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The “Empty-Shell” Approach: The Setup Process of International Administrations in Timor-Leste and Kosovo, Its Consequences and Lessons

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TLDR
In this article, the authors compare the two case studies of state-building in Kosovo and Timor-Leste and compare the empty-shell approach with the delegitimization process that came to be experienced by the UN in both cases.
Abstract
State-building under the aegis of international administrations has faced various hurdles and obstacles in Kosovo and Timor-Leste—failures that came to full light in March 2004 in Kosovo and in May 2006 in Timor-Leste. However, the international conception buttressing the set up of international administrations—I dub it the “empty-shell” approach—is still present in certain policy circles. This article aims to analyze this international conception by clarifying how the UN came to impose its authority over the two territories in a very similar process. While the literature on each state-building experiment is vast and compelling, few authors have attempted to contrast the two case studies, especially regarding the mental conception informing the governance process of these territories since 1999. This article links the empty-shell approach with the delegitimization process that came to be experienced by the UN in both cases. The article describes the international policies put in place by the UN to expand its control over the two territories, a mix of co-option of local elites and the marginalization of the local population. Finally, the article reveals some possible solutions in order to avoid the more blatant difficulties pertaining to state-building conducted from the outside-in.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Fragile and failed states: Critical perspectives on conceptual hybrids:

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors argue that the concepts of fragile and failed states are confusing, inherently superficial and unstable policy-oriented labels, and they interpret the analytical framework of fragile/failed states as a reactivation of developmentalist theories, primarily driven by a Western conception of the polity.
Journal ArticleDOI

Security sector reform and state building

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors argue that there is a close link between security sector reform (ssr) and state building and argue that these are an extension of liberal models containing a number of assumptions about the nature of states and how they should be constructed and that any analysis of ssr approaches needs to be seen within a broader framework of the international community.
Journal ArticleDOI

Everyday Legitimacy and International Administration: Global Governance and Local Legitimacy in Kosovo

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examine the limits of the Weberian approach to legitimacy in statebuilding and propose other possible avenues for statebuilding, more in line with a wider understanding of legitimacy and intervention.
Dissertation

Post-liberal statebuilding in Central Asia: A decolonial perspective on community security practices and imaginaries of social order in Kyrgyzstan

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present a development of the concept of post-liberalism to analyse processes of statebuilding in Central Asia by the example of Kyrgyzstan from a decolonial angle.
Journal ArticleDOI

Beyond Hybridity to the Politics of Scale: International Intervention and ‘Local’ Politics

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors argue that hybridity is a highly problematic optic, which falsely dichotomizes the local and international ideal-typical assemblages, and incorrectly presents outcomes as stemming from conflict and accommodation between them.
References
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MonographDOI

Preparing for peace : conflict transformation across cultures

TL;DR: This paper explored conflict resolution training and relationship to culture, using a special training tradition in mediation with a tradition derived from the author's work in development, and used anecdotes and experiences to demonstrate his resolution techniques.
MonographDOI

You, the people : the United Nations, transitional administration, and state-building

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors discuss the evolution of United Nations Complex Peace Operations and the use of force to maintain law and order in post-conflict regions. But their focus is on elections and exit strategies: No Exit without a Strategy, or No Strategy without an Exit.
Book

Political legitimacy and the state

Rodney Barker
TL;DR: In this article, the authors define political legitimacy as the legitimacy of the autonomous state, the independence of the representative or neutral state, and the political legitimacy of a partisan state all subjects are legitimately governed but some are more legitimately governed than others.
Journal ArticleDOI

Building State Failure in East Timor

TL;DR: In practice, however, the intervention failed to decentralize its own absolutist form of authority, but succeeded in excluding the local population from the equation as mentioned in this paper, which was the rationale behind the most total form of international administration in East Timor.
Journal ArticleDOI

The UN's Kingdom of East Timor

Jarat Chopra
- 01 Jan 2000 - 
TL;DR: With its transitional administration in East Timor, the UN is exercising sovereign authority over a fledgling nation for the first time in its history as mentioned in this paper. But this control could evolve into another form of authoritarianism unless the transitional administrators themselves separate power structures and become accountable to the local population.