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Post-Revolutionary State Building in Ethiopia, Iran and Nicaragua: Lessons from Terror
33
Citations
21
References
2000
Year
Regime AnalysisNationalismColonialismSocial SciencesDemocracyGeopolitical ConflictMiddle Eastern StudiesInternational PoliticsLanguage StudiesComparative AnalysisGeopoliticsCivil ConflictPublic PolicyInternational RelationsPost-revolutionary State BuildingAfrican PoliticsPolitical ConflictSummary JusticeInevitable StageRevolution StudiesPolitical TransformationPolitical ScienceAnti-imperialism
This paper focuses on an earlier theorized critical stage of revolution, the Reign of Terror which is redefined with summary justice as its essence and employed in a comparative analysis of three modern revolutions, Ethiopia, Iran and Nicaragua. The analysis demonstrates the importance of national factors over international factors in explaining post-revolutionary state construction. A reign of terror is an extemporized state; it is not an inevitable stage of revolution. Comparison of Ethiopia and Iran, where terrors occurred, is contrasted with Nicaragua, where a reign of terror was avoided. This reveals the significance for post-revolutionary state construction of the timing and outcome of civil war, of domestic policy choices constrained by circumstances directly encountered and of state control over new, revolutionary, means of coercion.
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