1st Edition
The Dynamics of States The Formation and Crises of State Domination
State domination in the non-Western world is hallmarked by its constantly shifting character. This stimulating book develops a new approach to the study of state formation and state erosion to explain dynamics that neither follow the pathways of development nor the rule of stagnation that dependency theory once suggested. Carefully edited by Klaus Schlichte, this book provides a fresh angle to the study of states with an attempt to 'overcome Weber with Weber'. The approach focuses on the historical authenticity of states and their institutional frameworks, describing the trajectories taken as they react to the effects of changes in their international and local social environments. The emphasis laid on the specific characteristics of individual states does not however lead to the theoretical difficulty of a new contextual relativism. The conceptual design employs sociological categories developed by Max Weber, Norbert Elias, Michel Foucault, Pierre Bourdieu and others.
Biography
Klaus Schlichte is Director of Young Scholar Group 'Micropolitics of Armed Groups', in the Institute for Social Sciences, at Humboldt University at Berlin, Germany.
’This remarkable collection of essays brings together an international group of scholars dealing with...the state in the global South. The book presents cutting-edge research on the very different trajectories which post-colonial state formation has taken. The authors engage in current debates about failed states, state decay and the privatization of violence...This is refreshing reading for anyone interested in the most pressing questions of global politics in our time.’ Dr Dietrich Jung, Danish Institute for International Studies, Denmark