Institutional Metamorphosis at the Intersection of Discourses: An Examination of the Conflict Between Posited Rationality and Traditional Legitimacy in Afghanistan (2001–2021)

Authors

    Abaidollah Hekmat Burhan Ph.D. student, Department of Political Science, CT.C., Islamic Azad University, Tehran, Iran
    Mojtaba Maghsoudi * Department of Political Science, CT.C., Islamic Azad University, Tehran. Iran Mojtaba.Maghsoudi@iau.ac.ir
    Katayon Sarlak Department of Political Science, CT.C., Islamic Azad University, Tehran. Iran

Keywords:

Posited rationality, discursive entropy, formal modernization, critical discourse analysis, Afghanistan

Abstract

This study aims to dissect the epistemological roots of political stagnation in Afghanistan by examining the dialectical tension between “modern posited rationality” and “premodern traditional legitimacy” during the period from 2001 to 2021. The central research question is based on the proposition of how the “regime of truth of tradition” was able to assimilate and transform the modern signifiers of modernization within civil and legal institutions, thereby generating “discursive entropy” in the state-building project. The research employs Critical Discourse Analysis (CDA), drawing upon Norman Fairclough’s three-dimensional model and Michel Foucault’s genealogical approach. The findings indicate that political modernization in post-2001 Afghanistan was reduced to a formalistic and artificially sustained process due to the incongruity between the “text of modern law” and the “traditional habitus of social agents.” The analysis demonstrates that civil and educational institutions, such as universities and the judiciary, rather than functioning as centers of transition toward Weberian rationality and a Habermasian public sphere, became arenas for the reproduction of ethnic solidarities and rigid jurisprudential interpretations. This functional transformation caused democratic concepts to be absorbed into the black hole of “neopatrimonialism,” resulting in a profound crisis of political legitimacy. Ultimately, the article concludes that the collapse of the Afghan political order in 2021 was the outcome of the dominance of “rigid traditional legitimacy” over “corrupt posited rationality,” a failure that reflects the inevitable consequence of imposed modernization undertaken without the reconstruction of the cultural and identity-based foundations of Afghan society.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

References

1. Rubin BR. Afghanistan from the Cold War through the War on Terror: Oxford University Press; 2013.

2. Rubin BR. The Afghanistan Chronicle: Twenty Years of War and Peace. Council on Foreign Relations, 2020.

3. Goodson LP. The Anatomy of Collapse: Order and Decay in Post-2001 Afghanistan: Princeton University Press; 2024.

4. Bayat Komitaki M, Nabavi S. An Explanation of the Non-Formation of the Modern State in Afghanistan. Journal of Legal Research. 2024(108).

5. Ibrahimi N. The Failure of Democratic State-Building in Afghanistan: Elite Factionalism and Ethnic Politics: Routledge; 2023.

6. Rahimi MuR. State Structure and Bureaucratic Challenges in Afghanistan. Kabul: Maiwand Publishing; 2023.

7. Yazdani AZ. Political Leaders and the Management Crisis in Afghanistan. Tehran: Shabak Publishing; 2024.

8. Adel SA. Political Discourse Analysis of Afghanistan. Kabul: Saeed Publishing; 2011.

9. Barfield T. Afghanistan: A Cultural and Political History: Princeton University Press; 2010.

10. Baha S. Free in the Wind. 4th ed. Tehran: Shabak Publishing; 2024.

11. Watanyar MN. The Apolitical Citizen: The Roots of the Afghanistan Crisis. 2025.

12. Foucault M. The Subject and Power. Critical Inquiry. 1982;8(4):777-95.

13. Fairclough N. Critical Discourse Analysis: Longman; 1995.

14. Fairclough N. Discourse and Social Change: Polity Press; 1992.

15. Fairclough N. Language and Power. 3rd ed: Routledge; 2018.

16. Wodak R. The Politics of Fear: The Analysis of Reactionary Right-Wing Discourses. 2nd ed: SAGE Publications; 2021.

17. Sigar. Why the Afghan Government Collapsed. Arlington, VA: Special Inspector General for Afghanistan Reconstruction, 2023.

18. Habermas J. Legitimation Crisis: Beacon Press; 1975.

19. Bashiriyeh H. Political Sociology. Tehran: Ney Publishing; 2006.

20. Rahimi MuR. A Critique of the Structure of the System in Afghanistan. 2nd ed. Tehran: Shabak Publishing; 2023.

21. Foucault M. The Will to Knowledge. Tehran: Ney Publishing; 2005.

22. Taylor C. Multiculturalism and the Politics of Recognition: Princeton University Press; 1994.

23. Bourdieu P. Habitus and Field: General Sociology Volume 2 (1982-1983): Polity Press; 2020.

24. Bourdieu P. Language and Symbolic Power: Harvard University Press; 1991.

25. Fukuyama F. Political Order and Political Decay: Farrar, Straus and Giroux; 2014.

26. Habermas J. The Structural Transformation of the Public Sphere. Tehran: Afkar-e Jadid Publishing; 2020.

27. Habermas J. Critique in the Public Sphere. Tehran: Ney Publishing; 2004.

28. Keshtmand SA. Political Notes. Kabul: Saeed Publishing; 2002.

29. Farhang MMS. Memoirs. 3rd ed. Tehran: SAMT Publishing; 2025.

30. Al-Rashed A. Taliban and the Mysterious Questions. 2021.

31. Giustozzi A. The Taliban Victory: Strategy, Military, and Governance: Oxford University Press; 2022.

32. Sariolghalam M. Rationality and Development. Tehran: Farzan Publishing; 2011.

33. Coburn N. Under the Surface of the Afghan State: Patronage, Corruption, and Modernity: Cambridge University Press; 2022.

34. Arefi MA. The Role of Political Culture in Political Participation in Afghanistan. Kateb Scientific-Research Quarterly. 2018(11).

35. Hotaki M. Discourse Analysis of Tradition and Modernity in Afghanistan. Tehran: SAMT Publishing; 2019.

36. Whitlock C. The Afghanistan Papers: A Secret History of the War. Tehran: Ketab-e Kooleposhti Publishing; 2022.

Downloads

Published

2027-05-01

Submitted

2026-03-12

Revised

2026-06-23

Accepted

2026-06-30

Issue

Section

Articles

How to Cite

Hekmat Burhan, A. ., Maghsoudi, M., & Sarlak , K. . (2027). Institutional Metamorphosis at the Intersection of Discourses: An Examination of the Conflict Between Posited Rationality and Traditional Legitimacy in Afghanistan (2001–2021). Journal of Historical Research, Law and Policy, 1-17. https://jhrlp.com/index.php/jhrlp/article/view/368

Similar Articles

1-10 of 190

You may also start an advanced similarity search for this article.