阿富汗地方警察——填补安全缺口?

IF 0.6 Q3 INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS Stability-International Journal of Security and Development Pub Date : 2015-09-07 DOI:10.5334/STA.GG
S. Vincent, Florian Weigand, Hameed Hakimi
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引用次数: 4

摘要

阿富汗地方警察(ALP)是一项国际反叛乱方案,通过在阿富汗农村社区内组建小规模的村级防御部队来发挥作用。尽管受到反叛乱目标的驱使——也就是说,寻求击败叛乱分子——但它强调利用当地人口反映了发展和安全政策圈更广泛的模式。这样的政策,反过来,通常被视为来自理论文献的主体,是重新思考政治秩序的本质在冲突撕裂的空间。然而,从表面上看,围绕工党的各种有据可查的争议表明,这种做法要“混乱”得多。通过对安达尔地区工党的案例研究,我们提出了两个主要论点。首先,围绕ALP的混乱和模糊揭示了目标和实践之间的差距,表明通过寻求利用“当地”来进行干预的工作引入了尚未完全认识到的问题。其次,然而,在解释ALP的“混乱”时,我们认为,理论驱动的工作通常被用来证明“自下而上”干预的合理性,如果认真对待,它非常适合理解甚至预测干预者寻求挖掘当地动态的所谓意想不到的后果。
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The Afghan Local Police – Closing the Security Gap?
The Afghan Local Police (ALP) was designed as an international counterinsurgency programme that works by raising small, village-level defence forces from within rural Afghan communities. Despite being driven by counterinsurgency objectives – that is, seeking to defeat insurgents - its emphasis upon harnessing local populations reflects broader fashions in development and security policy circles. Such policies, in turn, are commonly seen as emerging from a body of theoretical literature that is rethinking the nature of political order in conflict-torn spaces. At face value the range of well-documented controversies surrounding the ALP suggests, however, that the practice is much more ‘messy’. Using the case study of the ALP in the district of Andar, we make two main arguments. First, the mess and ambiguity surrounding the ALP reveal a gap between objectives and practices, suggesting that interventions that work by seeking to harness the ‘local’ introduce problems that have yet to be fully recognised. Second, however, in explaining the ‘mess’ of the ALP we argue that the theoretically-driven work that is commonly taken to justify ‘bottom-up’ interventions, if taken seriously, is well-suited to understanding and even anticipating the supposedly unexpected consequences of intervenors seeking to tap local dynamics.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.40
自引率
0.00%
发文量
3
审稿时长
11 weeks
期刊介绍: Stability: International Journal of Security & Development is a fundamentally new kind of journal. Open-access, it publishes research quickly and free of charge in order to have a maximal impact upon policy and practice communities. It fills a crucial niche. Despite the allocation of significant policy attention and financial resources to a perceived relationship between development assistance, security and stability, a solid evidence base is still lacking. Research in this area, while growing rapidly, is scattered across journals focused upon broader topics such as international development, international relations and security studies. Accordingly, Stability''s objective is to: Foster an accessible and rigorous evidence base, clearly communicated and widely disseminated, to guide future thinking, policymaking and practice concerning communities and states experiencing widespread violence and conflict. The journal will accept submissions from a wide variety of disciplines, including development studies, international relations, politics, economics, anthropology, sociology, psychology and history, among others. In addition to focusing upon large-scale armed conflict and insurgencies, Stability will address the challenge posed by local and regional violence within ostensibly stable settings such as Mexico, Brazil, Russia, India, Indonesia and elsewhere.
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