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DOMESTIC POWER (2) answer(s).
 
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1
ID:   091973


Liberal peace is neither: peacebuilding, state building and the reproduction of conflict in the democratic republic of Congo / Eriksen, Stein Sundstol   Journal Article
Eriksen, Stein Sundstol Journal Article
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Publication 2009.
Summary/Abstract This article discusses the attempts at state-building by international actors in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC). It uses this experience to discuss some of the obstacles and dilemmas facing external state-builders. I argue that attempts at state-building by foreign actors in the DRC have not had much success, and point out four reasons. First, insufficient resources have been provided. Second, donors have used a standardized approach that does not take local context sufficiently into account. Third, domestic power relations have been such that state-building has not served the interests of key actors. Finally, the policy has been based on a fixed, non-negotiable conception of what the state eventually should look like. Although all these factors have contributed to the failure to create a liberal state in the DRC, the last two appear to be more fundamental than the first and the second.
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2
ID:   133134


New perspectives on security sector reform: the role of local agency and domestic politics / Schroeder, Ursula C; Chappuis, Fairlie   Journal Article
Schroeder, Ursula C Journal Article
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Publication 2014.
Summary/Abstract This special issue identifies new directions in research on the consequences of international involvement in security sector reform (SSR). Both empirically and theoretically, the focus lies on the so far neglected role of local agency and domestic power constellations. The introductory article maps out different ways to analyse the external-domestic interaction dynamics that structure the often contentious and asymmetric encounters between international and local interests and demands in SSR processes. It makes the case for moving beyond a state-centric approach to the study of security governance in areas of limited statehood and for engaging more closely with the layered, mixed or hybrid security orders that can result from external engagement in domestic reform contexts.
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