弱国与全球威胁:溢出效应证据评估

Stewart Patrick
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引用次数: 52

摘要

最近捐助者对发展中国家的关注和财政资源投入背后的一个关键动机是,一方面是弱国和衰败国家之间的假定联系,另一方面是各种跨国威胁。事实上,人们普遍认为,表现不佳的国家会产生多重跨境“溢出效应”,包括恐怖主义、武器扩散、有组织犯罪、地区不稳定、全球流行病和能源不安全。令人惊讶的是,几乎没有经验证据支持这种笼统的断言。仔细观察就会发现,国家软弱与全球威胁之间的联系并不像人们通常认为的那样明确,也更加多变。“溢出效应”的类型和程度在一定程度上取决于所讨论的弱点是国家能力、意愿的函数,还是两者的结合。此外,一项初步审查表明,一些跨境威胁更有可能不是来自最弱的国家,而是来自实力较强的国家,这些国家在能力和意愿方面的差距较小,但却至关重要。制定针对弱国的有效美国和国际战略及其有时产生的跨境溢出效应,将取决于对连接这两种现象的潜在机制的更深入理解。分析人士和政策制定者面临的挑战将是更清楚地了解哪些国家应对哪些威胁负责,并相应地设计开发和其他外部干预措施。这份工作文件代表了这一方向的初步尝试,为未来的研究和政策制定提出了途径。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Weak States and Global Threats: Assessing Evidence of Spillovers
A key motivation behind recent donor attention and financial resources devoted to developing countries is the presumed connection between weak and failing states, on the one hand, and a variety of transnational threats, on the other. Indeed, it has become conventional wisdom that poorly performing states generate multiple cross-border “spillovers,” including terrorism, weapons proliferation, organized crime, regional instability, global pandemics, and energy insecurity. What is striking is how little empirical evidence underpins such sweeping assertions. A closer look suggests that the connection between state weakness and global threats is less clear and more variable than typically assumed. Both the type and extent of “spillovers” depend in part on whether the weakness in question is a function of state capacity, will, or a combination of the two. Moreover, a preliminary review suggests that some trans-border threats are more likely to emerge not from the weakest states but from stronger states that possess narrower but critical gaps in capacity and will. Crafting an effective U.S. and international strategy towards weak states and the cross-border spillovers they sometimes generate will depend on a deeper understanding of the underlying mechanisms linking these two sets of phenomena. The challenge for analysts and policymakers will be to get greater clarity about which states are responsible for which threats and design development and other external interventions accordingly. This working paper represents an initial foray in this direction, suggesting avenues for future research and policy development.
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