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ID159365
Title ProperRecognizing fragmented authority
Other Title Informationtowards a post-westphalian security order in Iraq
LanguageENG
AuthorDoyle, Damian
Summary / Abstract (Note)The rollback of Daesh’s territorial control during 2017 has (re-)established an area of limited statehood in large parts of Iraq that may endure for many years. The government of Iraq projects its authority into a large geographical and political space that it shares with a multitude of other state, non-state and hybrid actors, competing and collaborating to achieve advantageous security and political outcomes. This paper examines the heterarchy of actors in post-Daesh Iraq to develop a typology and start a critical discussion about post-Westphalian alternatives for security governance in Iraq during the coming period of reconstruction and reconciliation.
`In' analytical Note
Small Wars and Insurgencies Vol. 29, No.3; Jun 2018: p.537-559
Journal SourceAakrosh Vol: 4 No 12
Key WordsIraq ;  Kurdistan ;  Islamic State ;  Non-State Armed Groups ;  Security Governance ;  Daesh ;  Fragmented Sovereignty ;  Hybrid Political Order


 
 
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