Archive for the ‘Congo’ tag
The great mysteries of our time
Here’s one of the great mysteries of our age: why, despite the hundreds of millions of dollars spent on peacekeeping, peace deal negotiations, democracy promotion, humanitarian aid, development assistance, and celebrity awareness-raising, is the eastern Democratic Republic of Congo still an anarchic war zone?
TiA goes on to cite research by Severine Autesserre1 that suggests the answer lies in the false assumptions that dominate the international efforts to bring peace to the Congo, and the way that those assumptions shape their actions. There’s some truth to that, obviously, but such research runs into three problems:
- This research is almost entirely counterfactual, which means that while we can definitively say that what was tried did not work, we can’t with any authority say that what was not tried would have worked any better. Possibly the research (and book, apparently) goes beyond that, but it’s paywalled, so no comment is possible.
- Conflicts are complex, while almost all of our interventions are linear. Not only will linear interventions frequently fail in complex situations, but they will also a) generate unintended consequences which will increase complexity, and b) work against other linear interventions being attemptedĀ in other geographic and sectoral areas.
- Finally and most importantly, the question of why all those activities failed to bring peace might have a much simpler (if unpalatable) answer. Perhaps those activities don’t work very well, if they work at all, and perhaps we don’t have anything close to a good enough understanding of those activities to make them work well even if they do work.
Assumptions abound on all sides:one commenter says “At least the elections have reaffirmed Congolese territorial integrity, which seems to me a major step forward”, which of course is true only if you think reaffirming Congolese territorial integrity is a good thing in the first place. Some parts of the research make good points but for the wrong reason:
Autesserre discusses the ridiculous overemphasis on holding elections that permeated the international community’s response to the conflict. This, she argues, resulted from post-Cold War norms. Elections were the “obvious” or “natural” choice for statebuilding and the way to guarantee international peace.
I agree that elections are ridiculously overemphasised by the international community – the only people who’d disagree with that statement are people already working in the booming elections industry. The growth of that industry tells us all we need to know about why elections are so popular – not because they result from post-Cold War norms, but because they are a linear process which is easier to manage than the complex process that is democracy.
While the elections went mostly smoothly… the advent of so-called democracy has done little to improve the lives of anyone in the east. In fact, the situation has gotten worse since 2006, leading to much disillusionment with the idea of democracy.
Assumptions again: democracy in general improves specific peoples’ lives. This is false, and it’s no wonder that people become disillusioned with democracy when that’s the message that we send them. Elections are a useful signifier- highly visible, which is very appealling to the donors and the media – but they’re mainly a technical exercise. However “elections = democracy = a better life” is a nice simple equation that can be messaged to death, so that’s what we do.
Autesserre makes a convincing argument that “a transition process carefully planned over ten years to build a lasting peace at all levels, reconstruct the administrative and economic capacity of the country, minimize visible international interference, develop the preconditions for free and fair elections, and explain the advantages of this strategy to the population would probably have been received well” by the Congolese. It also might have worked.
Well, it might have worked, but it might not – that sauce isn’t strong enough to add much flavour to my dinner. A “transition process carefully planned over ten years to build a lasting peace at all levels” and so forth – this would be a great thing, but in the actual world in which we live it’s never going to happen. We need to do two things: first, demolish and restructure the industries that have grown up around democracy promotion, development assistance, etc; second, work with what we’ve got rather than what we wish we had.
- Didn’t I work with Severine in Kosovo? Answers on a postcard please. [↩]