00842cam0-2200289---450 99000999325040332120200313125202.0000999325FED01000999325(Aleph)000999325FED0100099932520150907d1883----kmuy0itay50------baitaITaf------001yyNuovi scavi della necropoli cumanaE. StevensRomaCoi tipi del Salviucci188317 p., 3 c. di tav.ill.27 cmEstratto da: Notizie degli scavi del mese di agosto 1883StevensE.748505ITUNINARICAUNIMARCBK990009993250403321RARI B 291/27386FARBCFARBCNuovi scavi della necropoli cumana1497255UNINA01021nam a22002531i 450099100167579970753620031202092120.0040407s1955 sp a||||||||||||||||spa b12806699-39ule_instARCHE-078632ExLDip.to Scienze StoricheitaA.t.i. Arché s.c.r.l. Pandora Sicilia s.r.l.390Salaverria, José Maria394765Guia sentimental del Pais Vasco :libro homenaje /Jose Maria SalaverriaSan Sebastián :Biblioteca Vascongada de los Amigos del País,1955142 p. :ill. ;23 cmMonografias Vascongadas ;14Paesi BaschiUsi e costumi.b1280669902-04-1416-04-04991001675799707536LE009 GEOG.14.5-10912009000152304le009-E0.00-l- 00000.i1335446216-04-04Guia sentimental del Pais Vasco298489UNISALENTOle00916-04-04ma -spasp 0100931nam0 22002411i 450 UON0029542620231205103940.27920070521d1974 |0itac50 bamalIN|||| 1||||Marttommayute kabharitamA. Mathias Mundadan[luogo ed ed. da traslitterare]1974VIII, 128 p., 2 c. di tav.20 cmCRISTIANESIMOIndiaUONC000643FISI VII FSUBCONT. INDIANO - RELIGIONE E FILOSOFIA - ALTREAMUNDADANA. MathiasUONV170010694786ITSOL20240220RICASIBA - SISTEMA BIBLIOTECARIO DI ATENEOUONSIUON00295426SIBA - SISTEMA BIBLIOTECARIO DI ATENEOSI SI VII F 005 SI SA 63211 5 005 Marttommayute kabharitam1250634UNIOR04432nam 22005895 450 991088780180332120250807140303.09789819765997981976599410.1007/978-981-97-6599-7(CKB)36213934900041(MiAaPQ)EBC31855469(Au-PeEL)EBL31855469(DE-He213)978-981-97-6599-7(EXLCZ)993621393490004120240923d2024 u| 0engur|||||||||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierThe Afghan Patchwork State Political Ideology, Infrastructural Power, and the Critical Juncture of 1929 /by Ryan S. Brasher1st ed. 2024.Singapore :Springer Nature Singapore :Imprint: Palgrave Macmillan,2024.1 online resource (222 pages)Politics of South Asia,2523-83539789819765980 9819765986 Chapter 1: Introduction -- Chapter 2: Political Ideology in Afghanistan: The Modernist Alternative -- Chapter 3: Political Ideology in Afghanistan: Patrimonial Absolutism -- Chapter 4: 1929 as a Critical Juncture -- Chapter 5: Regime Perception of and Actions Toward Local Elites: Allies -- Chapter 6: Regime Perceptions of and Actions Toward Local Elites: Rivals -- Chapter 7: Long-Term Development of Infrastructural Power -- Chapter 8: Conclusion.This book provides a theoretically grounded and empirically fine-grained analysis of uneven state development in Afghanistan beginning in the early 20th Century. Based on archival research, the book shows that after Amanullah Shah’s abortive modernist authoritarian experiment and Habibullah Kalakani’s brief rule, a newly empowered Musahiban dynasty charted a patrimonial absolutist course. The new regime delegated considerable authority to traditional tribal areas in the southeastern and eastern part of the country, while pursuing a coercive strategy in other parts of the country that usurped traditional leadership at the regional and local levels. Previous explanations of the weakness of the Afghan state tend to emphasize structural determinants such as difficult geography, acephalous tribal organization, ethnic heterogeneity, as well as colonial interventions. Others have focused only on events after the Soviet or NATO interventions, pointing out faulty external decision-making, corrupt government officials and warlords, neighboring insurgent safe havens, or the international aid-fueled rentier economy. This book proposes an intermediate explanation for the patchwork nature of the Afghan state rooted in institutional choices made by a new ruling elite that took over in 1929. The year represents one critical juncture in Afghan history, where individual agency based on certain ideological preferences set in motion a path-dependent process that shaped its politics well into the latter half of the century. Ryan Brasher is Associate Professor of Political Science in the Department of History and Political Science at Simpson University in Redding California. His research focus is centered on ethnic identity, nationalism, political religion, and state-building in Central and South Asia. He has previously published on the construction of Tajik identity in Tajikistan and Afghanistan, on different manifestations of Political Islam in Afghanistan and Pakistan, on domestic determinants of Pakistan’s foreign policy toward its neighbors, the political attitudes of the Christian minority in Pakistan, as well as ethnic identity and assimilation of Afghan refugees in Pakistan.Politics of South Asia,2523-8353Comparative governmentWorld politicsAsiaPolitics and governmentComparative PoliticsPolitical HistoryAsian PoliticsComparative government.World politics.AsiaPolitics and government.Comparative Politics.Political History.Asian Politics.320.3Brasher Ryan S1794470MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910887801803321The Afghan Patchwork State4335147UNINA