- Statehood - an overview | ScienceDirect Topics
Statehood is defined as the concept of nonprivate responsibility involving the shaping of legal norms, their enforcement, and the settlement of disputes It emphasizes the impartial enforcement of common rules by public powers rather than contingent evolution or party interests
- Statehood, democracy and preindustrial development
All societies start with non-statehood and transition into authoritarian statehood at some point, but the timing is random When later given the opportunity, only those societies that transitioned relatively recently to authoritarian statehood transition to democracy
- Does an early start help or hurt? Statehood, institutions and modern . . .
We propose that statehood experience has a direct and an indirect effect on climate change policies The direct effect occurs because greater statehood experience gives states more time to consolidate power, build state capacity, and closer-to-optimal policymaking
- Genocidal warfare in Gaza and the issue of balance in political . . .
How to read such an omission but as analogue to the Israeli state's erasure of Palestinian space and statehood? Where else is this erasure framed—intellectually or morally—as “Just War”?
- Virtual Forum: Gaza’s Past, Present, and Futures
select article International law: Israel's fig leaf or a route to Palestinian statehood?
- Slavery, Statehood, and Economic Development in Sub-Saharan Africa
We therefore suggest that indigenous slavery may have impeded the development not so much of statehood itself as of open, inclusive, capable, and accountable states Large scale social exclusion undermines broad-based state legitimacy, and thereby the state’s capacity to formulate and implement effective development policies
- Acting like a state: Armed violence in post-war Abkhazia
Different forms of violence after war, including the recurrence of full-fledged fighting, affect post-war societies in a myriad of ways These political, economic, and social effects are particularly pronounced in new states, which arise from the wars that pave the way to their often de facto statehood
- The potential role of peace, justice, and strong institutions in . . .
We conducted a qualitative study (2019–22) to contextualise Colombia's energy policy for sustainable development and renewable energy diversification, focusing on the new governance toolbox of market incentives, weak institutions, security risks in areas of limited statehood, and the role of indigenous people
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