Fragile States on the International Agenda
Author: Louise Andersen
Date: 2008
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14 pages
(553KB)
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What are the main arguments that make up the debate about fragile states? This research from the Danish Institute for International Studies suggests that the fragile states debate is essentially about politics. Focusing on the security-development nexus and on statebuilding, it shows how the debate concerns principles that are fundamental to the way we perceive the present world order. This creates a tension between idealism and realism. There is a need to prioritise and make choices between different values.
Today, strong states are seen as a prerequisite for both human and international security. It is a state’s responsibility to ensure that its citizens are ‘free from want’ and ‘free from fear’. A more interventionist international role is also evident: if states do not live up to their responsibilities, it is the task of the more responsible members of the international community to intervene – for the sake not only of the citizens, but also of wider international peace and security. This shift has been ongoing since the end of the Cold War.
Concern for state fragility covers a broad spectrum, embracing claims that fragile states present direct threats to Western national security, alongside arguments that dysfunctional state institutions are the key obstacle to sustainable development. The debate thus links security and development communities in a claim that addressing state fragility is one of the most pressing policy questions of our time.
Beneath this broad consensus, lie a number of often contradictory perceptions of the nature of the problem and the appropriate solutions.
A core question is not whether these standards and values are universally applicable but how they can be put into practice in fragile states. Apart from this general concern, the security-development nexus frames the debate thus:
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Source:
Andersen, L., 2008, 'Fragile States on the International Agenda', Part I in Fragile Situations: Background papers, Engberg-Pedersen, L., Andersen, L., Stepputat, F., and Jung, D., Danish Institute for International Studies, Copenhagen, pp 7-20
Author:
Louise Andersen
, lan[at]diis.dk
Organisation: Danish Institute for International Studies, http://www.diis.dk