Pathways to State Failure
Author: Jack Goldstone
Date: 2008
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13 pages
(100 KB)
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How does state failure come about, and how can donors help to prevent it? This article from Conflict Management and Peace Science identifies five pathways to state failure: escalating ethnic conflicts, state predation, regional guerrilla rebellion, democratic collapse, and succession/reform crises in authoritarian states. Each involves changes in the legitimacy and effectiveness of regimes; state failure happens when a state loses both effectiveness and legitimacy. Donors should keep both factors in mind to avoid the problems that arise when states focus on one to the exclusion of the other.
To remain stable, a state must possess both effectiveness and legitimacy. Effectiveness relates to the state’s ability to perform functions while legitimacy reflects whether its actions are accepted as reasonable by its population. A state that possesses high levels of one characteristic or the other can survive for years but is inherently unstable.
State failure is often analysed using an institutional approach in which long-standing characteristics and conditions provide insight into the specific failings of the present context. These institutions, however, are not easily changed. Therefore it is necessary to analyse failing states to identify those institutions that contribute most significantly toward promoting or undermining state stability. Such an analysis yields several common pathways to institutional failure that, while not comprehensive, can enable earlier recognition of state failure as it unfolds:
Responding to state failure is difficult because of the myriad variables and interests involved. Nevertheless, by focusing on state effectiveness and legitimacy the analysis above provides some general guidelines for interventions:
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Source:
Goldstone J., 2008, 'Pathways to State Failure', Conflict Management and Peace Science, vol. 25, no. 4, pp. 285-296
Author:
Jack Goldstone
, jgoldsto@gmu.edu