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Lisbon Treaty represents opportunity to deal with fragile states

November 6, 2009

Europe will be able to take a more active role in the world since the Lisbon Reform Treaty has been approved by all member states. It will also help to adopt a new institutional structure, development experts write.

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A thick book with bookmarks on top of the EU flag
The Lisbon Treaty overcame its final hurdleImage: EC AV Service

This is good news for Europe's ability to take effective action in the world arena, and the EU's foreign policy arm is set to be strengthened by a European External Action Service (EEAS) and consolidated under a High Representative with the rank of a Vice President in the EU Commission.

In this context, approaches to dealing with those countries that have in recent years come to figure prominently in the media as "fragile states" stand to benefit most from Europe's new foreign policy configuration.

Fragile states lag on Development Goals

Internally Displaced Persons in Sudan A group of Children are
Most countries in Africa will not come close to halving poverty and hunger by 2015Image: UNMIS/Fred Noy

As early as 2000, the UN member states reached agreement on the so-called Millennium Development Goals, one target of which is to halve poverty worldwide by 2015. As the year 2009 draws to a close, however, no other group of countries continues to lag as far behind in reaching these goals as the group of fragile states.

With the economic successes they have posted in recent years, China and India, the world's most populous countries, may well reach these global goals by 2015. But fragile states - most of them in Africa - are more than likely to ensure that the goals will be anything but a global success.

These countries, which lack certain key state functions - including a state monopoly on the legitimate use of force, a rudimentary of system of public welfare, or guarantees for the universal rule of law - are in need of better policies on the part of the rich countries of the North. That should come both out of concern for the lives of millions of people living in the countries in question and in the - rightly understood - self-interest of the "donors" themselves.

EU acting as coordinator

Compared with other organizations, the European Union has a virtually unparalleled storehouse of experience in dealing with fragile states. Indeed, its own origins and history are closely bound up with just this phenomenon.

Road in rural Romania with car and bicycle-driven cart loaded with firewood
The EU has integrated former Soviet bloc states with shaky economiesImage: AP

Once the western European countries had been successfully stabilized in the early 1950s, the EU went on to further develop its organizational know-how in providing support for a number of fragile European transition countries in connection with several enlargement rounds. Furthermore, on top of being a foreign-policy actor to be reckoned with today, the EU also has considerable potential as an effective coordination forum.

In its 2003 Security Strategy, the EU had already noted that fragile states represent a massive threat not only for their own, directly affected populations, but also for Europe itself.

It is precisely these countries that serve as staging grounds for trafficking in drugs, weapons and humans, and these activities show a tendency to proliferate rapidly beyond national boundaries and to threaten entire regions, such as West Africa.

European Report on Development focuses on Africa

Here, an object lesson may be found in the recently published first European Report on Development, which is devoted entirely to the issue of fragility in Africa.

While the choice of continent is in line with a long-standing focus of the EU's development policy, the issue chosen may certainly be read as a sign of the relevance the problem has from the perspective of development policy.

Illegal Migrants from Africa on a boat
Many illegal African migrants try to get to Europe to escape adverse conditions at homeImage: picture-alliance/dpa

Not only do fragile states have a long way to go on their path of transition to more security and stability, they also confront the countries and donors that have been supporting them in the process with a number of very particular challenges.

Many fragile states don't cater to their citizens

On the one hand, the state institutions in such countries tend to be underdeveloped or dysfunctional: Agreements between political actors are rarely kept. The state sector - assuming there is one in place at all - tends to be indifferent or at a loss to cope when it comes to meeting its responsibility toward the population. Political life is often overshadowed by violence, and entire segments of the population are frequently left to their own devices.

In this situation external influence has no chance of succeeding unless it sets, for the actors on the ground, clear and unmistakable incentives to engage in cooperative, non-violent behavior.

Stefan Gänzle, political scientist at the German Development Institute
The DIE's Stefan GänzleImage: DIE

On the other hand, this presupposes coherent support strategies on the part of external actors, including fair agricultural and trade policies and a willingness to coordinate closely the activities of the ministries or agencies responsible for diplomacy, development, and defense.

In addition, there is a need to strengthen the ability of development-policy actors to take, without undue delay, important decisions on the ground and to translate them into action.

Europe needs to help fragile states effectively

The EU is, in other words, faced with a need to act when it comes to dealing with fragile states. Two important points need to be kept in mind here:

First, some first steps on the road to an EU strategy on fragile states have begun to take on shape since the Portuguese Council Presidency of 2007. The European Report on Development can lend a new impetus to this task and contribute to ensuring that a greater measure of coordination and coherence is achieved, at least in the EU framework. This would be of particular importance in dealing with fragile states.

logo of the German Development Institute
The German Development Institute (DIE) is a thinktank based in Bonn

Second, the European Union will be able to enlarge its presence and its options "on the ground" in fragile states themselves in connection with the development of the EEAS. Even today, the European Commission has a network of external diplomatic representations more closely knit than that of just about any EU member state, and these are set, in the foreseeable future, to be upgraded into EU embassies in which representatives of Commission, Council, and member states will work closely together.

At present, the member states are engaged in a heated debate over staffing ratios as well as thematic and geographic configurations. In the ideal case, the EEAS could serve as a means to merge, as comprehensively as possible, the work of the agencies currently responsible for diplomacy, development, and defense, creating a unique “common service.”

In this sense the Lisbon Treaty offers the EU an opportunity to extend its peace-making and -building activities precisely beyond its own borders.

Dr. Stefan Gänzle is an expert on Bi- and Multilateral Development Cooperation at the Deutsches Institut für Entwicklungspolitik / German Development Institute (DIE)

Dr. Jörn Grävingholt is a political scientist working on“Governance, Statehood, Security “ at Deutsches Institut für Entwicklungspolitik / German Development Institute (DIE)