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Waiting for Dignity

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Florian Weigand investigates legitimacy and its absence in Afghanistan. He shows that what matters in conflict zones is dignity: People judge authorities on the basis of their day-to-day experience...
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  • 20 September 2022
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In August 2021, Taliban fighters entered the presidential palace in Kabul, ending twenty years of international efforts to build a democratic state in Afghanistan. Did the Taliban’s success rest on coercion and violence alone, or did they win the battle for public support through ideology and better services? Or did most people in the country not believe in the idea of the state at all, trusting only local elders and traditional councils? What is the source of legitimacy during armed conflict?

In Waiting for Dignity, Florian Weigand investigates legitimacy and its absence in Afghanistan. Drawing on hundreds of interviews, he examines the perspectives of ordinary people in Afghanistan as well as those of rival claimants to authority: insurgents, warlords, members of parliament, security forces, and community leaders. By exploring how different types of authority attempted to legitimize their rule, Waiting for Dignity challenges common assumptions about how to build legitimacy, such as by delivering services, holding elections, or adopting traditional institutions. Weigand shows that what matters in conflict zones is what he terms interactive dignity: Citizens judge authorities on the basis of their day-to-day experiences with them. People want to be treated with dignity. The extent to which people perceive interactions to be fair, inclusive, and respectful is vital to the construction of lasting order. Combining theoretical originality with in-depth and compelling empirical detail, this book offers timely new insights into recent developments in Afghanistan and the challenges facing conflict-torn areas more widely.

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Price: $35.00
Pages: 384
Publisher: Columbia University Press
Imprint: Columbia University Press
Publication Date: 20 September 2022
Trim Size: 8.50 X 5.50 in
ISBN: 9780231200493
Format: Paperback
BISACs: POLITICAL SCIENCE / History & Theory, POLITICAL SCIENCE / Security (National & International), POLITICAL SCIENCE / World / Asian, HISTORY / Asia / Central Asia
REVIEWS Icon
Weigand’s terrific book on how authority has been built and lost in Afghanistan is also an invitation to return to deeper levels of analysis. It runs from rethinking what legitimacy means in today’s world to what we have lost in the last twenty or more years. His conclusions have wide relevance beyond Afghanistan, shedding light on conditions that affect both the powerful and the poor and often forgotten.

Florian Weigand is the codirector of the Centre on Armed Groups and a research associate at the London School of Economics and Political Science. He is the author of Conflict and Transnational Crime: Borders, Bullets, and Business in Southeast Asia (2020) and coeditor of the Routledge Handbook of Smuggling (2021).

Acknowledgments
Introduction
1. Conflict-Torn Spaces and Legitimacy
2. The State
3. Strongmen and Warlords
4. The Taliban
5. Community Authorities
6. Waiting for Dignity
Notes
Bibliography
Index