TAIWAN AND HONG KONG: CHINA'S POLICIES AND PROSPECTS (Review Article) |
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Authors: | Kenneth C. Walker |
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Affiliation: | Chairman of the Calico Printers’ Association. |
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Abstract: | The author defines state-building as a process of increasing the capabilities within a society for the benefit of its population, noting that, traditionally, in Afghanistan villages were run through consent, though the state has usually preferred force. He then examines the various factors said to inhibit state-building – geography, class, the warlords, ethnicity and political Islam – drawing relevant comparisons with other South Asian states. His conclusion is that it has indeed been most difficult to try to build a functioning state in Afghanistan, partly because of the war, but partly because force is no substitute for consent. |
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