03477nam 2200421 450 991063778920332120230327172700.0(CKB)5470000001631645(NjHacI)995470000001631645(EXLCZ)99547000000163164520230327d2022 uy 0engur|||||||||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierFrom warlords to statelords armed groups and power trajectories in Libya and Yemen /edited by Eleonora Ardemagni, Federica Saini Fasanotti ; introduction by Paolo MagriMilan, Italy :Ledizioni,[2022]©20221 online resource (126 pages) maps88-5526-813-9 Introduction, Paolo Magri - ISPI Executive Vice President -- 1. Libya and Yemen's warlords: neopatirmonialsm under a new guise. Eleonora Ardemagni - ISPI and Catholic University of Milan -- 2. The lords of war in the changing geopolitical system. Vanda Felbab-Brown - Brookings Institution -- 3. Armed groups, oil revenue and energy infrastructure -- 3.1 Libya's Shadow Statelords: War, Peace and the Predation of the Oil Sector, Anas El-Gomati - Sadeq Institute -- 3.2 Old Elites and New Armed Groups: The Scramble Over Yemen's Oil Reserves Continues, Ahmed al-Shargabi, Mareike Transfeld - Yemen Policy Center 4. Armed groups, smuggling and illicit trafficking -- 4.1 The Lifeblood of Libya: Armed Groups' Normalisation of a Thriving Smuggling Economy, Amanda B. Kadlec - King's College London -- 4.2. Yemen: Militarised Borders Strengthen Smuggling Networks, Ahmed Nagi - Malcolm H. Kerr Carnegie Middle East Center -- 5. Libya and Yemen's governance of maritime boundaries -- 5.1 How Mafiaisation Destabilises Libya's Economy and Migration Control, Tarek Megerisi - European Council on Foreign Relations (ECFR) -- 5.2 Yemen's Coastal Lords: The Economics of "Multi-Governed" Maritime Boundaries, Eleonora Ardemagni - ISPI and Catholic University of Milan -- Conclusions: How militias became proto-governments. Federica Saini Fasanotti - ISPI and Brookings Institution -- About the authors.Armed groups play a central role in Libya and Yemen. Pervading weak and contested institutions, they have gradually brought their survival, profit and governance strategies under the state umbrella: warlords have become the new lords of the state. Armed groups control most of the energy revenues, critical infrastructure, smuggling and illicit trafficking. Their leaders are multifaceted: they are simultaneously military commanders, tribal chiefs, politicians and businessmen. Combining comparative analysis and case studies, this Report sheds light on the "economic face" of the armed groups and their power trajectories. How do armed groups build networks of profit and loyalty in the territories they hold? How does clientelism mark a continuity trend with former authoritarian regimes?From Warlords to Statelords WarlordismLibyaPolitics and governmentYemen (Republic)Politics and governmentWarlordism.364.13Ardemagni EleonoraFasanotti Federica SainMagri PaoloNjHacINjHaclBOOK9910637789203321From warlords to statelords3086441UNINA