Rule and Rupture 2017
DOI: 10.1002/9781119384816.ch1
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Rule and Rupture: State Formation through the Production of Property and Citizenship

Christian Lund

Abstract: Christian Lund and how this ought to be the centre of analysis of the formation of political authority. Finally, I provide two concise examples from Ghana and Indonesia. THE ARGUMENT Dynamics of State Formation and Institutional Pluralism Treating the 'state' as a finished product gets in the way of understanding it. The state is always in the making. Political authority is (re-)produced through its successful exercise over an important issue in relation to the social actors concerned. 2 To move beyond the mer… Show more

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Cited by 31 publications
(45 citation statements)
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References 99 publications
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“…I make this argument through close study of hitherto largely unstudied state records at the Directorate of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Libraries and Archives in Peshawar, an original documentary archive of the MKP's bulletins and literature assembled from remaining party members throughout Pakistan, and oral histories that I collected over 4 months of ethnographic fieldwork in Charsadda district. My study brings these sources into conversation with the emerging literatures on the intersections of state formation and subnational variation (Naseemullah & Staniland, ), agrarian contestation (Lund & Boone, ; Lund & Eilenberg, ), and the roles played “not only by elites but also by the masses” (Vu, , p. 149; see also Slater, ).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 90%
“…I make this argument through close study of hitherto largely unstudied state records at the Directorate of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Libraries and Archives in Peshawar, an original documentary archive of the MKP's bulletins and literature assembled from remaining party members throughout Pakistan, and oral histories that I collected over 4 months of ethnographic fieldwork in Charsadda district. My study brings these sources into conversation with the emerging literatures on the intersections of state formation and subnational variation (Naseemullah & Staniland, ), agrarian contestation (Lund & Boone, ; Lund & Eilenberg, ), and the roles played “not only by elites but also by the masses” (Vu, , p. 149; see also Slater, ).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 90%
“…For example, after South Africa's drafting of a new constitution, Kenya and Tanzania also initiated massive debates about new developmental constitutions in which human rights frameworks are used as references. The continuous state formation needs legitimacy by citizens and vice versa (Lund and Eilenberg 2017). Similarly, states depend at least partly on the overwhelming numbers of investors in self-supply who vote.…”
Section: Contribution To Global Debatesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Legal recognition (by institutions) is not “legalistic” per se, rather it means the recognition of rights to citizenship and territory by an institution and reciprocal recognition of its authority by subjects (Lund, , p. 1206). As Lund () notes, the core element of both the right to property and the right to citizenship is recognition. Citizenship is an apparatus of inclusion and exclusion – it is a key way of extending the “right to have rights,” as Arendt put it.…”
Section: Toward a Decolonial Theory Of Legal And Intersubjective Recomentioning
confidence: 99%