Corrupting or consolidating the peace? : the drugs economy and post-conflict peacebuilding in Afghanistan / Jonathan Goodhand.

By: Material type: TextTextPublication details: 2008Description: p. 405-423 ; 30 cmSubject(s): DDC classification:
  • Pamphlet HV 5816 .G663 2008
Online resources:

Published in “International Peacekeeping” v.15, No.3, June 2008, p. 405–423.

Summary: This article examines how the drugs economy emerged, evolved and adapted to transformations in Afghanistan’s political economy. With a primary focus on the conflictual war to peace transition following the signing of the Bonn Agreement, the relationship between drugs and political (dis)order is explored. Central to the analysis is an examination of the power relationships and institutions of extraction that developed around the drug economy. Expanding upon a model developed by Snyder (2004), it is argued that joint extraction regimes involving rulers and private actors have tended to bring political order whereas private extraction regimes have led to decentralized violence and political breakdown. This model helps explain why in some parts of Afghanistan drugs and corruption have contributed to a level of political order, whereas in other areas they have fuelled disorder.