Downloads

New Books Catalogue Autumn/Winter 2013New Books Catalogue Spring/Summer 2013

Plu Social

Blog Twitter Facebook

Newsletters

Signup now

Book of the Week

The Islamophobia Industry
Essential reading in the wake of the recent anti-Islamic violence in the UK
Competitions Jobs

Political Theory


Click to enlarge image

Chandler's work is a most valuable contribution to the debate ...

(Alex Veit, Development and Change)

A provocative and insightful study which raises many important questions ...

(Lenard Cohen, Professor of Political Sci)

David Chandler’s book is a very important one, with a ...

(Didier Bigo, Professor of International )

Western-supported 'state building' in places like Bosnian and Kosovo has ...

(Robert M. Hayden, University of Pittsbur)

Empire in Denial
The Politics of State-Building

Product Description

David Chandler argues that state-building, as it is currently conceived, does not work.

In the 1990s, interventionist policies challenged the rights of individual states to self-governance. Today, non-Western states are more likely to be feted by international institutions offering programmes of poverty-reduction, democratisation and good governance.
States without the right of self-government will always lack legitimate authority. The international policy agenda focuses on bureaucratic mechanisms, which can only instutiutionalise divisions between the West and the non-West and are unable to overcome the social and political divisions of post-conflict states. Highlighting the dangers of current policy -- including the redefinition of sovereignty, and the subsquent erosion of ties linking power and accountability -- David Chandler offers a critical look at state-building that will be of interest to all students of international affairs.

Praise for From Kosovo to Kabul and Beyond:
'A fine book.' Edward S. Herman
'Anyone concerned with world events should read this book.' Global Dialogue

About The Author

David Chandler is Professor of International Relations, Centre for the Study of Democracy, University of Westminster. He has written widely on democracy, human rights and international relations and is also the author of From Kosovo to Kabul: Human Rights and International Intervention (Pluto Press) and Constructing Global Civil Society: Morality and Power in International Relations (2004), editor of Rethinking Human Rights: Critical Approaches to International Politics (2002) and Peace without Politics: Ten Years of State-Building in Bosnia (2005), and co-editor of Global Civil Society: Contested Futures (2005).

Click to browse contents

Prices