Abstract
Public authority beyond the state has often been seen as isolated from the state and/or constituting a threat to the state. Recent scholarship, however, has started to conceptualize state' and non-state' forms of public authority as closely connected and interdependent. This article contributes to this theoretical shift by means of a qualitative case study of public authority in Palestinian refugee camps in South Lebanon. Lebanon's Palestinian camps are routinely characterized as states-within-the-state', undermining the sovereignty of the Lebanese state. Yet, as this article demonstrates, both a generic state idea and the specific Lebanese state system constitute crucial benchmarks for the Popular Committees that govern informal Palestinian settlements. The article therefore conceptualizes the Popular Committees as twilight institutions' and explores the languages of stateness' that they adopt both communicatively, vis-a-vis Palestinian competitors, and coordinatively, vis-a-vis Lebanese counterparts. This reveals that the Popular Committees emulate the Lebanese state institutions they come into contact with, to bolster their own authority. They do this partly to be viable interlocutors for Lebanese state institutions; this suggests that the Popular Committees' non-state authority might validate rather than challenge state authority in Lebanon, and that state and non-state authority can be mutually constitutive.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 446-471 |
Number of pages | 26 |
Journal | Development and Change |
Volume | 47 |
Issue number | 3 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 1 May 2016 |
Externally published | Yes |
Keywords
- AFRICA
- GOVERNANCE
- POWER
- AUTHORITY
- PROPERTY
- REFUGEES