Inside Afghanistan

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A01=Timor Sharan
Afghan governance networks
Afghan Government
Afghan State
Alliance Formation
Alp
Ashraf Ghani
Author_Timor Sharan
Category=JBSL
Category=JPH
Category=NHTB
Ceo Position
Ceo's Office
Civil Society
elite patronage systems
eq_bestseller
eq_history
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Ethnic Pashtun
Ethnic Tajik
Fragmented Order
Hanif Atmar
informal power structures in Afghanistan
international intervention analysis
International State Building
International Statebuilding
Kabul City
Loya Jirga
MT
Political Networks
Post-2001 Afghanistan
post-conflict political economy
President Ghani
President Karzai
President Rabbani
Regional Strongmen
state capture theory
Technocratic Networks
warlordism
Wolesi Jirga

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138280151
  • Weight: 520g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 28 Sep 2022
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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This book maps out how political networks and centres of power, engaged in patronage, corruption, and illegality, effectively constituted the Afghan state, often with the complicity of the U.S.-led military intervention and the internationally directed statebuilding project. It argues that politics and statehood in Afghanistan, in particular in the last two decades, including the ultimate collapse of the government in August 2021, are best understood in terms of the dynamics of internal political networks, through which warlords and patronage networks came to capture and control key sectors within the state and economy, including mining, banking, and illicit drugs as well as elections and political processes. Networked politics emerged as the dominant mode of governance that further transformed and consolidated Afghanistan into a networked state, with the state institutions and structures functioning as the principal “marketplace” for political networks’ bargains and rent-seeking. The façade of state survival and fragmented political order was a performative act, and the book contends, sustained through massive international military spending and development aid, obscuring the reality of resource redistribution among key networked elites and their supporters. Overall, the book offers a way to explain what it was that the international community and the Afghan elites in power got so wrong that brought Afghanistan full circle and the Taliban back to power.

Timor Sharan is an Associate Fellow at IDEAS, London School of Economics and Political Science’s foreign policy think tank, London, U.K. He was formerly the International Crisis Group’s Policy Analyst for Afghanistan and worked as a Senior Civil Servant for the Afghan government. He completed his doctorate at the University of Exeter and his MPhil at the University of Cambridge, U.K.

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