In the summer of 2014, the Iraqi government lost control of much of the country. Insurgents — including the Islamic State of Iraq and al-Sham (ISIS), former Ba'thists, and an array of Sunni tribes — captured Mosul, and then much of western Iraq. Although complex factors lay behind these developments, this article focuses on one theme of central importance: attempts to consolidate power in Baghdad and the concomitant evisceration of Iraq's constitution. When key provisions of a very decentralizing federal constitution were ignored or violated, the blowback from disenfranchised groups in Iraq brought the country to the brink of collapse
Ever since the U.S.\u27 2003 invasion, Iraq\u27s legal system has been mired by corruption, sectaria...
This article examines the drafting process of the new Iraqi constitution, which took place in 2004 a...
This article uses Margaret Somers’ and Charles Tilly’s work on discursive approaches to identity to ...
This article examines Iraqi political developments in the last few years. It argues that unless a co...
What role did Iraq\u27s ethno-sectarian cleavages play in the process of drafting its 2005 Constitut...
This article compares Britain's failed attempt at building a stable, liberal state in Iraq from 1914...
In the last fifteen years, Iraq has been continuously described as on the brink of dissolution: its ...
On October 15, 2005 an Iraq ravaged by a civil war spawned by the 2003 American invasion and subsequ...
As the situation in Iraq continues to stabilize, the people of Iraq will turn to the task of reconst...
This article discusses the longstanding and recent intentions of the United States to include Iraq i...
In 2003, an erstwhile successful state apparatus - the security party-state of Ba`athist Iraq - coll...
Previous attempts to explain US policy towards Iraq from 2003 onwards have understood US intentions ...
This paper focuses on the US occupation of Iraq from the seizing of Baghdad in April 2003 until the ...
The University Archives has determined that this item is of continuing value to OSU's history.The me...
The article studies the rise of the Sunni Awakening (or Sahwa) movement as an example of how differe...
Ever since the U.S.\u27 2003 invasion, Iraq\u27s legal system has been mired by corruption, sectaria...
This article examines the drafting process of the new Iraqi constitution, which took place in 2004 a...
This article uses Margaret Somers’ and Charles Tilly’s work on discursive approaches to identity to ...
This article examines Iraqi political developments in the last few years. It argues that unless a co...
What role did Iraq\u27s ethno-sectarian cleavages play in the process of drafting its 2005 Constitut...
This article compares Britain's failed attempt at building a stable, liberal state in Iraq from 1914...
In the last fifteen years, Iraq has been continuously described as on the brink of dissolution: its ...
On October 15, 2005 an Iraq ravaged by a civil war spawned by the 2003 American invasion and subsequ...
As the situation in Iraq continues to stabilize, the people of Iraq will turn to the task of reconst...
This article discusses the longstanding and recent intentions of the United States to include Iraq i...
In 2003, an erstwhile successful state apparatus - the security party-state of Ba`athist Iraq - coll...
Previous attempts to explain US policy towards Iraq from 2003 onwards have understood US intentions ...
This paper focuses on the US occupation of Iraq from the seizing of Baghdad in April 2003 until the ...
The University Archives has determined that this item is of continuing value to OSU's history.The me...
The article studies the rise of the Sunni Awakening (or Sahwa) movement as an example of how differe...
Ever since the U.S.\u27 2003 invasion, Iraq\u27s legal system has been mired by corruption, sectaria...
This article examines the drafting process of the new Iraqi constitution, which took place in 2004 a...
This article uses Margaret Somers’ and Charles Tilly’s work on discursive approaches to identity to ...