@article{oai:kansaigaidai.repo.nii.ac.jp:00007805, author = {Porteux, Jonson N.}, journal = {研究論集, Journal of Inquiry and Research}, month = {Mar}, note = {論文, ARTICLE, This article investigates the post-war state building experience of South Korea, with a focus on state-non-state cooperation as a process of the consolidation of power under a single coercive entity. While often presented as an outlier case in terms of state emergence, the evidence suggests that the case of South Korea fits within the broader empirical patterns and experiences of Western polities, which in turn adds robustness to existing theory. Namely, state seekers collaborated with non-state sources of violence in order to obtain and then maintain, internal supremacy. Once coercive supremacy, and thus, legitimacy, was obtained, reliance on such risky outsourcing ceased to occur under any systematic level.}, pages = {13--26}, title = {Emergence of Leviathan : Monopolization of Violence in a Post-Colonial State}, volume = {107}, year = {2018} }