State development through war-making Charles Tilly (1985) argues that war-making was an indispensable aspect of state development in Europe through the following interdependent functions: • War-making—rulers eliminate external rivals (requires building military forces and supportive
bureaucracies) • State-making—rulers eliminate internal rivals and establish control over their territories (requires building police forces and bureaucracies) • Protection—rulers bring about benefit to their clients by eliminating their external rivals and guaranteeing their rights (requires building courts and representative assemblies) • Extraction—rulers extract more tax from their subjects (requires building tax collection apparatuses and exchequers) Tilly summarizes this linkage in the famous phrase: "War made the state, and the state made war." Similarly, Herbst (1990) adds that a war might be the only chance to strengthen an extraction capability since it forced rulers to risk their political lives for extra revenue and forced subjects to consent to pay more tax. It is also important for state development because the increased revenue would not return to its original level even after the wars end. Contrary to European states, however, he also pointed out that most
Third World states lacked external threats and had not waged interstate wars, implying that these states are unlikely to take similar steps in the future. File:Myanmar_civil_war.svg|alt=|
Myanmar civil war File:War_in_Sudan_(2023).svg|alt=|
Sudanese civil war File:Somali Civil War (Google Live Map).svg|alt=|
Somali Civil War "Nation-building" by developed countries Steward and Knaus (2012) tackle the question "Can intervention work?" and conclude "we can help nations build themselves" by putting an end to war and providing "well-resourced humanitarian interventions". They criticize the overconfidence of policymakers on nation-building by contrasting what they regard as successful interventions in
Bosnia (1995) and
Kosovo (1999) with the failed attempt of nation-building in
Iraq (2003) and
Afghanistan (2001–2021) in which the U.S. lost thousands of lives over ten years and expended more than a trillion dollars without realizing its central objective of nation-building. When a so-called failed nation-state is crushed by internal violence or disruption, and consequently is no longer able to deliver positive political goods to its inhabitants, developed states feel the obligation to intervene and assist in rebuilding them. However, intervention is not always seen positively, but due to past intervention by for instance the U.S. government, scholars argue that the concept of a failed state is an invented rationale to impose developed states' interests on less powerful states. Labeling states like Somalia or Liberia as failed states gives
Western countries the legitimization to impose the Western idea of a stable nation-state. It is commonly accepted that nation-building or international response to troubled/rogue states happens too late or too quickly, which is due to inadequate analysis or a lack of political will. Still, it is important to highlight that developed nations and their aid institutions have had a positive impact on many failed states. Nation-building is context-specific; thus, a country's cultural-political and social environment needs to be carefully analyzed before intervening as a foreign state. The Western world has increasingly become concerned about failed states and sees them as threats to security. The concept of the failed state is often used to defend policy interventions by the West. Further, as Chesterman, Ignatieff, and Thakur argue, regarding the duration of international action by developed states and international organizations, a central problem is that a crisis tends to be focused on time, while the most essential work of reframing and building up a state and its institutions takes years or decades. Therefore, effective state-building is a slow process, and suggesting otherwise to the domestic public is disingenuous.
Promoting development through foreign aid Pritchett, Woolcock, and Andrews (2013) analyze the systematic failure of the development of failed states. They define "state administrative capability for implementation" as the key aspect of state development, and find the mechanism in which failed states stumbled regardless of decades of development practices tried, billions of dollars spent, and alleged "progress" boasted. These countries adopted the following techniques, which led to undermining it: •
systemic isomorphic mimicry—disguising the dysfunction of states by simply mimicking the appearance of functional states. •
premature load bearing—limited-capacity states being overloaded with "unrealistic expectations". In light of the fact that many of these countries would likely need centuries to reach the state capability of developed countries, they suggest creating "context-specific institutions", promoting "incremental reform process", and setting "realistic expectations" for attaining the goal of substantial development. Foreign aid produces several unintended consequences when used to develop the institutional capacity of the state. Donors will often delegate aid spending to recipient governments since they do not have the information or capacity to identify who is in the greatest need and how it can be best spent. The downside of this is that it can be captured by recipient governments and diverted either towards self-enrichment of incumbent elites or to establish and maintain clientelist networks to allow them to remain in power—for example, in Kenya, aid allocation is biased towards constituencies with high vote shares for the incumbent, so the geographic distribution of aid changes to their supporters following a change of regime. Furthermore, aid can also be diverted to non-state actors, and thus undermine the state's monopoly on violence, such as in Colombia during the 1990s and 2000s, where U.S. aid to the Colombian military was diverted by the military to paramilitary groups, leading to significant increases in paramilitary violence in municipalities located near military bases. The implication is that foreign aid can undermine the state by both feeding corruption of incumbent elites, and empowering groups outside of the state. Moss, Todd, Gunilla Pettersson, and Nicolas Van de Walle (2006) acknowledge the controversy over the effect of foreign aid that has developed in recent years. They argue that although there is a call for an increase in large aid efforts in Africa by the international community, this will actually create what they call an "aid-institutions paradox". This paradox is formed because of the large cash contributions that Western countries have given to African countries have created institutions that are "less accountable to their citizens and under less pressure to maintain popular legitimacy." Furthermore, Binyavanga Wainaina (2009) likens Western aid to colonization, in which countries believe that large cash contributions to spur the African economy will lead to political development and less violence. In reality, these cash contributions do not invest in Africa's economic, political, and social growth.
Neotrusteeship James Fearon and David Laitin suggest in "Neotrusteeship and the Problem of Weak States" that the problem of failed states can be addressed through a system of "neotrusteeship", which they compare to "postmodern imperialism". Fearon and Laitin's idea involves a combination of international and domestic organizations which seek to rebuild states. Fearon and Laitin start with the assumption that failed states comprise a
collective action problem. Failed states impose negative externalities on the rest of the international system, like refugees displaced by war. It would be a net good for the international system if countries worked to develop and rebuild failed states. However, intervention is very costly, and no single nation has a strong enough incentive to act to solve the problem of a failed state. Therefore, international cooperation is necessary to solve this collective action problem. Fearon and Laitin identify four main problems to achieving collective action to intervene in failed states: • Recruitment - getting countries to participate in and pay for interventions • Coordination - providing good communication between all of the peacekeeping countries • Accountability - ensuring that any peacekeeping countries that commit human rights abuses are held responsible • Exit - having some mechanism for the peacekeeping countries to withdraw Fearon and Laitin do propose some solutions to these problems. To solve the recruitment problem, they argue for having a powerful state with security interests in the failed state to take the lead in the peacekeeping operations and serve a point role. Having a single state lead the peacekeeping operation would help solve the coordination problem. Empowering a UN body to investigate human rights abuses would solve the accountability problem. Finally, forcing the failed state to contribute funds to peacekeeping operations after several years can reduce the incentives of the peacekeepers to exit. Fearon and Laitin believe that multilateral interventions that solve the above four collective action problems will be more effective at rebuilding failed states through neotrusteeship. Weinstein fears that international intervention may prevent a state from developing strong internal institutions and capabilities. One of Weinstein's key arguments is that war leads to peace. By this, he means that peace agreements imposed by the international community tend to freeze in place power disparities that do not reflect reality. Weinstein believes that such a situation leaves a state ripe for future war, while if war were allowed to play out for one side to win decisively, future war would be much less likely. Weinstein also claims that war leads to the development of strong state institutions. Weinstein borrows from Tilly to make this argument, stating that wars require large expansions in state capabilities, so the more stable and capable states will win wars and survive in the international system through a process similar to natural selection. Weinstein uses evidence from Uganda's
successful recovery following a guerrilla victory in a civil war,
Eritrea's forceful secession from Ethiopia, and development in
Somaliland and
Puntland—autonomous regions of Somalia—to support his claims. Weinstein does note that lack of external intervention can lead to mass killings and other atrocities, but he emphasizes that preventing mass killings has to be weighed against the ensuing loss of long-term
state capacity. == Capability traps of failed states ==