An invaluable, and urgently needed, guide to the most significant conundrum facing the contemporary Middle East: why and how are so many Arab states failed or failing entities? By examining in detail state failure in Syria, Iraq, Yemen, and Lebanon, he (Partrick) has sketched an invaluable roadmap to the political crisis that has rendered so many Arab countries hotbeds of instability, extremism, foreign meddling, terrorism and refugee flight. Anyone seeking to understand the cascading disasters in the Arab world need to look no further than this crucial volume. It is an indispensable addition to the literature on one of the worlds most important yet troubled regions, and will remain required reading for decades.
Dr Hussein Ibish, Senior Resident Scholar, AGSIW (Arab Gulf Studies Institute in Washington)
This cutting-edge study explores power contestations between nominal state and non-state actors, focusing on the Middle Easts weakest states where the genealogical lines of power relations have been broken due to civil war and external nation-building. Partrick, a foremost expert in the field, offers a sophisticated and highly informative analysis of the intricacies of state dysfunctionality which will be indispensable for scholars and policy makers.
Gabriele vom Bruck, SOAS, University of London
Collapse of the state devastates lives. Partrick looks through the eyes of people on the ground to show the dynamics of power inside and outside the state bodies of very different countries in the Middle East. This is first class research that explains clearly the events, the causes and the consequences of state failure.
Sir Richard Dalton, former UK Consul-general in Jerusalem and Ambassador to Libya and Iran
In State Failure in the Middle East, Neil Partrick examines four case studies to investigate the very meaning of statehood in the Arab world, and assesses the dynamics and features of both state dysfunctionality and state resilience. This book is an essential addition to the literature on the contemporary Arab state by a scholar deeply immersed in both the subject and the region. The extensive reliance on Arabic sources, and numerous, incisive interviews in particular, is a particular strength.
Mouin Rabbani, an analyst of the contemporary Middle East and co-editor of the ezine Jadaliyya
Neil Partrick brings his extensive experience of the Middle East to a rigorous analysis of the regions four weakest states: Lebanon, Iraq, Syria and Yemen. Combining his deep regional knowledge with on-the-ground reporting, Partrick delivers a comprehensive tour of the internal fissures weakening these failed and failing states, overlaid with a cogent explanation of outside powers influence over the conflicts and political discord that have beset all four over the past couple of decades.
His book outlines these countries principal actors and security networks, along with their linkages to, and troubles with, militias undermining central control, from the complexities of Yemens fractured state to the sectarian tensions bedevilling the political systems of Lebanon and Iraq. It also includes a timely evaluation of the rapid ouster of the Assads in Syria, where the survival of a regime dominated by a narrow clique hollowed out the state apparatus to the point where a little-noticed Islamist militant group swept into Damascus.
Simeon Kerr, Scotland Correspondent, Financial Times
One of the great puzzles of the modern world is why so many Arab states are in such a mess. How can this be when these countries have long and distinguished histories? Nowadays we see these countries divided by tribes, clans and militias, failing to build lasting institutions. Neil Partrick's book examines four such states in depth, which sheds a great deal of light on this intractable conundrum.
Anthony Harris, former British Ambassador to the United Arab Emirates and currently a businessman in the Gulf