2016: An Imperfect World
Social Studies
When States Falter
91ÇÑ×Ó
Introductory Questions
- How would you define a state? Are nations and states different?
- What purposes do states serve in the world?
- How different would your life be if you had been born in a different state?
- Do “perfect” states exist in the world?
- What are the “best” and “worst” states you can think of? How are you measuring them?
- Are democracies better states than non-democracies?
- What is the difference between a failed state and a fragile state?
- What do failed (and fragile) states have in common?
- How much of state failure can be attributed to politics?
- How much of state failure can be attributed to factors beyond a state’s control?
- Who should be in charge of measuring a state’s success—its citizens, or other states?
- If you were the leader of a failed or fragile state, whom would you ask for help?
- Can there be such a thing as a failed region in a successful state? How about a successful region in a failed state?
- What happens to a state after it fails? What happens to its people?
- Has globalization made states stronger or weaker?
- Do revolutions and uprisings save states, or further doom them?
- Is a failed state a failed society?
- Are some states doomed to failure?
- Is the traditional concept of the state outdated in an age of globalization and the Internet?
- Do your best to understand the current refugee crisis, also sometimes called the "Syrian" refugee crisis. Should all nations open their borders to people in need - or are nations right to reject any, many, or all of them?
Why Do Bad Things Happen to Good States?
- Factors in State Failure: Civil War | Foreign War | Economic Collapse | Natural Disasters | Climate Change | Regime Type | Leadership | Colonialism | Disease | Geography
- Select Historical Cases: Biafra | Haiti | Weimar Republic | the Roman Empire | Yemen | Libya | Zaire | Colombia | the Soviet Union | Somalia
- Potential Preventative and Restorative Measures
Total Fail? Tools for Measurement
Additional Terms to Learn (Examples)
- Weak state | Fragile state | Collapsed state | Catastrophic success
- Civil Society | Regime Type | Institutions | NGOs
- Development Agencies | Peacebuilding Commission | Post-Conflict Compacts
- Democratization | Authoritarianism | Sovereignty | Social Contract
Selected Readings & Speeches
- – Robert Kaplan
- (Book 1, Chapter 6, Pages 6-7) – Jean-Jacques Rousseau
- The Prince, Chapters & – Machiavelli
- – Thomas Hobbes
- – Jared Diamond
- – Ashraf Ghani
- – Paul Collier
Selected Film: The Lego Movie
Additional Questions & Cases to Discuss (Examples)
- Study the Fund for Peace's "" (formerly the "Failed State Index"). Why do you think the index has been renamed? Are its metrics appropriate? Where does your country fall in their rankings – and do the rankings of any states surprise you?
- How important are institutions to the success or failure of states? Consider the in the book Why Nations Fail, by Daron Acemoglu and James A. Robinson – and then read this of their argument by Jared Diamond.
- Is it the to rescue or save failed states?
- Should serve as a model for other formerly-failed states?
- Is there a —and, if so, how can a state break out of it?
- Are more likely to fail?
- ? If so, what should the focus of their efforts be?
- What can we learn from fictional failed states such as and Panem?
- Consider the . Is economics the most critical factor in state failure?
- To what degree can we ?
- Does ? Or: do failed states spawn terrorism?
- Consider the recent catastrophic . Was it the main reason for the government’s collapse – and did Ebola have a similar impact on countries in West Africa?
- Explore the Rwandan concept of . Could it be applied in other failing states?
- Is a failed state?
- Myanmar was until recently . Should the recent elections there change this perception?
- Is it premature (or too pessimistic) to label post-war ?
- Consider other recent cases of state failure such as Haiti and the Central African Republic. In rebuilding a failed state, how important are elections?
- In Silicon Valley (and beyond), a conventional wisdom has emerged that it is good for people and companies to “” in order to succeed sooner. Does the same apply to states?
