Purchase
Beyond Afghanistan and Iraq
Forum on Constructive Capitalism
Johns Hopkins University Press
February 2006
272 pages ISBN: 0801883350 Hardcover
Add to Wish List
Non-Fiction Political
Bestselling author Francis Fukuyama brings together esteemed
academics, political analysts, and practitioners to reflect
on the U.S. experience with nation-building, from its
historical underpinnings to its modern-day consequences. The
United States has sought on repeated occasions to
reconstruct states damaged by conflict, from Reconstruction
in the South after the Civil War to Japan and Germany after
World War II, to the ongoing rebuilding of Iraq. Despite
this rich experience, there has been remarkably little
systematic effort to learn lessons on how outside powers can
assist in the building of strong and self-sufficient states
in post-conflict situations. The contributors dissect mistakes, false starts, and lessons
learned from the cases of Afghanistan and Iraq within the
broader context of reconstruction efforts in other parts of
the world, including Latin America, Japan, and the Balkans.
Examining the contrasting models in Afghanistan and Iraq,
they highlight the Coalition Provisional Authority in Iraq
as a cautionary example of inadequate planning. The need for post-conflict reconstruction will not cease
with the end of the Afghanistan and Iraq missions. This
timely volume offers the critical reflection and evaluation
necessary to avoid repeating costly mistakes in the future. Contributors: Larry Diamond, Hoover Institution and Stanford
University; James Dobbins, RAND; David Ekbladh, American
University; Michèle A. Flournoy, Center for Strategic and
International Studies; Francis Fukuyama, Paul H. Nitze
School of Advanced International Studies, Johns Hopkins
University; Larry P. Goodson, U.S. Army War College; Johanna
Mendelson Forman, UN Foundation; Minxin Pei, Samia Amin, and
Seth Garz, Carnegie Endowment for International Peace; S.
Frederick Starr, Central Asia--Caucacus Institute at Johns
Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies; F. X.
Sutton, Ford Foundation Emeritus; Marvin G. Weinbaum,
University of Illinois at Urbana--Champaign
Comments
No comments posted.
Registered users may leave comments.
Log in or register now!
|