Drug Trafficking, Violence, and Instability
Author(s) -
Phil Williams,
Vanda FelbabBrown
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
hathi trust digital library (the hathitrust research center)
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Reports
DOI - 10.21236/ada560718
Subject(s) - legitimacy , sovereignty , political science , monopoly , corporate governance , political economy , global governance , national security , drug trafficking , international security , criminology , development economics , sociology , law , business , economics , politics , finance , market economy
: The rationale for this series is a reflection of the ways in which the world of armed groups has changed and is continuing to change, and the impact of these changes on threats and challenges to national and global security. Although challenges posed by various kinds of violent armed groups initially appear highly diverse and unrelated to one another, in fact they all reflect the increasing connections between security and governance and, in particular, the relationship between poor governance and violent armed groups. The growth in the number of states with capacity gaps, functional holes, and legitimacy deficits helps to explain the resurgence of a new medievalism, and the rise of illegal quasi-governments in localized areas. The irony is that after several decades in which the number of sovereign states represented in the United Nations (UN) has increased significantly, relatively few of these states can truly claim a monopoly on force within their territorial borders.
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