Explaining Civil War Persistence in Afghanistan
English

About The Book

This study asks why the civil war in Afghanistan persists. Put slightly differently what is preventing the state/government from achieving outright victory against the rebel forces? A central theme in civil war research is that ''weak states'' are prone to (prolonged) civil war; state-weakness seems to be the variable around which there is the most theoretical agreement. There is a strong sense that state failure -- whether defined as failure to monopolize legitimate violence or failure to deliver development good governance and basic services -- is a principal driver of contemporary civil conflicts often resulting in prolonged crises. In investigating the puzzle this study tests the weak state framework. The study explores the relationship between state-weakness and the particularities of insufficient institutional capacity (including governance) in the conflict-ridden country of Afghanistan. The study argues state-weakness deprives the state/government from ensuring a favorable war-outcome; state weakness also robs the state/government of societal support and thereby political legitimacy.
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