Assembling security in a ‘weak state:’ the contentious politics of plural governance in Lebanon since 2005
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Abstract
Abstract: Lebanon is most often depicted as a ‘weak state’ lacking territorial sovereignty and thus fostering the proliferation of violent non-state actors that generate political instability and regional insecurity. In contrast, this essay explores the dynamics of security politics in Lebanon since 2005 through the lens of hybrid sovereignty. It shows how an assemblage of state and non-state actors has been able to navigate between rival understandings of insecurity, producing at times shared, but still contested, understandings which have sustained a system of plural governance over security that has been able to respond to a shifting geography of threats. © 2016 Southseries Inc., www.thirdworldquarterly.com.
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Hezbollah, Hybrid sovereignty, Insecurity, Isis, Lebanon, Middle east, Non-state actors, Syria, Weak state, Syrian arab republic, Governance approach, National security, Political instability, Sovereignty, Terrorism