Strong states in a troubled region: anatomies of a Middle Eastern regional conflict formation
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| Publication date | 2010 |
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| Book title | Troubled regions and failing states: the clustering and contagion of armed conflict |
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| Series | Comparative social research, 27 |
| Pages (from-to) | 171-195 |
| Publisher | Bingley: Emerald |
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| Abstract |
This article calls for closer attention to the Middle East in the wider debate on the purported rise of new modes of armed conflict following the end of the Cold War, particularly in relation to the notion of ‘regional conflict formations’ (RCFs). In so doing, it presents and analyses three main paradoxes. First, though the contemporary Middle East had its own share of intrastate conflicts that generally grew into regional constellations, a look at the region's post-colonial history suggests that such trends are not as novel as has often been claimed. Second, the striking longevity of regionally entwined conflict in the Middle East calls into question the common and generalizing argument that it was the end of the Cold War, together with the alleged disengagement of the superpowers, that constituted the radical shifts - including the rise of RCFs - that signalled the demise of old forms of politics and conflict involving weak states. Third, Middle Eastern states, mostly authoritarian in outlook, have over recent decades become stronger despite prevailing conditions of regionalized conflict; indeed, as tentatively suggested in this article, to some extent because of those factors.
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| Document type | Chapter |
| Language | English |
| Published at | https://doi.org/10.1108/S0195-6310(2010)0000027011 |
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