The politics of post-war/post-conflict reconstruction

被引:0
作者
Guttal S.
机构
关键词
Democracy; Economic reform; Foreign investment; Justice; Neo-liberalism; World Bank;
D O I
10.1057/palgrave.development.1100169
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Shalmali Guttal argues that post-conflict/war reconstruction is not simply about rebuilding lives and societies after periods of violent conflicts, crises and upheavals. Reconstruction is about establishing a market based capitalist economic system, twinned with a political regime that is willing to promote and defend free market-capitalism. She proposes that the hallmark of the 'reconstruction model' is neo-liberalism - an unregulated, market economy, liberal democracy, free flow of private capital, privatization, removal of domestic regulations and economic protections, and 'good governance', which in practice means that the fledgling state's responsibilities are re-oriented towards facilitating and protecting free market conditions for creating wealth, much of which is expropriated by private sector actors from outside the country and/or consolidated by national elites. © 2005 Society for International Development.
引用
收藏
页码:73 / 81
页数:8
相关论文
共 20 条
  • [1] Bahri T.S., Aceh: A land of silenced and marginalised voices, (2004)
  • [2] Bendana A., From Peace-Building to State-Building: One step forward and two backwards?, (2004)
  • [3] Blumenthal M., The Other Regime Change, (2004)
  • [4] Burnett V., Afghanistan moves to gain control of aid
  • [5] Government passes law to weed out groups that are profit-making entities, The Globe and Mail, (2005)
  • [6] Carlin A., Rush to Re-engagement in Afghanistan: The IFI's post conflict agenda, (2003)
  • [7] Docena H., The Other Reconstruction: How private contractors are transforming Iraq's state and civil society, Focus on Trade, 101 PART 1, (2004)
  • [8] Financial Times US prepares classified watch-list of 25 unstable countries, (2005)
  • [9] Foley C., Humanitarian Aid Workers Getting Caught in the Crossfire, The Guardian Weekly, (2004)
  • [10] Gershman J., East Timor Violence: Legacy of US Indonesia policy, The Progressive Response, 3, 32, (1999)