Description
Book SynopsisSince 1945, the average length of civil wars has increased three-fold. What explains this startling fact? Hironaka points to the crucial role of the international community in propping up new and weak states that resulted from the postwar decolonization movement. These states are prone to conflicts and lack the resources to resolve them decisively.
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Neverending Wars, Ann Hironaka sets the record straight by pointing at the responsibility of the international community. Not only have superpowers, former colonial metropoles, and regional powers often directly interfered in other countries through outright intervention—they have also done so indirectly by fostering international norms to which all states are obliged to conform. The originality of Hironaka’s argument and the strength of her book rest in the examination of the relationship between civil wars and the structure of the international system. -- Caty Clément * Ethics and International Affairs *
Most studies consider how internal factors can explain prolonged wars. Sociologist Ann Hironaka’s timely book points out that the focus has neglected an important influential drive of war: the international community. The decolonization following World War II encouraged the creation of many weak states… Hironaka argues that civil wars are prolonged not because of local factors like ethnic hatred, but that ‘the political salience of ethnic identities results from the absence of institutionalized political identities in weak states.’ -- Helga Malmin Binningsbo * Journal of Peace Research *
This book will undoubtedly have a major impact far beyond the world of comparative sociology, and is likely to be well received by political scientists who study international relations, and by serious policy analysts who grapple with the problems of a disorderly world in a more practical way.
Neverending Wars makes an important and timely argument about contemporary civil war. -- Daniel Chirot, University of Washington
Neverending Wars will be a contribution to both the discussion of civil war and the broader literature on the contemporary world system. It also provides further motivation for the engagement of sociology and political science. -- Ron Jepperson, University of Tulsa