Institutional Change in the Absence of the Rule of Law and Market Mechanisms

This paper outlines and evaluates the nature of terrorism as perpetrated by alQaeda. To begin it graphs the institutional blueprint of society, and identifies the ubiquitous relationship between state, market and culture in any society. It goes on to describe how private markets and cultures are har...

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Veröffentlicht in:Public choice 2006-07, Vol.128 (1/2), p.197-219
1. Verfasser: Bradley, Anne E. Rathbone
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:This paper outlines and evaluates the nature of terrorism as perpetrated by alQaeda. To begin it graphs the institutional blueprint of society, and identifies the ubiquitous relationship between state, market and culture in any society. It goes on to describe how private markets and cultures are harmed and diminished by the relative expansion of the state. At some stage in this relative expansion, private markets and cultures simply collapse. At this point, a societal backlash ensues. al-Qaeda, in this sense, is the modem day coup d'etat against the overwhelming power of an over-extended autocracy. The paper evaluates this hypothesis through an institutional examination, largely focused on Saudi Arabia, the initial homeland of Osama bin Laden, the highly effective leader of al-Qaeda, and current home to the world's largest financial contributors to the cause of al-Qaeda. Understanding the specific and purposeful institutional nexus from which al-Qaeda has emerged must be a first step in any systematic attempt to reduce the terrorist threat that it poses.
ISSN:0048-5829
1573-7101
DOI:10.1007/s11127-006-9049-5