Item Details
Skip Navigation Links
   ActiveUsers:2352Hits:21365508Skip Navigation Links
Show My Basket
Contact Us
IDSA Web Site
Ask Us
Today's News
HelpExpand Help
Advanced search

In Basket
  Journal Article   Journal Article
 

ID082053
Title ProperTilly tally
Other Title InformationWar-making and state-making in the contemporary Third World
LanguageENG
AuthorTaylor, Brian D ;  Botea, Roxana
Publication2008.
Summary / Abstract (Note)Does the war-making/state-making thesis, most associated with Charles Tilly, apply in the developing world If so, how? This essay reviews the bellicist literature and offers an explanation for variation in state capacity among the most war-prone states in the developing world. We investigate the influence of war on state strength in two countries, Afghanistan and Vietnam. We examine three hypothesized causal mechanisms about how war contributes to state formation: raising money, building armies, and making nations. We find that war in Vietnam contributed to state-building, while war in Afghanistan has been state-destroying. There appear to be two main factors that contributed to state-making in Vietnam that were absent in Afghanistan: the existence of a core ethnic group that had served as the basis for a relatively long-standing political community in the past, and the combination of war and revolution, which inspired state officials and facilitated the promulgation of a unifying national ideology. Of these two factors, comparative data suggest relative ethnic homogeneity is the most important. Absent these specific conditions, war is more likely to break than make states in the contemporary Third World.
`In' analytical NoteInternational Studies Review Vol. 10, No.1; Mar 2008: p27-56
Journal SourceInternational Studies Review Vol. 10, No.1; Mar 2008: p27-56
Key WordsThird World ;  Developing Countires ;  Nationalism ;  State Building ;  Ethnic Conflict