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005 | 20240229145909.0 | ||
008 | 240229b |||||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d | ||
100 | _aCANCIAN Matthew | ||
245 |
_aInfrastructure, revenue and services: _bnon-state governance in Iraq's disputed territories/ _cMatthew Cancian and Diana B. Greenwald |
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260 | _c2022 | ||
520 | _aWhile states and non-state armed groups often engage in militarised conflict over contested territory, at other times they co-govern in a tenuous equilibrium. Using a survey of over 1,600 Kurdish soldiers (Peshmerga) and elite interviews, we investigate local variation in shared governance in one such context – the disputed territories of northern Iraq. Despite the area being under Kurdish military control, the Iraqi government continued to provide services in districts where it had pre-existing infrastructural capacity. However, in revenue-producing districts, Kurdish actors appropriated infrastructural power to provide services themselves. This illustrates that non-state governance strategies, and their outputs, can vary locally. | ||
598 | _aIRAQ, INFRASTRUCTURE, NEWARTICLS | ||
650 |
_aIRAQ _xINFRASTRUCTURE _xREVENUE _xSERVICES |
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700 | _aGREENWALD Diana B. | ||
773 | _gCivil Wars, Vol 24, Number 4, December 2022, page: 445-496 | ||
856 |
_uhttps://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/13698249.2022.2125718 _zClick here for full text |
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_2ddc _cARTICLE _n0 |
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