The Failed
States Index (para leerlo completo:
http://www.foreignpolicy.com/story/cms.php?story_id=3098 )
By FOREIGN POLICY & the Fund for Peace
July/August 2005
About 2 billion people live in countries that are in danger of
collapse. In the first annual Failed States Index, FOREIGN POLICY
and the Fund for Peace rank the countries about to go over the brink.
America is now threatened less by conquering states than we are by
failing ones.” That was the conclusion of the 2002 U.S. National
Security Strategy. For a country whose foreign policy in the 20th
century was dominated by the struggles against powerful states such
as Germany, Japan, and the Soviet Union, the U.S. assessment is
striking. Nor is the United States alone in diagnosing the problem.
U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan has warned that “ignoring failed
states creates problems that sometimes come back to bite us.” French
President Jacques Chirac has spoken of “the threat that failed
states carry for the world’s equilibrium.” World leaders once
worried about who was amassing power; now they worry about the
absence of it.
Failed states have made a remarkable odyssey from the periphery to
the very center of global politics. During the Cold War, state
failure was seen through the prism of superpower conflict and was
rarely addressed as a danger in its own right. In the 1990s, “failed
states” fell largely into the province of humanitarians and human
rights activists, although they did begin to consume the attention
of the world’s sole superpower, which led interventions in Somalia,
Haiti, Bosnia, and Kosovo. For so-called foreign-policy realists,
however, these states and the problems they posed were a distraction
from weightier issues of geopolitics.
Now, it seems, everybody cares. The dangerous exports of failed
states—whether international terrorists, drug barons, or weapons
arsenals—are the subject of endless discussion and concern. For all
the newfound attention, however, there is still uncertainty about
the definition and scope of the problem. How do you know a failed
state when you see one? Of course, a government that has lost
control of its territory or of the monopoly on the legitimate use of
force has earned the label. But there can be more subtle attributes
of failure. Some regimes, for example, lack the authority to make
collective decisions or the capacity to deliver public services. In
other countries, the populace may rely entirely on the black market,
fail to pay taxes, or engage in large-scale civil disobedience.
Outside intervention can be both a symptom of and a trigger for
state collapse. A failed state may be subject to involuntary
restrictions of its sovereignty, such as political or economic
sanctions, the presence of foreign military forces on its soil, or
other military constraints, such as a no-fly zone.
How many states are at serious risk of state failure? The World Bank
has identified about 30 “low-income countries under stress,” whereas
Britain’s Department for International Development has named 46
“fragile” states of concern. A report commissioned by the CIA has
put the number of failing states at about 20.
To present a more precise picture of the scope and implications of
the problem, the Fund for Peace, an independent research
organization, and FOREIGN POLICY have conducted a global ranking of
weak and failing states. Using 12 social, economic, political, and
military indicators, we ranked 60 states in order of their
vulnerability to violent internal conflict. (For each indicator, the
Fund for Peace computed scores using software that analyzed data
from tens of thousands of international and local media sources from
the last half of 2004. For a complete discussion of the 12
indicators, please go to www.ForeignPolicy.com or
www.fundforpeace.org.) The resulting index provides a profile of the
new world disorder of the 21st century and demonstrates that the
problem of weak and failing states is far more serious than
generally thought. About 2 billion people live in insecure states,
with varying degrees of vulnerability to widespread civil conflict.
The instability that the index diagnoses has many faces. In the
Democratic Republic of the Congo or Somalia, state failure has been
apparent for years, manifested by armed conflict, famine, disease
outbreaks, and refugee flows. In other cases, however, instability
is more elusive. Often, corrosive elements have not yet triggered
open hostilities, and pressures may be bubbling just below the
surface. Large stretches of lawless territory exist in many
countries in the index, but that territory has not always been in
open revolt against state institutions.
Conflict may be concentrated in local territories seeking autonomy
or secession (as in the Philippines and Russia). In other countries,
instability takes the form of episodic fighting, drug mafias, or
warlords dominating large swaths of territory (as in Afghanistan,
Colombia, and Somalia). State collapse sometimes happens suddenly,
but often the demise of the state is a slow and steady deterioration
of social and political institutions (Zimbabwe and Guinea are good
examples). Some countries emerging from conflict may be on the mend
but in danger of backsliding (Sierra Leone and Angola). The World
Bank found that, within five years, half of all countries emerging
from civil unrest fall back into conflict in a cycle of collapse (Haiti
and Liberia).
The 10 most at-risk countries in the index have already shown clear
signs of state failure. Ivory Coast, a country cut in half by civil
war, is the most vulnerable to disintegration; it would probably
collapse completely if U.N. peacekeeping forces pulled out. It is
followed by the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Sudan, Iraq,
Somalia, Sierra Leone, Chad, Yemen, Liberia, and Haiti. The index
includes others whose instability is less widely acknowledged,
including Bangladesh (17th), Guatemala (31st), Egypt (38th), Saudi
Arabia (45th), and Russia (59th).
Weak states are most prevalent in Africa, but they also appear in
Asia, Eastern Europe, Latin America, and the Middle East. Experts
have for years discussed an “arc of instability”—an expression that
came into use in the 1970s to refer to a “Muslim Crescent” extending
from Afghanistan to the “Stans” in the southern part of the former
Soviet Union. Our study suggests that the concept is too narrow. The
geography of weak states reveals a territorial expanse that extends
from Moscow to Mexico City, far wider than an “arc” would suggest,
and not limited to the Muslim world.
The index does not provide any easy answers for those looking to
shore up countries on the brink. Elections are almost universally
regarded as helpful in reducing conflict. However, if they are
rigged, conducted during active fighting, or attract a low turnout,
they can be ineffective or even harmful to stability. Electoral
democracy appears to have had only a modest impact on the stability
of states such as Iraq, Rwanda, Kenya, Venezuela, Nigeria, and
Indonesia. Ukraine ranks as highly vulnerable in large part because
of last year’s disputed election.
What are the clearest early warning signs of a failing state? Among
the 12 indicators we use, two consistently rank near the top. Uneven
development is high in almost all the states in the index,
suggesting that inequality within states—and not merely poverty—increases
instability. Criminalization or delegitimization of the state, which
occurs when state institutions are regarded as corrupt, illegal, or
ineffective, also figured prominently. Facing this condition, people
often shift their allegiances to other leaders—opposition parties,
warlords, ethnic nationalists, clergy, or rebel forces. Demographic
factors, especially population pressures stemming from refugees,
internally displaced populations, and environmental degradation, are
also found in most at-risk countries, as are consistent human rights
violations. Identifying the signs of state failure is easier than
crafting solutions, but pinpointing where state collapse is likely
is a necessary first step.
Fueling Failure
The Failed States Index
By FOREIGN POLICY & the Fund for Peace Page 1 of 1
July/August 2005
The discovery of large oil and gas reserves has been a boon to many
national economies, and countries often spend decades trying to
strike it rich. But is black gold actually good for stable
government?
Political scientists have coined the term “petrostate” to describe a
country that is dependent on income from oil and gas yet plagued by
weak institutions, a poorly functioning public sector, and a gross
disparity of power and wealth. Some experts have argued that large
oil economies often stunt the development of stable, transparent
institutions—a phenomenon that has been labeled the “resource
curse.” José Ramos-Horta, the foreign minister of East Timor, has
openly worried that his small country might not be able to handle
the temptations that will arise when it begins to exploit its
offshore oil and gas fields with Australia’s help. “While oil and
gas revenues can be a blessing,” Ramos-Horta has said, “we are
conscious that our public administration, our Treasury, and other
branches of government are very weak.”
The index suggests that many states with oil and gas are indeed
vulnerable. Iraq, home to the world’s second-largest oil reserves,
is the fourth most vulnerable country, although the causes of its
instability are manifold. Chad, which has negotiated a major oil
pipeline deal with private companies and the World Bank, is the
seventh most vulnerable. Oil-rich Venezuela, under the mercurial
leadership of President Hugo Chavez, is 21st.
Most of the energy-rich states, however, are clustered toward the
back of the index, indicating that they are vulnerable but have also
managed to craft and preserve a semblance of stability. These states—Saudi
Arabia, Indonesia, Bahrain, and Nigeria, among others—have filled
their coffers with oil money. But those funds may come at a steep
political cost.
http://www.foreignpolicy.com/story/cms.php?story_id=3098