Notes
Robert Egnell is a lecturer in War Studies at the Swedish National Defence College. He received his doctorate from the Department of War Studies, King's College London and won the 2008 APSA Kenneth N. Waltz Dissertation Prize. He is the author of Complex Peace Operations and Civil-military Relations: Winning the Peace (Routledge, 2009).Peter Haldén received his PhD in social and political sciences from the European University Institute in Florence, Italy in 2006. His research interests are state-formation/state-building, environmental security, security in the Horn of Africa, African and Central Asian societies and international security.
1. CitationFukuyama, State-building, ix.
2. CitationChandler, Empire in Denial.
3. CitationParis, At War's End.
4. CitationOnuf, Republican Heritage in International Thought.
5. CitationReus-Smit, Moral Purpose of the State Culture.
6. CitationEgnell and Haldén, ‘Laudable, Ahistorical and Overambitious’.
7. Susan Woodward, roundtable presentation at the annual ISA Convention in New Orleans, February 2010.
8. Cf. CitationElias and Jephcott, Civilizing Process; CitationElias, What is Sociology?.
9. CitationHerbst, ‘Let Them Fail’.
10. Cf CitationBuzan and Little, ‘Why International Relations Has Failed’.
11. CitationDickinson, Equality of States; CitationDonnely, ‘Sovereign Inequalities’; CitationWatson, Limits of Independence.
12. CitationOhmae, End of the Nation State.
13. CitationLake, Hierarchy.
14. CitationCrawford, Creation of States.