000 03943nam a2200433 a 4500
001 EBC605087
003 MiAaPQ
005 20240120131959.0
006 m o d |
007 cr cn|||||||||
008 100927s2011 enka sb 001 0 eng d
010 _z 2010041670
020 _z9781107003194 (hbk.)
020 _z9780521176682 (pbk.)
020 _a9780511928369 (electronic bk.)
035 _a(MiAaPQ)EBC605087
035 _a(Au-PeEL)EBL605087
035 _a(CaPaEBR)ebr10460497
035 _a(CaONFJC)MIL305497
035 _a(OCoLC)710972873
040 _aMiAaPQ
_cMiAaPQ
_dMiAaPQ
043 _aa-af---
050 4 _aKNF2020
_b.R85 2011
082 0 4 _a958.104/71
_222
245 0 4 _aThe rule of law in Afghanistan
_h[electronic resource] :
_bmissing in inaction /
_cedited by Whit Mason.
260 _aCambridge, U.K. ;
_aNew York :
_bCambridge University Press,
_c2011.
300 _axvi, 350 p. :
_bill.
504 _aIncludes bibliographical references and index.
505 8 _aMachine generated contents note: 1. Introduction Whit Mason; Part I. The Scope and Nature of the Problem: 2. Approaching the rule of law Martin Krygier; 3. Deiokes and the Taliban: local governance, bottom-up state formation and the rule of law in counterinsurgency David J. Kilcullen; Part II. The Context: Where We Started: 4. The international community's failures in Afghanistan Francesc Vendrell; 5. The rule of law and the weight of politics: challenges and trajectories William Maley; 6. Human security and the rule of law: Afghanistan's experience Shahmahmood Miakhel; Part III. The Political Economy of Opium: 7. The Afghan insurgency and organised crime Gretchen Peters; 8. Afghanistan's opium strategy alternatives: a moment for masterful inactivity? Joel Hafvenstein; Part IV. Afghan Approaches to Security and the Rule of Law: 9. Engaging traditional justice mechanisms in Afghanistan: state-building opportunity or dangerous liaison? Susanne Schmeidl; 10. Casualties of myopia Michael Hartmann; 11. Land conflict in Afghanistan Colin Deschamps and Alan Roe; Part V. International Interventions: 12. Exogenous state-building: the contradictions of the international project in Afghanistan Astri Suhrke; 13. Grasping the nettle: facilitating change or more of the same? Barbara J. Stapleton; 14. Lost in translation: legal transplants without consensus-based adaptation Michael Hartmann and Agnieszka Klonowiecka-Milart; Part VI. Kandahar: 15. No justice, no peace: Kandahar, 2005-2009 Graeme Smith; 16. Kandahar after the fall of the Taliban Shafiullah Afghan; Part VII. Conclusion: 17. Axioms and unknowns Whit Mason.
520 _a"How, despite the enormous investment of blood and treasure, has the West's ten-year intervention left Afghanistan so lawless and insecure? The answer is more insidious than any conspiracy, for it begins with a profound lack of understanding of the rule of law, the very thing that most dramatically separates Western societies from the benighted ones in which they increasingly intervene. This volume of essays argues that the rule of law is not a set of institutions that can be exported lock, stock and barrel to lawless lands, but a state of affairs under which ordinary people and officials of the state itself feel it makes sense to act within the law. Where such a state of affairs is absent, as in Afghanistan today, brute force, not law, will continue to rule"--
_cProvided by publisher.
533 _aElectronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, MI : ProQuest, 2015. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest affiliated libraries.
650 0 _aRule of law
_zAfghanistan.
650 0 _aJustice, Administration of
_zAfghanistan.
650 0 _aAfghan War, 2001-
655 4 _aElectronic books.
700 1 _aMason, Whit.
710 2 _aProQuest (Firm)
856 4 0 _uhttps://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/bacm-ebooks/detail.action?docID=605087
_zClick to View
999 _c57030
_d57030