Iraq Transformed
Violence, Poverty and War
Toby Dodge(Author)
Wiley-Blackwell (Publisher)
Book
Paperback/Softback
200 pages
978-1-4051-1679-4 (ISBN)
Description
Iraq has occupied a ground-breaking role in world politics, highlighting the tortured growth of the post-colonial state in international relations. After the end of the Cold War, military intervention and economic sanctions were used to promote a global liberal order. In 1990, in the aftermath of the invasion of Kuwait, Iraq, heavily dependent on oil exports, appeared to offer an ideal target for such action. However, despite over twelve years of the harshest economic blockade in modern history and great societal suffering, sanctions failed to coerce Iraq. With the Bush administration's policy shift, in the aftermath of 9/11, from the use of sanctions to the use of overt violence for regime change, Iraq is once again occupying a path-breaking role. In Iraq today the US is presiding over a country about which it has a limited understanding and is attempting to rebuild state institutions and reform their interaction with society. The US faces the problem of how to deal with a country whose civil society was largely wiped out during the Baathist dictatorship.
Military interventions into failed or rogue states with the overt aim of reforming their political systems, although increasingly common in the post-Cold War era, have to date been largely unsuccessful. The most important questions at the heart of such interventions - can states be rebuilt and if so how? - remain largely unanswered. If the rebuilding and reform of the Iraqi state is to be successful then the US will have to find those answers in and beyond Baghdad. Iraq Transformed examines what three wars and over twelve years of sanctions have done to the Iraqi state, its economy and society. It then goes on to explain why Iraq poses such a problem for US attempts at rebuilding and reform and assesses the pitfalls Americans face in their involvement with the country.
Military interventions into failed or rogue states with the overt aim of reforming their political systems, although increasingly common in the post-Cold War era, have to date been largely unsuccessful. The most important questions at the heart of such interventions - can states be rebuilt and if so how? - remain largely unanswered. If the rebuilding and reform of the Iraqi state is to be successful then the US will have to find those answers in and beyond Baghdad. Iraq Transformed examines what three wars and over twelve years of sanctions have done to the Iraqi state, its economy and society. It then goes on to explain why Iraq poses such a problem for US attempts at rebuilding and reform and assesses the pitfalls Americans face in their involvement with the country.
More details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
Oxford
United Kingdom
Publishing group
John Wiley and Sons Ltd
Target group
College/higher education
Professional and scholarly
Dimensions
Height: 229 mm
Width: 152 mm
ISBN-13
978-1-4051-1679-4 (9781405116794)
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Schweitzer Classification
Person
Dr Toby Dodge is a Senior Research Fellow at the Centre for the Study of Globalisation and Regionalisation, University of Warwick and an Associate Fellow at RIIA.