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Hybrid forms of governance - where the central state authority does not possess a monopoly of violence and fails to exercise control - are not only an epiphenomena, but a reality likely to persist. This book explores this phenomenon drawing on examples from the Middle East and Africa. It considers the different sorts of actors - state and non-state, public and private, national and transnational - which possess power, examines the dynamics of the relationships between central authorities and other actors, and reviews the varying outcomes. The book provides an alternative view of the way in which governance has been constructed and lived, puts forward a conceptualisation of various forms of governance which have hitherto been regarded as exceptions, and argues for such forms of governance to be regarded as part of the norm.
Sommario
Foreword, Raymond Hinnebusch
Introduction
Part I International interventions and the interplay between formal and informal governance
- Fluid concepts and understandings redefined: states, porous borders and transnational militant actors in Syria
Joseph P. Helou
- Limited Statehood and the Politics of Security Governance in the Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus (TRNC)
Mustafa Çıraklı, Umut Koldaş
- (In)Securitizing Somalia’s territorial waters as an area of limited statehood
Stephanie Carver
- Limited statehood in a shattered state: territorial and economic challenges to the construct of the Iraqi state
Adriano Cozzolino, Irene Costantini,
- Trials and tribulations: the challenges of building a sustainable state in South Sudan
Daniela Nascimento
- Interventions and sovereignty limitations in Libya
Debora Malito
Part II Domestic Agency and Dynamics
- The margins at the core: Boko Haram’s impact on hybrid governance on Lake Chad
Alessio Iocchi
- Competing orders in cross border areas of limited statehood: the cases of Southern Tunisia and Northern Mali micro-regions
Edoardo Baldaro, Giulia Cimini
- Resisting or Appropriating: Two approaches in the study of aid, violent non-state actors, and governance
Ori Swed, Samuel Fletcher Stubblefield
- Somalia, Fragmented Hybrid Governance and Inclusive Development
Eric Herring, Latif Ismail, Aoife McCullough and Muhyadin Saed
- Mediating Security – Hybridity and Clientelism in Lebanon’s Hybrid Security Sector
Francisco Mazzola
- Micro Formations of Hybrid Security Governance in Ethnic Riots: Mapping the Interworkings of State Forces, Vigilantes, Residents, Thugs and Armed Mobs in the Violent Slums of Jos, Nigeria
Madueke, Vermeulen
- Leadership Changes & Rebels’ Goals in Areas of Limited Statehood in the Middle East: Libya, Iraq and Yemen
Carmela LutmarConclusion
Info autore
Ruth Hanau Santini is Associate Professor of Politics and International Relations, Università L’Orientale, Naples
Abel Polese is Senior Research Fellow at the School of Law and Government, Dublin City University, Ireland, and Tallinn Law School, Tallinn University of Technology, Estonia
Rob Kevlihan is Consultative Director at the Shanahan Research Group and Managing Director of Gumfoot Consultancy Ltd., both based in Ireland.
Riassunto
This book explores this phenomenon drawing on examples from the Middle East and Africa. It considers the different sorts of actors – state and non-state, public and private, national and transnational – which possess power, examines the dynamics of the relationships between central authorities and other actors.