What is it about?
This is an introductory article to a special issues titled 'External Governance of State-Building in Post-Conflict Kosovo'. The issue sheds light on possible explanations, difficulties and prospects of the state-building project in Kosovo. Theoretically, we investigate how international and local explanations play out, interact and gain dominance over each other; highlight the local factors that shape the experience of state-building; and focus on the hybridity of institution- and state-building on the ground. Empirically, we take stock of two decades of international state-building activities and one decade of independent statehood by providing long-term and in-depth analysis of specific areas of reform – municipal governance, state bureaucracy, normalization of relations between Serbia and Kosovo, education, creation of armed forces, security sector reforms and reception of Salafi ideologies. Such time-sensitive, case-nuanced and empirically heavy analysis enables the authors to go back and forth between the role of international activities, domestic strategies of resistance and evidence of hybrid reforms in order to test the role of competing explanations.
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Why is it important?
Offers theoretical insights into the intricacies of state-building process in deeply divided, post-conflict polities. Engages with various factors that influence state-building processes, particularly the international factor Offers in-depth empirical material into various areas of state-building
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This page is a summary of: State-building or state-capture? Institutional exports, local reception and hybridity of reforms in post-war Kosovo, Journal of Southeast European and Black Sea Studies, July 2018, Taylor & Francis,
DOI: 10.1080/14683857.2018.1475901.
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