有选择的统治权:利比亚的干预和权力认证

IF 2.3 3区 社会学 Q1 INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
Debora Valentina Malito
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引用次数: 0

摘要

重建国家的失败通常是从局部的宗派纷争角度进行研究的,很少有人了解外部干预是如何改变国家权威的。然而,国际干预如何促进权威的形成?我认为,权威认证具有双重治疗/毒化潜力,可产生选择性的统治权。通过分析 2011 年至 2016 年利比亚冲突中的承认政治,本文解读了国际干预三个阶段(政权更迭、民主化和调解)的合法性认证和取消认证机制。我认为,认证通过使国内势力合法化来促进主权的模拟,而国内势力则利用认证来加强其权力主张。通过将对认可政治的关注与对权威制造机制的过程导向视角相结合,我提出了认证作为政治秩序重构工具的概念。从理论上讲,我将选择性统治权定义为一种经过外部过滤的权利,这种权利来自于塑造复杂权力斗争的认证实践。在经验方面,我展示了认证体系如何在 2011 年后进一步分裂利比亚。北约的介入分散了政权更迭所必需的军事力量,而联合国领导的民主化和调停努力则助长了制度性的僵局,从而帮助了对立的军事和政治力量,加强了不同的权力主张。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

A selective right to rule: interventions and authority certifications in Libya

A selective right to rule: interventions and authority certifications in Libya

Failures in rebuilding states have generally been studied in terms of localised, sectarian strife, with little comprehension of how external interventions alter state authority. Yet, how do international interventions contribute to authority-making? I argue that authority certifications hold a twofold cure/poisoning potential producing a selective right to rule. By analysing the politics of recognition in the Libyan conflict between 2011 and 2016, this article unpacks mechanisms of legitimacy certification and decertification throughout three stages of international intervention (regime change, democratisation, and mediation). Certifications, I argue, promote a simulacrum of sovereignty by legitimising domestic forces, who then utilise certification to enhance their claim to power. By combining a focus on recognition politics with a process-oriented perspective on the mechanics of authority-making, I advance the notion of certification as a tool for political re-ordering. Theoretically, I define a selective right to rule as an externally filtered entitlement resulting from certification practices that shape complex power struggles. Empirically, I demonstrate how certification systems further divided and split Libya after 2011. While NATO’s involvement dispersed the military strength essential for regime change, UN-led democratisation and mediation efforts fueled an institutional limbo that aided rival military and political powers, bolstering divergent authority claims.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.60
自引率
5.90%
发文量
33
期刊介绍: JIRD is an independent and internationally peer-reviewed journal in international relations and international political economy. It publishes articles on contemporary world politics and the global political economy from a variety of methodologies and approaches. The journal, whose history goes back to 1984, has been established to encourage scholarly publications by authors coming from Central/Eastern Europe. Open to all scholars since its refoundation in the late 1990s, yet keeping this initial aim, it applied a rigorous peer-review system and became the official journal of the Central and East European International Studies Association (CEEISA). JIRD seeks original manuscripts that provide theoretically informed empirical analyses of issues in international relations and international political economy, as well as original theoretical or conceptual analyses.
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