The Arnold A. Saltzman Institute of War and Peace Studies presents a book talk “The Ideology of Failed States: Why Intervention Fails” with author Susan L. Woodward, Professor, PhD Program in Political Science the Graduate Center, City University of New York.

 

What do we mean when we use the term ‘failed states’? This book presents the origins of the term, how it shaped the conceptual framework for international development and security in the post-Cold War era, and why. The book also questions how specific international interventions on both aid and security fronts – greatly varied by actor – based on these outsiders’ perceptions of state failure create conditions that fit their characterizations of failed states. Susan L. Woodward offers details of international interventions in peacebuilding, statebuilding, development assistance, and armed conflict by all these specific actors. The book analyzes the failure to re-order the international system after 1991 that the conceptual debate in the early 1990s sought – to the serious detriment of the countries labelled failed or fragile and the concept’s packaging of the entire ‘third world’, despite its growing diversity since the mid-1980s, as one.

 

Panelists:

Séverine Autesserre,

Professor of Political Science at Barnard College, Columbia University and Member, SIWPS  

Page Fortna,

Harold Brown Professor of US Foreign and Security Policy in the Political Science Department at Columbia University and Member, SIWPS

Dipali Mukhopadhyay,

Assistant Professor, SIPA and Member, SIWPS

Jack Snyder,

Robert and Reneé Belfer Professor of International Relations