Title: Development,Peace and Security:Challenging One Dimensional Strategies
1Development,Peace and SecurityChallenging One
Dimensional Strategies
- Kevin P Clements
- To Challenging UncertaintiesThe Future of the
Netherlands Armed Forces - Clingangdael 16/12/08
2The Development,Security Peace Nexus
- Links three disparate discourses, theories and
practices together. - It makes no sense to maintain these theoretical
and practical realms as separate entities. - Holistic analysis and prescriptions combining
these perspectives is a survival imperative and
critical to successful military intervention
3Very little Theory that synthesises these
perspectives
- Development and Peacebuilding Theory
- Conflict Transformation Theory
- State/Nation Building Theory-especially the
literature dealing with fragile states, enhancing
state effectiveness etc
4Importance of Context
- Text without context is pre-text.
- Vital to understand the context within which
Mutilateral and Regional OrganisationsStates,mili
tary,NGOs/CSOs Private Sector are working. What
is the nature of the relationship between these
diverse actors and the context? - What levels are actors working at?
Micro-Meso-Macro? How conscious are the actors
of the context and vice versa?
5Micro-Macro Spectrum
- Family Unit
- Social Network/Peer Group
- Community
- Sub National Region
- Society at Large/Country
- Regional Group
- Global
- Micro Level
- Mezo Level
- Macro Level
6Contested Spaces
Regional Economy
State Roles and Responsibilities
Civil Society Roles and Responsibilities
Private Sector Roles and Responsibilities
Global Economy
7Dynamics assumed to strengthen resilience and
diminish fragility
- Provision of internal and external security
- Organisation of the legal system(s) rule of law
- Provision of basic social services
- Organisation of political representation and
decision making - Organisation of leadership
- Political will and commitment of leaders
- Organisation of socio-political
inclusion/exclusion sociopolitical networks - Organisation of accountability
- Sources of legitimacy
- Sources of citizenship/social belonging
- Perception of political order by community
- Organisation of economic activity
- Sources and management of revenues for the
fulfilment of political tasks - Organisation of personnel for fulfilment of
political tasks.
8Problematic Nature of External Intervention
- External actors have enormous trouble supporting
positive internal dynamics. - They are perceived as outsiders
- Substantial internal resistance to external do
gooders. - Many external interventions generate malign
internal consequences. - External actors cannot generate long term
internal legitimacy
9Not all States are alike
- There is a tendency to assume that all states and
peoples wish to become social democracies like
the Netherlands, NZ, the other OECD countries. - The evidence for this is slight.
- There are OECD style states, post colonial
states,of greater or lesser degrees of
effectiveness, then quite a number of states
practicing what can be called criminalised
forms of governance
10Criminalised forms of Governance
- The Corrupt state Where there are many
opportunities for corrupt activity but where
there is still some acknowledgement of the public
good. E.g Brazil, Thailand - The Mafia State where there is a vertical
integration of official crime and political
control-e.g parts of post Soviet Russia,
Milosevics Serbia, Nigeria under Abacha,
Myanmar, North Korea - Warlordism Where states are fragmented into
sub states run by political military commanders
able to amass resources and provide basic social
services security and welfare. Power determined
by control of income generating extractive
resources.
11Parallel and Neo Patrimonial States
- Briscoe defines such states as combining formal
political authority ( including rule of law, a
form of public representation,certain civic
rights and a clear hierarchy of authority) with
an informal power structure that has emerged from
the innards of the stateis organically linked to
the state and yet ..serves its own factional ,
sector based or institutional interests in
combination with organised crime networks or
armed groups
12Conditions for creating Parallel States
- They emerge from historically weak states
- Where one institution (normally the military or
intelligence service) is strong - Where globalisation has increased the range of
licit and illicit commercial opportunities, - Where dominant public issues legitimate
expert institutional intervention over
democratic practice - Where foreign powers act according to an
overarching geo- strategic logic and - Where there are transactional mechanisms that
link political rulers and parallel organisations
13External Focii on Security generates Parallel
States
- Parallel states, criminalised governance flow
from external programmes which focus primarily
on the security sphere and do not integrate the
development, peace and security agendas. - Money, arms and International Blind Eyes in the
name of a narrow security based policy will
deepen shadowy realms of the state and entrench
the problems that generate concern
14Importance of Working with the Grain of locality
- Many foreign interventions fail because they seek
to impose inapproriate institutions on complex
customs, traditional and values. - The Challenge is how to work with the grain of
locality against an understandable desire for
universal homegeneity.
15High state coercion / Legitimate order
Effective Governance / Social Peace
High social resilience
GOVERNANCE
Traditional peacemaking and control of violence
Diversified control of violence
State monopoly of violence
Positive mutual accommodation / complementarity
- WEBERIAN STATE
- legal bureaucracy
- welfare, health, education,
- representative institutions
- statutory law
- individual land titles system
- market / subsistence economy
- CUSTOMARY ORDER
- customary institutions,
- traditional leadership
- kin-based social organisation,
- customary law,
- communal land tenure,
- subsistence economy
- HYBRID POLITICAL ORDER
- partial customary institutions
- partial state institutions
- civil society
- legal pluralism
- mixed land tenure
- subsistence / market
GOVERNANCE
TYPE OF
Friction / incompatibility / non-cooperative /
confrontation
EFFECTIVENESS OF
Payback cycles of violence
Privatisation of violence
Privatisation of violence and payback cycles
Low / Ineffective / illegitimate use of state
coercion
Low social resilience
Fragile governance / Violent conflict
16Activities are Effective if they
- Increase the number of people or organisations
actively working , or speaking out for peace,(or
reduces the numbers of people actively engaged
in or promoting conflict) - Engage people in positions to make or influence
formal peace agreements in the process of doing
so.
17Activities are Effective if they
- Promote peace related activities that are able to
sustain themselves when violence worsens or
threats are made. - Establish links between leadership and the
general public by which either the leadership or
the general public communicate to the other in
ways that encourage their commitment to move
toward a settlement.
18Activities are Effective if
- Specific acts of violence are stopped (when these
acts are themselves unjust and breeders of
further violence. - They address institutional weaknesses for dealing
with conflict in non violent ways.
19Monitoring and Accountability
- Major point of all this work is to monitor the
effectiveness of the intervention and to ensure
the accountability of practitioners and
intervenors - Monitoring needs to take place with key
stakeholders at all stages of project/programme
planning and implementation cycle - Accountability needs to take place at all stages
too.