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The Soldier and the Changing State

الجندي والدولة المتغيرة

Not Translated

Book Title The Soldier and the Changing State Author Name Zoltan Barany Publishing house Princeton University Press Country - city USA Date of issue 2012 Number of pages 472 Buy the book Translation rights

_The Soldier and the Changing State_ is the first book to systematically explore, on a global scale, civil-military relations in democratizing and changing states. Looking at how armies supportive of democracy are built, Zoltan Barany argues that the military is the most important institution that states maintain, for without military elites who support democratic governance, democracy cannot be consolidated. Barany also demonstrates that building democratic armies is the quintessential task of newly democratizing regimes. But how do democratic armies come about? What conditions encourage or impede democratic civil-military relations? And how can the state ensure the allegiance of its soldiers? Barany examines the experiences of developing countries and the armed forces in the context of major political change in six specific settings: in the wake of war and civil war, after military and communist regimes, and following colonialism and unification/apartheid. He evaluates the army-building and democratization experiences of twenty-seven countries and explains which predemocratic settings are most conducive to creating a military that will support democracy. Highlighting important factors and suggesting which reforms can be expected to work and fail in different environments, he offers practical policy recommendations to state-builders and democratizers. Zoltan Barany is the Frank C. Erwin, Jr., Centennial Professor of Government at the University of Texas and the author of _Democratic Breakdown and the Decline of the Russian Military_ (Princeton).

The Soldier and the Changing State

Bibliographic Data

Author
PublisherPrinceton University PressWebsite
Publisher Addressinfo@press.princeton.edu
CountryUSA
Also In
Published2012
Language0
Pages472 pages
Translation
Not Translated
Keywords
The Soldier and the Changing State

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