The state of the art of the art of state building.
Wesley, Michael
From Sierra Leone to Solomon Islands, developed powers have
undertaken a range of state-building interventions in the early years of
this century. Two influences appear to shape the emerging state of the
art on state building: conceptions about the nature of the state in the
developed world; and the postcolonial sensitivities and practicalities
that attend the project of intervention. After examining the imperatives
driving interventions in fragile states, I explore the remarkable
consistency among approaches to state building applied by different
states and coalitions in different contexts. I then examine the
imperatives driving this convergence of approaches and conclude with
some observations tracing the difficulties of contemporary interventions
to the current dominant approach to state building. KEY-WORDS: state
building, intervention, fragile states, development, transnational
security, sovereignty.
The past decade has seen the states and international agencies
hesitantly assume an increasingly hands-on role in trying to stabilize
states beset by or prone to internal conflict. The imperative of dealing
with "weak," "failing," or "fragile"
states, and the reluctance with which most interventions are undertaken,
has led commentators to coin a range of terms, from
"Empire-lite" (1) to "neotrusteeship" and
"postmodern imperialism." (2) Yet these terms suggest a
coherence of policy approach that belies the ad hoc pattern of
interventions; despite several attempts to quantify state dysfunction
and to rank fragile states, (3) there is little evidence that the
project of state building is being approached in a systematic manner,
that those states at most risk of collapse are being priortized. (4) But
while there is no apparent logic to where interventions occur, there is
an emerging pattern to how state building is being undertaken by Western
states and Western-dominated development agencies. (5) I contend that
there are two influences shaping the emerging state of the art on state
building: conceptions about the nature of the state in the minds of
policymakers in the developed world; and the postcolonial sensitivities
and practicalities that attend the project of state-building
interventions.
My argument proceeds in four parts. After examining the imperatives
driving interventions in fragile states, I explore the remarkable
consistency among approaches to state building applied by different
states and coalitions in different contexts. I then examine the
imperatives driving this convergence of approaches and conclude with
some observations tracing the difficulties of contemporary interventions
to the current dominant approach to state building.
The Rise of International Concern with Fragile States
The stampede to decolonization between 1945 and 1975 was
underpinned by several dominant norms. One was that, as imperial
administrations packed up and left, the state form would take their
place, leaving imperial demarcations unchallenged. Another was what
Robert Jackson called the doctrine of "negative sovereignty":
that these new states were given international assurance of their status
as sovereign states irrespective of their capacity to govern their
people and territory as a viable state unit. (6) Granted sovereign
status and at least in theory freed from the pressures of predatory
power politics, it was expected that, in time, the internal attributes
of state function and control--Jackson's "positive
sovereignty"--would develop within new states. "Modernization
theory" gave voice to this teleology: the widespread expectation
that, given the requisite resources and advice, economic development and
political maturity would come to postcolonial states along the same
trajectories as had developed in Western Europe and North America.
Negative sovereignty, postcolonial sensitivities, Cold War geopolitics,
and modernization theory expectations combined to produce a
disinclination in developed states to take too close an interest in the
internal affairs of developing states--confining themselves to regime
change when client states' foreign policy alignment started to
waver. (7)
But by the 1980s, this tolerant agnosticism had begun to wane amid
growing convictions that the inadequacies or pathologies within
postcolonial states had an impact beyond the borders of the states
concerned, and that there were perhaps unacceptable costs associated
with waiting for new states to develop of their own accord. Humanitarian
tragedies, rooted in smoldering conflicts and the venality of indigenous
elites, became significant causes among Western publics. As the
performance gap between successful and unsuccessful former colonies
grew, the conviction began to spread among academics and officials that
the problems of the worst-performing states were not transitional but
structural. The developed world and development agencies moved through
stages of concern about the economic management, quality of democracy,
protection of human rights, and standards of governance in developing
states. (8) Over time, as it has grown increasingly concerned about the
internal workings of developing states, the developed world has become
more insistent and interventionary in its responses: from advice, to aid
conditionality, to direct physical intervention.
The end of the Cold War offered the opportunity to address a range
of conflicts within developing countries. The instrument of choice was
the United Nations, which oversaw cease-fires and brokered peace
agreements in Namibia, Nicaragua, EI Salvador, Angola, Mozambique,
Cambodia, and Western Sahara. UN missions enacted increasingly complex
mandates, from supervising the disarmament and demobilization of
combatants to overseeing elections, conducting postconflict
reconstruction, and supporting the development of state institutions.
Despite the ambition of their mandates, the early post-Cold War
interventions remained true to the original intention of UN peacekeeping
missions: that it was the task of the intervention to "hold the
ring" while an indigenous peace agreement emerged, or to help
implement a peace agreement that had been already hammered out among the
belligerents (9) Even the ill-fated interventions in Somalia and Bosnia
were conceived in line with this model as attempts to ameliorate
humanitarian crises and provide a measure of stability while the
belligerents were encouraged to come to a peace agreement.
Four developments combined to increase the urgency of responses to
violence-prone developing states. One was sheer impatience with the
obduracy of belligerents in the Balkans and a frustration that the
international community could be kept waiting while humanitarian
atrocities continued. The NATO air campaigns against Serbia in September
1995 and March 1999 saw the West's policy of "holding the
ring" while a peace agreement emerged shift toward imposing a
cease-fire and coercing the belligerents toward a peace agreement.
Concurrently, a new advocacy of muscular cosmopolitanism developed
within academic communities and international organizations. Scholars
argued strongly that humanitarian crises imposed exceptions to
injunctions to nonintervention and sovereignty, (10) while a series of
UN reports, from Agenda for Peace to the Report of the International
Commission on Intervention and State Sovereignty, advanced the argument
that sovereignty is conditional on the discharge of certain
responsibilities by the state and that the international community has a
"responsibility to protect" those suffering from humanitarian
abuses. (11)
The second development was a growing awareness and discussion of
what many in the development community began to call the "aid
paradox": that wealth, productivity, and levels of poverty had
worsened in a large number of developing states despsite many years of
development aid. Spearheaded by the World Bank and the Development
Assistance Committee of the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and
Development (OECD), development officials began a series of studies and
discussions intended to increase the effectiveness of aid. As these
considerations progressed, they increasingly focused on the internal
governance of developing states, and a growing consensus emerged,
culminating in the World Bank's landmark 1997 World Development
Report. (12) But initial policy responses, which attempted to improve
governance through aid conditionality, had a net negative effect. Over
time, the linking of aid to governance reforms had the effect of
starving the poorest states of development aid. Britain's
Department for International Development estimates that "even
taking account of their poor performance, fragile states have received
43% less aid than would have been appropriate given the extent of
poverty within them." (13) Encouraging governance reforms through
conditions and incentives was clearly making things worse for the
poorest states.
The third development was the Asian financial crisis of 1997-1998.
A run on the Thai but in July 1997 became a regional financial contagion that brought many of Asia's most dynamic economies to their knees
and threatened to tip the global economy into a bout of chronic
deflation. The Asian crisis caused a broad perceptual shift in thinking
about globalization, alerting academics and policymakers to the fact
that advancing economic and communications integration offered not only
prosperity but vulnerability as well. Many of the diagnoses of the
crisis argued that it was weak and corrupt governance within the
affected states that had driven the contagion. The renewed focus on
governance was accompanied by the implication that poor governance was
not just a local concern, when an increasingly integrated global economy
could see the results of local turbulence cascading through world
markets. These economic concerns soon extended to the spread of HIV/AIDS
and other infectious diseases, unchecked migration, and growing concern
with climate change. (14)
The fourth development, the September 11 attacks, reinforced the
underlying perception that poorly governed states constituted weaknesses
in the fabric of international society, and that the developed world had
a considerable self-interest in helping strengthen their governance
capacities. Al-Qaida's decision to base itself in Afghanistan gave
birth to the failed state as a vogue term; according to the US Agency
for International Development (USAID), "the events of September 11,
2001 profoundly demonstrated the global reach of state failure."
(15) The "failed" or "fragile" state shifted
security thinking from focusing on concentrations of state power to
worrying about zones of state powerlessness, where transnational threats
can incubate and transit while exploiting the interdependence of a
globalized world to attack developed societies. It simply reinforced
thinking that fragile states could no longer be dealt with at arm's
length with aid and advice: there was a new imperative for developed
states to address the most dangerous sites of state weakness.
The Imperatives of State Building
The rise of concern with governance and fragile states has seen the
traditional term nation building replaced by state building. The concept
of nation building harks back to the beginnings of the decolonization
process, to the belief that new governments would build not only
infrastructure, economies, and political institutions, but also an
emotional attachment to the new state among the often disparate ethnic
groupings of former colonies. Nation building denotes a big, complex,
and interlinked project, a shaping of economy, polity, and society into
a condition of positive sovereignty. The concept of state building is
much more narrowly defined. It focuses closely on the institutions of
the state--primarily the bureaucracy--with a view to increasing their
integrity and efficiency and shaping them in ways that will have
positive effects on the economy, society, and politics. State building
sends a strong signal that the project is strictly limited in scope and
technical in nature. It advertises the intent that the intervention will
either leave local political processes and elites intact or replace them
quickly through a transparent electoral process. State building denotes
both a willingness of the international community to impose peace and
oversee some form of conflict resolution, and a desire to disengage as
quickly as possible from political and social processes and focus on the
technocratic task of reforming state institutions.
The concept of state building carries within it assumptions of what
a completed state looks like, that in the end "all states are
constituted and function in the same way." (16) A survey of
developed countries' position papers on fragile states reveals a
remarkable similarity among their conceptions of state function and
priorities for addressing state failure. (17) With minor variations in
emphasis, state-building frameworks concentrate on what are argued to be
the key themes of state function: security and the rule of law;
transparent and efficient bureaucratic institutions; the provision of
essential services to the population; the operation of democratic
processes and norms; and the fostering of the conditions for market-led
development. These frameworks mirror what interventions seek to achieve
in practice. The operations in Kosovo, East Timor, the Democratic
Republic of Congo, Afghanistan, Liberia, and Solomon Islands have been
given mandates to successively prioritize those functions they see as
most crucial to state functionality, and to use progress on the more
basic functions as benchmarks for concentrating more heavily on the next
phase. (18) This tiered approach has three broad phases: the first
concentrates on security, order, and the provision of humanitarian
assistance; the second focuses on building effective, efficient, and
transparent systems of public administration; and the third concentrates
on strengthening the rule of law, promoting democratic processes and
norms, and fostering the conditions for free-market-driven growth. In
parallel with the development of a common "recipe" for state
building, various international agencies and NGOs have developed a range
of measures designed to help measure progress on the various aspects of
state building. (19)
Four broad influences have driven this convergence of approaches to
state building. One is what Michael Ignatieff discerns as a form of
imperial narcissism at the heart of the state-building enterprise, a
"desire to imprint our values, civilisation and achievements on the
souls, bodies and institutions of other people," (20) and a belief
that making fragile states more like developed, Western states will
improve the lot of their people. Understandings of properly functioning
states are drawn from self-understandings and commitments held by
policymakers in the developed world. There is evidence of the strong
influence of Max Weber's conception of the elements of the state,
as well as dominant understandings about the process of the emergence of
the modern state through the stages of the consolidation of force and
the imposition of order; the transition from coercive to administrative
capacity; and, finally, the evolution of a collective civic identity and
broad understandings of political legitimacy and civil rights centered
on the state. (21) State building rests on the beliefs that the state as
a political form can be transferred across all cultures and contexts
and, crucially, that the long and bloody process of state building
experienced in Europe and North America can be both truncated and
sanitized by those who hold the blueprints of the final product. The
philosophy of state building is that external actors will initially
supply what are taken to be the crucial attributes of the
state--coercion, capacity, legitimacy, and capital--with the intention
of transferring these attributes of "stateness" to an
indigenous sovereign center of political accountability over time. (22)
A second factor relates to time. Ignatieff argues that
"effective imperial power requires controlling the subject
people's sense of time." (23) The distinctive form of modern
state building emerges from the need to manipulate the sense of time of
key stakeholders in different, and often contradictory, ways. On the one
hand, there are audiences who require assurances that the intervention
has clear time limits. Publics in both intervening and inter-vened-in
states are sensitive to open-ended commitments and overtones of
neocolonialism, respectively. Governments contemplating weak states are
faced with what James Fearon and David Laitin see as a classic
collective action problem:
Given the dangers posed by collapsed states and rogue regimes in a
world with WMD, open economies, and easy international travel, all
would benefit from political order and responsible (if possible,
democratic) governments in the periphery. But the costs to provide
effective support for political order and democracy after a state
collapses often exceed the expected benefits for any one power. (24)
The Brahimi Commission on United Nations peacekeeping found that
the willingness of states to endorse interventions is rarely matched by
a commitment to a comprehensive project. (25) To gain the support of
governments for state building, officials usually must reassure them
that the interventions they support are limited in scope and have clear
exit strategies linked to progress against measurable performance
indicators. Another reason for signaling the finite nature of the
intervention is to discourage the particular form of moral hazard associated with state building: that the greater efficiency of service
provision achieved by the intervention will be a disincentive to the
local population in developing its own capacities for service delivery.
(26) On the other hand, state-building missions must send signals that
they are determined to stay for as long as it takes to get the job done.
Leading officials in state-building missions report that their ability
to build local "constituencies for reform" depends on their
ability to reassure the population that the intervention is not a
Band-Aid response but is committed to the long-term improvement of
governance. (27) It is also necessary to create the illusion of
permanence among those in the political elite who oppose the
intervention, who would be encouraged by a clear exit date simply to sit
out the intervention, unreformed, and resume old modes of operation
after its departure.
A third consideration is an aversion to appearances of
neocolonialism. A narrow focus on the technocratic tasks of reforming
bureaucratic institutions has the benefit of avoiding, as much as is
possible by an intervention, resonances of neocolonialism. The
state-building mission, by demonstrating that it wishes to operate
alongside an indigenous, representative government--either left intact
by the intervention or rapidly constituted through a representative
process sponsored by the intervention--sends a clear signal that it is
there to render technical advice, not to meddle in the politics of the
society. As I argue in the following section, remaining apolitical is
easier in theory than in the messy reality of a state-building context.
Many officials involved in state building also believe that the task of
imparting efficient bureaucratic practices and redesigning institutions
is much more achievable than trying to reform the processes of political
representation and power in many societies. And in the context of
presenting home governments and local political elites with clear exit
strategies, it is regarded as being much easier to develop performance
indicators measuring the progress of bureaucratic reforms than of
political reforms.
One final mechanism of convergence comes from within the modalities
of state-building interventions. The steady rate of state-building
interventions since 1999 has generated a cadre of international planning
and operational personnel who move from one intervention to the next,
applying familiar diagnoses of the problems of state failure and similar
frameworks of response to often dissimilar situations. (28) There is
also an active, conscious process of transmission of the lessons of
state building between states and international organizations, as the
various fragile state centers set up within the OECD and national
governments (29) have developed regular processes of information and
research exchange. This convergence of understandings and frameworks has
become increasingly important as more state-building interventions are
undertaken by nonconventional coalitions of agencies and states, often
without the central policy coordination capacities of traditional UN
missions. While the UN has led missions such as those in East Timor and
the Democratic Republic of Congo, regional organizations such as the
African Union and the European Union have led missions to Burundi and
Sudan, and Macedonia, respectively; "coalitions of the
willing" have been formed to undertake pacification and state
building in Solomon Islands and Haiti; and individual countries such as
Australia, France, and the United Kingdom have intervened in Papua New
Guinea, Cote d'Ivoire, and Sierra Leone, respectively. (30) Another
emerging practice is for regional powers to lead "hybrid
operations," which combine elements of the United Nations, regional
alliances such as NATO, and other willing states; the missions in
Afghanistan and Kosovo are examples. (31) These are an attempt to
combine "critical mass" in the form of highly effective
military contributions with the legitimacy supplied by international
organizations and a range of smaller, more neutral states.
Approaches to State Building
The understandings about the state held by those who plan and
execute state-building missions are also shaped by their own experiences
as officials who have participated in the two decades of reforms that
most Western states have undergone. These reforms have seen the
institutions and practices of the Keynesian welfare state pared back
toward a model of what has been termed the "regulatory state."
(32) The regulatory state withdraws government from the economy and many
areas of service provision, shifting the role of the state from that of
generating social and economic outcomes to that of establishing, through
regulation, the appropriate conditions for social, political, and
economic forces to generate desirable outcomes. Increasingly,
"government departments (or nominated agencies or self-regulatory
bodies) now regulate the provision of services (setting down standards,
monitoring for compliance and enforcing) through the instruments of
statutory regulation and contract." (33) In this conception, the
state becomes an independent variable, shaping desirable outcomes
indirectly through establishing parameters of acceptable conduct and
manipulating incentives. The state is conceived as separate from the
distinct spheres of the economy, politics, and society, each of which,
in Friedrich Hayek's terms, are seen to be constituted as
"spontaneous orders," with an inner, autonomous dynamism. (34)
The philosophy of the regulatory state is that government's role is
to foster the inherent dynamism within the economic, political, and
social spheres in positive directions, not to attempt to replace those
forces or compete with them in creating desired outcomes.
The imperatives of constructing the regulatory state are even more
pressing in an age of globalization. The danger of cascading turbulence,
be it economic contagion or the spread of violent jihad, increases the
imperative to bring the standards of regulation to uniform, high
standards across all jurisdictions. Well-regulated states will prosper
in the age of globalization, (35) while the "disconnected"
will fall further behind; (36) meanwhile, malevolent transnational
actors will flow naturally to the low points of regulation. (37)
Consequently, both by experience and by what they see as the imperatives
of international security, state-building interventions are inclined to
construct regulatory states within their "patients." Getting
the regulatory state "right" is seen as the key to achieving
all other objectives, and this informs the patterns and sequencing of
objectives in state-building interventions.
Security is given absolute priority, reflecting a Weberian
understanding of the essence of stateness as the monopoly of the means
of legitimate violence and a Hobbesian belief that a pervasive state of
insecurity makes all other human activity impossible. The imperative of
intervening states and organizations is to protect their own personnel
first and foremost, especially in situations where sections of the
population may have an incentive to attack foreign personnel. Violence
is also the most visible manifestation of state failure: making rapid
progress in quelling instability and disarming militants is important
for mission morale and the domestic legitimacy of the exercise in the
intervening states. In the Balkans and elsewhere, the security mandate
has carried implicitly the requirement to keep the state together
against the will of secessionist groups, asserting not just peace but
peaceful multiculturalism against antagonists with an interest in
violent ethnic separation.
Humanitarian relief is also a pressing concern, reflecting both a
belief that a basic state function is the welfare of its citizens as
well as a concern to end human suffering. Missions are also keen to
deliver a rapid "peace dividend" to a pacified society, in the
form of obvious benefits accruing to the whole population from the
cessation of hostilities, to forestall public disillusion and discontent
that can complicate the mission's operating environment and even
see a return to disorder. (38) There is a realization, however, that
humanitarian assistance is a short-term solution: one scholar has
observed that Bosnians have received more assistance per capita than
Europe under the Marshall Plan, but this has still not resulted in a
stable or effective state that would be able to oversee its welfare on a
sustainable basis. (39) This often leads to an impatience to move on to
the second state-building phase of the intervention, leading at times to
a diversion of resources and attention from the tasks of humanitarian
relief.
The second priority is to build effective and transparent systems
of public administration. Francis Fukuyama attributes this to a belief
that it is state strength, "the ability to enact statutes and to
frame and execute policies; to administer public business with relative
efficiency; to control graft, corruption and bribery; to maintain high
levels of transparency and accountability in governmental institutions;
and most importantly, to enforce laws," that is crucial to
effective state functioning. (40) This phase often sees officials from
international agencies and developing countries placed both in line
positions within the recipient state's bureaucracy and in advisory
roles, with the intention that this will lead not only to the imparting
of basic administrative skills and culture, but also to enduring
institutional links. In other situations, such as the missions in
Bosnia, Kosovo, and East Timor, administrative functions are discharged
by the mission itself, and locals are trained and recruited to take over
administrative functions. Significant emphasis is given to inculcating
public servants with bureaucratic culture and knowledge of
administrative regulations and role delimitations. Training is provided
in merit selection procedures; effective leadership skills; the
tracking, monitoring, and storage of documents and records; and
communications within the public service and between the public service
and political leaders. There is a strong focus on institutional design,
or redesign, reflecting the belief that institutions shape outcomes.
Bolstering the strength, efficiency, and integrity of the bureaucracy is
seen to be the best way to stabilize the state against volatility within
politics, society, and the economy and to foster long-term stability and
reform in those spheres. Combating corruption is also a priority. Action
against corruption is thought to have a supply-side
component--"improving investigation and enforcement capacities
(such as audit), strengthening key government systems (such as
procurement) and building a professional bureaucracy"--and a
demand-side component--"supporting community organisations and the
media that create demand for transparent and accountable government
processes, decision making and delivery of basic services." (41)
The third priority is strengthening the rule of law, promoting
democratic processes and norms, and fostering the conditions for
free-market-driven growth. Following the OECD Development Assistance
Committee Principles for Good International Engagement in Fragile
States, this has both a supply-side and a demand-side component:
"State-building rests on three pillars: the capacity of state
structures to perform core functions; their legitimacy and
accountability; and ability to provide an enabling environment for
strong economic performance to generate incomes, employment and domestic
revenues. Demand for good governance from civil society is a vital
component of a healthy state." (42) On the supply side, the
promotion of democratic processes and norms is driven by a focus on
designing and writing constitutions and setting up safe, transparent,
and efficient electoral processes. On the demand side, civic education
programs are intended to develop a broad "constituency for
reform," informed about what elected representatives are supposed
to deliver and empowered to demand their rights as citizens. A parallel
preoccupation is to build local "ownership" of reform,
ensuring that people and groups acquire a stake in building and
reforming state capacities. The difficulty here is that this process can
become highly political. (43)
Another strong preference is for designing appropriate regulatory
frameworks for private sector-led economic growth. According to the OECD
Development Assistance Committee Principles for Good International
Engagement in Fragile States, a key pillar of state functionality is an
"ability to provide an enabling environment for strong economic
performance to generate incomes, employment and domestic revenues."
(44) In Fukuyama's schema, this involves restricting state scope
with the intention of removing state impediments to free-market growth.
(45) This, as well as programs designed to improve government financial
oversight and audit procedures, and treasury, inland revenue, customs,
payroll, and debt management processes, are intended to build market
confidence and stimulate inflows of foreign investment to the local
economy.
Imbuing the whole menu of state-building actions is a
liberal-materialist understanding of human motivation and the role of
the state. State legitimacy, the attachment of the majority of citizens
to the state, is seen as flowing ultimately from the state's
effectiveness, "the capability of the government to work with
society to assure the provision of order and public goods and
services." (46) Through its reformed governance institutions, the
state will acquire "performance" legitimacy over time,
particularly among a population that has developed numerous
"constituencies for reform," with clear ideas of what they are
entitled to expect from government. The state as the ensurer of basic
service provision is paired with a population focused on rights and
welfare to create a dynamic of reform that will build a strong state.
Consequences and Implications
Despite the clarity of the state-building blueprint and the
investment of billions of dollars over years in state building, there is
little evidence that the new, hands-on state-building project is any
more effective than the old, arm's-length approaches to nation
building. In Iraq and Afghanistan, the state-building missions face
rising insurgent violence. In East Timor and Solomon Islands, until
recently considered "poster children" for successful state
building, unresolved tensions led to serious rioting in early 2006.
Bosnia and Kosovo appear no closer to self-administration than they did
in 1999, and the state of the Democratic Republic of Congo appears as
fragile as it was before the original intervention. The problems
encountered by the state-building project offer an important lens on the
adequacy of Western conceptions of the state and the challenges of state
consolidation in the post-colonial and postcommunist world.
A common theme that emerges from the track records of
state-building operations is that they remain vulnerable to ongoing
turbulence in the political sphere, despite intervention efforts to
build stable systems of public administration and constituencies for
reform. From Iraq and Afghanistan to Kosovo and Bosnia, intervention
forces are trapped by the realization that if they withdraw,
unreconciled hatreds in the political sphere, unresolved resentments in
the economic sphere, and unreformed traditions in the social sphere will
tear apart the imposed order and state frameworks. The intention of
remaining aloof from politics while concentrating on technocratic
reforms has proved unrealistic. (47) Even seemingly technocratic tasks
confront international administrators with essentially political
decisions: the nature and basis of elections; which pressure groups to
consult; the reintegration or de facto separation of ethnic communities;
school curricula; degrees of public ownership of enterprises; the status
of women; and so on. (48) However technocratic their intention,
state-building missions inevitably find themselves factored into local
rivalries. As agents of reform, interventions cannot fail to incur the
opposition of those in the political elite that were benefiting from the
previous system.
The crucial failure in the state-building blueprint would appear to
lie in its very conception of the state as an independent variable,
ideally divorced from politics, economics, and society. The
"failing state" label tends to delegitimize local politics as
venal and disruptive, as the problem to be addresed. (49) As a
consequence, the process of state building relies heavily on the
expectations of international agencies and officials rather than on
working with indigenous understandings and expectations of political
authority. (50) To be sustainable, agreement on the nature of the state
must arise from existing social forces and understandings, from
"real interests and clashes of interest which lead to the
establishment of mechanisms and organisational rules and procedures
capable of resolving and diffusing disagreements." (51) Rather than
treating local politics as the source of political institutions,
international advisers rely on their own political understandings and
commitments and their belief in the power of institutions to shape
political behavior, rather than vice versa. (52)
Implicit in Western understandings of the functioning state and the
failed state are beliefs that there are legitimate cleavages within
society--such as those that separate people on the basis of
socioeconomic status and interest--and illegitimate cleavages, such as
those based on ethnic or religious identity. Competition between groups
based on ethnic or religious identifiers tends to be seen as
destabilizing factionalism to be suppressed by the law-and-order
elements of the intervention rather than as natural expressions of
society to be integrated into understandings of the state and processes
of government.
It also appears that the process of building the state's
"performance legitimacy" as a provider of basic services has
been less successful than was hoped. State-building interventions have
varied widely in both the scope of state functions and attributes
addressed, and the level of authority assumed by intervening agencies
over these functions--from the extensive in scope and authority (Kosovo,
East Timor) to the highly limited (Papua New Guinea, Haiti). None have
been able to escape broad popular perceptions that the very necessity of
intervention corrodes the legitimacy of the indigenous state. Among
Solomon Islanders, for instance, there is strong support for the
intervention's ability to improve the condition of ordinary people,
as well as a widespread belief that it is only the mission's
presence that is keeping the largely unreformed state and security
institutions in check. It appears highly unrealistic to expect local
institutions of state to compete for performance legitimacy with large,
well-funded interventions--even if the interventions themselves have no
intention of entering such a competition.
Whether a state can come to be seen as legitimate solely or even
predominantly on the basis of its effectiveness in providing basic
services to its population also needs to be questioned. The bitterness
of struggles over state control and definition are hardly likely to
arise over an institution that is primarily a provider of services.
Rather, legitimate states are seen by their societies as expressions of,
in Eric Voegelin's terms, either an existential, or a transcendant,
or an immanent truth. (53) In other words, the process of state building
can never be simply a technocratic exercise of providing institutional
design and imparting sound bureaucratic techniques. It is mistaken to
conceive of the state as separate from the political, economic, and
social spheres; a legitimate, stable state can only emerge from the
dominant understandings, compromises, and categories arising from within
these spheres of human activity. Imposing a conception of state arising
from the understandings and compromises of other societies promises to
leave behind little more than an anemic, imposed structure that is
vulnerable to both disruption from the inside and exploitation from the
outside. This does not bode well for the success of contemporary
state-building missions.
The design of effective responses to fragile states demands a
rethinking of the dominant preconceptions about the state held by most
officials in development agencies and Western states, and a fundamental
rethinking of the nature of the state and the processes that attend its
emergence and consolidation. The first step needs to be an
acknowledgement that a broad variation in the state form already exists
and will continue to emerge in the coming decades. A bottom-up
understanding of state formation--accepting that stable and effective
states must emerge from within the traditions, compromises, and
conflicts particular to the political, economic, and social spheres of
each society--needs to replace a top-down belief that a single blueprint
for effective state design can be exported and imposed at will. There
are already signs that this realization is spreading among officials
involved with state-building missions, who argue that much more needs to
be understood about "context" when designing state-building
interventions. The crisis of contemporary state-building missions may
swing the pendulum back toward holding the ring--alleviating suffering
and violence while an indigenous solution to conflict emerges--that
characterized early post--Cold War interventions. Or the pendulum may
swing in novel directions, combining a reshaping of state institutions
with deeper involvement in the shaping of local political processes.
Such approaches will undoubtedly be prolonged and frustrating and
provoke all of the impatience of developed democracies, but the record
shows that they have a greater success rate than current approaches to
state building.
Notes
Michael Wesley is professor of international relations and director
of the Griffith Asia Institute at Griffith University, Australia. He is
editor of the Australian Journal of International Affairs. His most
recent books are Energy Security in Asia and The Howard Paradox:
Australian Diplomacy in Asia 1996-2006. The author wishes to thank the
officials with whom the spoke in the preparation of this article, as
well as Victoria Wheeler, Sue Graves, Martin Griffiths, and an anonymous
reviewer for their helpful suggestions.
(1.) Michael Ignatieff, Empire Lite: Nation-Building in Bosnia,
Kosovo and Afghanistan (London: Vintage, 2003).
(2.) James D. Fearon and David Laitin, "Neotrusteeship and the
Problem of Weak States," International Security 28, no. 4 (Spring
2004).
(3.) Robert I. Rotberg, ed., When States Fail: Causes and
Consequences (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2004); "The
Failed States Index," Foreign Policy 149 (July-August 2005).
(4.) The World Bank's work on low-income states under stress
has begun to develop an impressive database; see
http://web.worldbank.org/WBSITE/EXTERNAL/PROJECTS/STRATEGIES/EXTLICUS/0,,menuPK:511784~pagePK:64171540~piPK:64171528~theSitePK:511778,00.html;
see also the University of Maryland's Polity Project, available at
www.cidcm.umd.edu/polity/data.
(5.) Japanese, Chinese, and Russian approaches to development aid
rarely engage with development aid forums or institutions; these states
appear to have much less concern with the conditions of governance in
the states to which they give aid.
(6.) Robert H Jackson, Quasi-States: Sovereignty, International
Relations and the Third World (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press,
1990).
(7.) The exception being France, which considered itself bound by
continuing responsibilities to its former colonies, especially in West
Africa, and continued a pattern of interventions there.
(8.) Michael Wesley, "Towards a Realist Ethics of
Intervention," Ethics and International Affairs 19, no. 2 (2005).
(9.) Michael Wesley, Casualties of the New World Order: The Causes
of Failure of UN Missions to Civil Wars (Basingstoke: Macmillan, 1997).
(10.) See, for example, Nicholas J Wheeler, Saving Strangers:
Humanitarian Intervention in International Society (Oxford: Oxford
University Press, 2000); Matthew Perault, "Moving Beyond Kosovo:
Envisioning a Coherent Theory of Humanitarian Intervention,"
Journal of Public and International Affairs 16 (Spring 2005); Clifford
Orwin, "Humanitarian Military Intervention: Wars for the End of
History?" Social Philosophy and Policy 23, no. 1 (Winter 2006).
(11.) Boutros Boutros-Ghali, An Agenda for Peace: Preventive
Diplomacy, Peacemaking and Peace-keeping, Report of the
Secretary-General (New York: United Nations, 1992); The Responsibility
to Protect: Report of the International Commission on Intervention and
State Sovereignty (Ottawa: International Development Research Centre for
ICSS, 2001); Ramesh Thakur, "Intervention, Sovereignty and the
Responsibility to Protect: Experiences from ICSS," Security
Dialogue 33, no. 3 (2002); Anne-Marie Slaughter, "Security,
Solidarity and Sovereignty: The Grand Themes of UN Reform,"
American Journal of International Law 99, no. 3 (July 2005).
(12.) World Bank, World Development Report 1997 (Washington, DC:
World Bank, 1997).
(13.) United Kingdom Department for International Development, Why
We Need to Work More Effectively with Fragile States, DFID, January
2005, p. 5.
(14.) My thanks to an anonymous reviewer for this point.
(15.) US Agency for International Development (USAID), Fragile
States Strategy (Washington, DC: USAID, January 2005), p. 1.
(16.) Morten Boas and Kathleen M. Jennings, "Insecurity and
Development: The Rhetoric of the 'Failed State,'"
European Journal of Development Research 17, no. 3 (September 2005).
(17.) Documents I have reviewed include those from the United
States (USAID, Fragile States Strategy); the United Kingdom (United
Kingdom Department for International Development, Why We Need to Work
More Effectively with Fragile States); Canada (Canadian International
Development Agency, On the Road to Recovery: Breaking the Cycle of
Poverty and Fragility: Guidelines for Effective Development Cooperation
in Fragile States, November 2005); and Australia (Ian Anderson, Fragile
States: What Is International Experience Telling Us? AusAID, June 2005).
(18.) See, for example, the mandates contained in UN Security
Council Resolutions 1244 (1999) on Kosovo; 1272 (1999) on East Timor;
1279 (1999) and 1565 (2004) on Democratic Republic of Congo; 1386 (2001)
on Afghanistan; and 1497 (2003) on Liberia. On the Solomon Islands
intervention, see Policy Statement on the Offer by the Government of
Australia of Strengthened Assistance to Solomon Islands, 2003 (Honiara:
Solomon Islands Government, 2003).
(19.) For measuring progress on governance in general, see, for
example, www.worldbank.org/wbi/governance/data.html; for security and
law and order, see www.undp.org/governance/cd/documents/717.pdf, and
www4.worldbank.org/legal/legalr/access.html; for provision of services
and infrastructure, see http://devdata.worldbank.org/query/default.htm,
http://unstats.un.org/unsd.mi/mi_goals.asp, and
www.adb.org/Statistics/default.asp; for a positive environment for
market-led development, see www.doingbusiness.org,
www.transparency.org/policy_research/surveys_indices/cpi, and
www.heritage.org/research/features/index/downloads.cfm#scores; for
poverty relief, see www.chronicpoverty.org/pdfs/ CPR l%20FINAL/CPRfinCH
11 stats.pdf.
(20.) Ignatieff, Empire Lite, p. 42.
(21.) Toby Dodge, "Iraq: The Contradictions of Exogenous
State-Building in Historical Perspective," Third World Quarterly
27, no. 1 (2006).
(22.) Barnett R. Rubin, "Peace Building and State Building in
Afghanistan: Constructing Sovereignty for Whose Security?" Third
World Quarterly 27, no. 1 (2006).
(23.) Ignatieff, Empire Lite, p. 121.
(24.) Fearon and Laitin, "Neocolonialism and the Problem of
Weak States," p. 13.
(25.) United Nations, Report of the Panel on Peace Operations (New
York: United Nations, 21 August 2000).
(26.) Tarcisius Tara Kabutaulaka, "Australian Foreign Policy
and the RAMSI Intervention in the Solomon Islands," Contemporary
Pacific 17, no. 2 (2005).
(27.) See, for example, Nick Warner, "Operation Helpem Fren:
Rebuilding the Nation of Solomon Islands," speech presented at the
National Security Conference, 23 March 2004, Canberra.
(28.) For example, Simon Chesterman, "East Timor in
Transition: Self-Determination, State-Building and the United
Nations," International Peacekeeping 9, no. 1 (Spring 2002): 62.
(29.) The OECD has set up a Fragile States secretariat within the
Development Assistance Committee; the United States has appointed a
special coordinator for reconstruction and stabilization; and
Britain's Department for International Development and
Australia's Agency for International Development have each set up
Fragile States units.
(30.) See Jane Boulden, ed., Dealing with Conflict in Africa: The
United Nations and Regional Organisations (Basingstoke: Palgrave, 2004);
Michael Pugh and Waheguru Pal Singh Sidu, eds., The United Nations and
Regional Security: Europe and Beyond (Boulder: Lynne Rienner, 2003).
(31.) Fearon and Laitin, "Neocolonialism and the Problem of
Weak States," p. 28.
(32.) See Cass R. Sunstein, "Paradoxes of the Regulatory
State," University of Chicago Law Review 57, no. 2 (Spring 1990);
Giandomenico Majone, "The Rise of the Regulatory State in
Europe," West European Politics 17, no. 3 (1994); Martin Loughlin
and Colin Scott, "The Regulatory State," in Patrick Dunleavy,
Ian Holliday, Andrew Gamble, and Gillian Peele, eds., Developments in
British Politics, vol. 5 (Basingstoke: Macmillan, 1997); Michael Moran,
"The Rise of the Regulatory State in Britain," Parliamentary
Affairs 54 (2001): 19-34.
(33.) Colin Scott, "Regulation in the Age of Governance: The
Rise of the Post-Regulatory States," National Europe Centre Paper
No. 100, Australian National University, 6 June 2003, p. 4.
(34.) Friedrich A Hayek, Law, Legislation and Liberty: A New
Statement of the Liberal Principles of Justice and Political Economy,
vol. 1 (London: Routledge, 1982), p. 52.
(35.) Commonwealth of Australia, Advancing the National Interest,
Australia's Foreign and Trade Policy White Paper, Canberra, April
2003.
(36.) Thomas P. M. Barnett, The Pentagon's New Map (New York:
Putnam, 2004).
(37.) Richard N. Haass, "The Changing Nature of
Sovereignty," lecture to Georgetown University's School of
Foreign Service, Washington, DC, 14 January 2003.
(38.) Manuel Ennes Ferreira, "Development and the Peace
Dividend Insecurity Paradox in Angola," European Journal of
Development Research 17, no. 3 (September 2005).
(39.) Simon Chesterman, You, the People: United Nations,
Transitional Administration and State Building (Oxford: Oxford
University Press, 2004).
(40.) Francis Fukuyama, "The Imperative of
State-Building," Journal of Democracy 15, no. 2 (April 2004): 22.
(41.) Australian Agency for International Development, Annual
Report, 2003-2004 (Canberra: AusAID, 2004), p. 6.
(42.) Development Assistance Committee, "Piloting the
Principles for Good Engagement in Fragile States," DAC Fragile
States Concept Note, 17 June 2005.
(43.) My thanks to an anonymous reviewer for this point.
(44.) Development Assistance Committee, "Piloting the
Principles for Good Engagement in Fragile States."
(45.) Fukuyama, "The Imperative of State-Building."
(46.) USAID, Fragile States Strategy, p. 3.
(47.) Robert Jackson, "International Engagement in War-Torn
Countries," Global Governance 10, no.1 (January-March 2004): 27.
(48.) Caplan, "International Authority and State
Building," p. 54.
(49.) Mark Duffield, "Social Reconstruction: The Reuniting of
Aid and Politics," Development 48, no. 3 (2005).
(50.) For example, Tanja Hohe, "The Clash of Paradigms:
International Administration and Local Political Legitimacy in East
Timor," Contemporary Southeast Asia 24, no. 3 (December 2002);
Chesterman, You, the People.
(51.) Chandler, "Peace Without Politics?" p. 309.
(52.) See David Chandler, Constructing Global Civil Society:
Morality and Power in International Relations (Basingstoke: Palgrave,
2004).
(53.) Eric Voegelin, The New Science of Politics (Chicago:
University of Chicago Press, 1952), pp. 49, 54, 59.