소개글
[국제관계론] Failed States and Ethnic Conflicts(영문)에 대한 자료입니다.
목차
Failed states in a World of Terror
The Clash of Civilizations?
The Clash of Ignorance
Security dilemma and ethnic conflict
Discussion questions
본문내용
Failed states in a World of Terror
The Clash of Civilizations?
The Clash of Ignorance
Security dilemma and ethnic conflict
Discussion questions
Having failed at some of the basic conditions and responsibilities of a sovereign government
Loss of physical control of its territory
Erosion of legitimate authority to make collective decisions
Inability to provide reasonable public services
Inability to interact with other states
International Security relies on states to protect against chaos at home and limit the cancerous spread of anarchy beyond their borders and throughout the world
→ States exist to deliver political goods to
their inhabitants
Strong States
-------------------------------
Control their territories
Deliver high order of political goods
Perform well in per capita GDP
High levels of Security
Ensure political freedom and civil liberties
Create environments conductive to the growth of economic opportunity
Places of peace and order
Strong States
-------------------------------
Control their territories
Deliver high order of political goods
Perform well in per capita GDP
High levels of Security
Ensure political freedom and civil liberties
Create environments conductive to the growth of economic opportunity
Places of peace and order
Failed States
-------------------------------
Rise in criminal and political violence
Loss of control over their borders
Declining levels of GDP per capita
Rising ethnic, religious, linguistic, and cultural hostilities
Civil War
Use of terror against their own citizens
Weak institutions
Collapsed health system
Basic food shortage, leading to starvation
Basic differences among civilizations
Smaller world
Economic modernization and social change separate people from local identities
The dual role of the west
less mutable, less easily compromised than political and economical ones
Increasing Economic regionalism