Living in the Wrong Neighbourhood: State Failure and its Implications for Neighbouring Countries

Autor/a

Fernández Gibaja, Alberto

Otros/as autores/as

Institut Català Internacional per la Pau

Fecha de publicación

2010-12-23T17:13:23Z



Resumen

Why and how do failed states affect neighbouring countries? The attention of the international community towards state failure has grown significantly in recent years, improving the understanding of this phenomenon; nevertheless, the knowledge about the influence of state failure on neighbouring countries remain scarce. This research aims at contributing to filling up the existing gap by analyzing two different cases of state failure –Liberia and Afghanistan– and its consequences on four of their neighbours –Sierra Leone, Guinea, Pakistan and Tajikistan. More concretely, this research investigates the importance of insurgency movements in the relationship between these countries. The research argues that failed states generate conflict-enhancing mechanisms –which might lead to conflict outbreak– in their neighbours through the creation of informal networks. The empiric evidence shows how insurgency-based informal networks have a decisive role in the outbreak of conflict.

Tipo de documento

Documento de trabajo

Lengua

Inglés

Materias CDU

35 - Administración pública. Gobierno. Asuntos militares

Palabras clave

Insurgència; Insurgencia; Insurgency; Relacions internacionals; Relaciones internacionales; Foreign relations; Liberia; Libèria; Afganistan; Afghanistan; Afganistán

Páginas

56 p.

638935 bytes

Colección

ICIP Working Papers; 2010/04

Documentos

WP201004_ENG.pdf

623.9Kb

 

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