Publication | Open Access
State formation as it happens: insights from a repeated cross-sectional study in Afghanistan, 2007–2015
226
Citations
28
References
2017
Year
Reciprocal RelationsRegime AnalysisPublic PolicyGeopolitical ConflictEmpirical UnderstandingGovernmental ProcessInternational RelationsSociologyComparative PoliticsState FormationPolitical BehaviorState StructurePolitical ConflictPolitical ScienceSocial SciencesGeopoliticsCross-sectional Study
This paper contributes to an empirical understanding of state formation. Based on an original household-level data set, we provide a detailed picture of the process of state formation in Afghanistan over the last decade. State formation happens when state and society engage in reciprocal relations. Central to this relationship is an exchange of services for the acceptance of authority and increased legitimacy. Our data allows us to assess state-society relations across different dimensions. We focus on the provision of services, on the responsiveness of the state, on conflict regulation and on taxation. As a result we find more evidence of state formation than expected, but also see this as a contested process that unfolds unevenly and with different speed across different sectors.
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