From Kinshasa to Kandahar

Canada and Fragile States in Historical Perspective

Edited by Michael K. Carroll, Greg Donaghy
Contributions by Stephanie M. Bangarth, Duane Bratt, Darren Brunk, Hevina S. Dashwood, Jean Daudelin, Tom Keating, Stephen Saideman, Julian Schofield, Kevin Spooner, Andrew Thompson, and David Webster
Series: Beyond Boundaries: Canadian Defence and Strategic Studies Series
Publisher: University of Calgary Press
Paperback : 9781552388440, 304 pages, May 2016
Ebook (PDF) : 9781552388464, 304 pages, May 2016
Ebook (EPUB) : 9781552388471, 304 pages, May 2016
Ebook (Kindle) : 9781552388488, 304 pages, May 2016

Table of contents

 

Introduction
Michael K. Carroll and Greg Donaghy

1. Responding to Failed and Fragile States: The Evolution of Canadian Policy
Tom Keating

2. Present at the Creation? Canada, United Nations Intervention, and the Congo as a Failed Sate, 1960–64
Keven A. Spooner

3. The Politics of African Intervention: Canada and Biafra, 1967–70
Stephanie Bangarth

4. Failing Fragile States: Canada and East Timor
David Webster

5. Entangled: Canadian Engagement in Haiti, 1968–2010
Andrew S. Thompson

6. Diagnostic Confusion and Missed Opportunities: Canada and Pakistan?s "Failed State"
Julian Schofield

7. Bosnia: From Failed State to Functioning State
Duane Bratt

8. Six Years in Kandahar: Understanding Canada?s Multidimensional Effort to Build a Sustainable Afghan State
Stephen M. Saideman

9. Canada and Fragile States in the Americas
Jean Daudelin

10. Corporate Social Responsibility in Fragile and Stable States: Dilemmas and Opportunities in South Sudan and Ghana
Hevina S. Dashwood

11. Conclusion
Darren Brunk

Contribution
Bibliography
Index

Description

Failed or fragile states are those that are unable or unwilling to provide a socio-political framework for citizens and meet their basic needs. They are a source of terrorism and international crime, as well as incubators of infectious disease, environmental degradation, and unregulated mass migration. Canada's engagement with countries such as the Congo, East Timor, Bosnia, and Afghanistan underlines the commitment of successive Canadian governments to addressing the threats posed to Western security by state fragility.

From Kinshasa to Kandahar: Canada and Fragile States in Historical Perspective brings together leading Canadian historians and political scientists to explore Canada's historic relationship with fragile states. The collection spans the period from the 1960s to the present and covers a geographical range that stretches from the Middle East to Latin America to Southeast Asia. Authors embrace a variety of approaches and methodologies, including traditional archival historical research, postmodern textual analysis, oral history, and administrative studies to chronicle and explain Canada's engagement with fragile and failed states.

This collection reflects the growing public interest in the issue of failed states, which are of increasing concern to Canadian policymakers and are making headlines on the world stage. It helps explain the historic forces that have shaped Canadian policy towards failed and fragile states, and provides a platform for a national discussion about Canada's future role addressing state fragility.

With contributions by:

Stephanie M. Bangarth
Duane Bratt
Darren Brunk
Hevina S. Dashwood
Jean Daudelin
Tom Keating
Stephen Saideman
Julian Schofield
Kevin Spooner
Andrew Thompson
David Webster