European University Institute Library

Effective governance under anarchy, institutions, legitimacy, and social trust in areas of limited statehood, Tanja A. Börzel, Thomas Risse

Label
Effective governance under anarchy, institutions, legitimacy, and social trust in areas of limited statehood, Tanja A. Börzel, Thomas Risse
Language
eng
Bibliography note
Includes bibliographical references and index
Illustrations
illustrationsmaps
Index
index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
Effective governance under anarchy
Nature of contents
bibliography
Oclc number
1159649284
Responsibility statement
Tanja A. Börzel, Thomas Risse
Sub title
institutions, legitimacy, and social trust in areas of limited statehood
Summary
"Areas of limited statehood are ubiquitous. Most states in the contemporary international system contain areas in which states are too weak to set and enforce rules and/or lack the monopoly of the use of force. The modern ("Western") nation-state with full control over its territory and sufficient capacity to enforce the law is the exception rather than the rule. At the same time, areas of limited statehood are neither ungoverned nor ungovernable. Some actors always engage in governance. Rebels, "traditional" authorities, companies, (I)NGOs and foreign governments seek to make rules and provide collective goods and services, such as security, human rights and the rule of law, democracy, health, education, food security, and others. Three drivers, alone or in combination, explain effective "governance under anarchy": First, the governing actors and institutions must enjoy legitimacy and social acceptance. Second, governance institutions have to be "fit for purpose," adequately resourced, as well as inclusive, fair, and transparent. Third, social trust relations among citizens and within local communities are crucial in enabling collective action capacity "under anarchy.""--, Provided by publisher
Table Of Contents
Introduction : the world is not Denmark! -- Areas of limited statehood and governance : concept and measurements -- Theorizing governance in areas of limited statehood -- Who, why, and how? Actors and modes of governance -- Security -- Human rights, rule of law, and democracy -- Welfare
Content