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Exit Strategies and State Building
Edited by Richard Caplan
320 pages
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235x156mm
978-0-19-976012-1
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Paperback
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27 September 2012
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- Features unprecedented policy analysis of how state-building campaigns end
- Includes perspectives on exit strategies internationally and throughout history
In Exit Strategies and State Building, fifteen of the world's best scholars and practitioners of peace building focus on relevant historical and contemporary cases to provide a comprehensive overview of this issue. The book identifies four basic types of international operations where state-building has been a major objective—colonial administrations, peacekeeping operations, international administrations, and military occupations. Editor Richard Caplan and his contributors cover a variety of topics, from broad-ranging studies of exit in many types of state-building operations, to focused studies on specific historical cases, to
thematic analyses under frameworks such as economics and global international relations. By examining the major challenges associated with the conclusion of international state-building operations and the requirements for the maintenance of peace in the period following exit, this book provides a unique perspective on the realities of military and political intervention. Given the twenty-first century trend toward international intervention the world over , Exit Strategies and State Building sheds more light on what is not merely an academic issue, but a pressing global policy concern.Readership: Students and scholars of: international relations, international studies, military strategy, global policy, military
history, political history, decolonization, and peace studies, as well as area studies for the Middle East, Africa, Southeast Asia, and Eastern Europe.
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Edited by Richard Caplan, Professor of International Relations, Oxford University Richard Caplan is Professor of International Relations and Director of the Centre for International Studies at Oxford University. He also serves as a member of the World Economic Forum's Global Agenda Council on Fragile States. Contributors: John Darwin; Tony Chafer; Hendrik Spruyt; William J. Durch; A. Sarjoh Bah; Johanna Mendelson Forman; Richard Caplan; Ben Crampton; Toby Dodge; Gregory H. Fox; Anthony Goldstone; Joel Peters; Richard Ponzio; Michael Pugh; Ralph Wilde; Dominik Zaum
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"This superior collection does an excellent job of defining and analysing a research agenda for this neglected area and sets a high standard against which future works on the subject should be compared." - Steven Curtis, The Times Higher Education Supplement "Richard Caplan's book, Exit Strategies and State Building, is an important, thought-provoking, and compelling addition to what has become quite a substantial body of literature on international peace-building missions." - Mona Fixdal, H-Net Reviews
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Contributors
Acknowledgments
1. Exit Strategies and State Building: Richard Caplan
Colonial Administrations
2. Exit and Colonial Administrations: John Darwin
3. Senegal: Tony Chafer
4. Indonesia: Hendrik Spruyt
Peace Support Operations
5. Exit and Peace Support Operations: William J. Durch
6. Sierra Leone: A. Sarjoh Bah
7. Haiti: Johanna Mendelson Forman
International Administrations
8. Exit and International Administrations: Dominik Zaum
9. Kosovo: Ben Crampton
10. East Timor: Anthony Goldstone
Military Occupations
11. Exit and Military Occupations: Gregory H. Fox
12. Gaza: Joel Peters
13. Iraq: Toby Dodge
Thematic Issues
14. Competing Normative Visions of Exit: Ralph Wilde
15. The Political Economy of Exit: Michael Pugh
16. After Exit: The UN Peacebuilding Architecture: Richard Ponzio
17. Policy Implications: Richard Caplan
Index
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The specification in this catalogue, including without limitation price, format, extent, number of illustrations, and month of publication, was as accurate as possible at the time the catalogue was compiled. Occasionally, due to the nature of some contractual restrictions, we are unable to ship a specific product to a particular territory. Jacket images are provisional and liable to change before publication.
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