Author
Listed:
- Mailhot, Cameron
- Karim, Sabrina
Abstract
While often described as a unified process imposed by external actors on weak, conflict-ridden countries, international state building increasingly comprises a variety of actors involved in different ways in (re)building a diverse set of institutions. Civilian preferences are often excluded from this fragmented environment. We identify and explicate three dimensions along which postconflict state building meaningfully varies: the actor involved, the type of institution targeted, and the form of involvement. We then examine how variation along each dimension impacts civilians’ state-building preferences with two rounds of original survey experiments fielded in Liberia. We find that Liberians largely prefer state-building processes overseen by a subset of international actors; that they prefer state building focused on security-oriented institutions over non-security-oriented institutions; and that different forms of involvement in the process meaningfully influence their preferences. We also find that these preferences depend on civilians’ characteristics. Ultimately, we provide an initial, conceptual mapping of the diversified landscape of international state building, as well as an empirical “unpacking” of the conditions that may shape civilians’ preferences toward the process.
Suggested Citation
Mailhot, Cameron & Karim, Sabrina, 2025.
"International State Building and Civilian Preferences: Experimental Evidence from Liberia,"
International Organization, Cambridge University Press, vol. 79(3), pages 547-573, August.
Handle:
RePEc:cup:intorg:v:79:y:2025:i:3:p:547-573_6
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