This article examines the relationship between post-conflict peace-building and state-building. In so doing, the article illustrates the process of the expansion and transformation of "world international society". By comparing the process of the formation of sovereign states in modern Europe and state-building activities in post-conflict societies in the contemporary world, the article seeks to identify dilemmas of peace-building through state-building. First, it describes the dilemma at the level of overall international order concerning world international society and regional discrepancies of peace-building through state-building. Second, it also highlights the dilemma at the level of state-building policies concerning the concentration of power and the limitation of concentrated power. Third, it illustrates the dilemma concerning liberal peace-building and local ownership. Then, the article argues that postconflict state-building needs to be understood in the context of the long-term state-building process.
CITATION STYLE
Shinoda, H. (2018). Peace-building and Statebuilding from the Perspective of the Historical Development of International Society. International Relations of the Asia-Pacific, 18(1), 25–43. https://doi.org/10.1093/irap/lcx025
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