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Radical Reconstructions: A Critical Analogy of U.S. Post-Conflict State-building

Da Vinha, L. ORCID: 0000-0002-7222-5095 (2010). Radical Reconstructions: A Critical Analogy of U.S. Post-Conflict State-building. Nação e Defesa, 126, pp. 191-224.

Abstract

Post-conflict state-building has been at the heart of contemporary debates in IR. However, state-building endeavours by foreign countries are not a novel phenomenon. This article establishes an analogy between the present-day US State-building experience in Iraq and the reconstruction effort of the postbellum South in the 19th century. The aim is to try to identify similarities and differences in the dynamics involved in both instances. The assessment demonstrates that both reconstruction projects did not look to restore the previously existing political order. Quite on the contrary, the secular State-building experiments of the US have culminated in the institutionalization of an agenda of radical transformation of the existing political, social and economic orders. Both Radical Reconstruction and the War in Iraq can be best understood in the framework of the contemporary peacebuilding project, encompassed within the liberal state-building enterprise.

Publication Type: Article
Additional Information: Available under License Creative Commons Attribution
Subjects: J Political Science > JA Political science (General)
J Political Science > JZ International relations
Departments: School of Policy & Global Affairs
School of Policy & Global Affairs > Department of International Politics
SWORD Depositor:
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