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- Title
The Failures of Neo-Liberal State Building in Iraq: Assessing Australia's Post-Conflict Reconstruction and Development Initiatives.
- Authors
Hassin, Ahmed; Isakhan, Benjamin
- Abstract
This article examines Australia's post-conflict reconstruction and development initiatives in Iraq following the intervention of 2003. Overall, it finds that Australia privileged the neo-liberal model of post-conflict state building by investing in projects that would enhance the capacity of the new Iraqi state, its key institutions and the private sector towards the imposition of a liberal democracy and a free-market economy. To demonstrate, this article documents the failures of the Australian government's stated aims to 'support agriculture' and 'support vulnerable populations' via interviews conducted in Iraq with rural farmers and tribal members and those working in, or the beneficiaries of, Iraq's disability sector. It concludes by noting that such failures are not only indicative of the inadequacy of the neo-liberal state building model, but also that these failures point the way forward for future post-conflict reconstruction and development projects which ought to be premised on a genuine and sustained commitment to addressing the needs of those made most vulnerable by war and regime change.
- Subjects
IRAQ; POSTWAR reconstruction; NATION building; NEOLIBERALISM -- Social aspects; AGRICULTURE; AUSTRALIAN participation in the Iraq War, 2003-2011; DEMOCRACY; IRAQI politics &; government, 2003-; AUSTRALIAN politics &; government, 1945-; INTERNATIONAL cooperation; TWENTY-first century; HISTORY
- Publication
Australian Journal of Politics & History, 2016, Vol 62, Issue 1, p87
- ISSN
0004-9522
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1111/ajph.12209