My latest journal article, ‘Post-Colonial Statebuilding in East Timor: Bringing Social Conflict Back In‘, has now been published in Conflict, Security and Development.
Abstract: One potential explanation for the persistent gap between international state-builders’ aspirations and achievements is their misguided understanding of states as institutional apparatuses abstracted and separated from society. State-society interpenetration is actually the historical norm, and a proper understanding of state forms requires close analysis of the conflicts between different social forces as they promote state projects that will advance particular interests over others. International state-builders are best conceptualised as merely one—albeit important—party to this ongoing struggle, which state-builders have no realistic hope of taming. The argument is illustrated by the case of East Timor. Both Indonesian and UN efforts to transplant state projects into Timorese society, even when backed by tremendous economic and coercive resources, failed to simply penetrate and dominate, or to create a technically efficient state insulated from, society. Rather, their state projects became interpenetrated with the society they sought to govern, and thus became shot through with social conflict. Neither more ‘capacity-building’ nor ‘participatory intervention’ can eliminate this conflict, nor evacuate it from the state.
I’ll put up a link to a PDF when I get the chance.
Please put up the link to the pdf. My institution does not subscribe to Conflict, Security and Development and I can’t access your article.
Thanks
Link | November 23rd, 2011 at 2:30 pm
The article can be accessed via the publications page.
Link | November 24th, 2011 at 8:22 am