YOU, THE PEOPLE:
The United Nations,
Transitional Administration, and State-Building.
By Simon Chesterman. Oxford
Univ. Press. 296 pp. $95
In this fine, timely,
and usable study, Simon Chesterman analyzes the complicated
process of transferring power from an international authority
that has governed a country temporarily to a viable local
regime. Before shifting power, the outside authority must
build sustainable institutions and train local people for
government jobs, while also laying the groundwork for
democracy by building trust in government institutions and
encouraging people to take part in the democratic
process. But the preparations for democracy are hampered by
the fact that the transitional administration itself is
anything but democratic: Notwithstanding the good intentions
of its creators, it’s essentially a military occupation. The
contrast between pragmatic means and idealistic ends is stark.
As Chesterman, a senior associate at the New York-based
International Peace Academy, asks at the beginning of his
book, “Is it possible to establish the conditions for
legitimate and sustainable national governance through a
period of benevolent foreign autocracy?”
His answer is a
tentative yes, but only if certain conditions are met. In
chapters on the recent experiences in Kosovo, East Timor,
Afghanistan, and elsewhere, Chesterman describes how
transitional administrations have maintained law and order,
provided humanitarian and development assistance, consulted
with local populations, established the rule of law, and
administered elections, all with varying degrees of efficacy.
The factors that make a transitional administration more
likely to succeed come as no surprise: a realistic plan
tailored to the specific situation, the commitment of troops
from a powerful nation or coalition, coordination between
military operations and efforts to build a new government,
ample time, and plenty of money.
But Chesterman also
analyzes why so many efforts founder, and why the United
Nations and countries that contribute troops to these efforts
are often unwilling to invest
sufficient resources. The UN has only recently begun to
oversee transitional administrations, and it does so on a
strictly ad hoc basis, without a permanent office for managing
such missions. Its reluctance is unfortunate, but many within
the UN believe that traditional peacekeeping is the only type
of military operation appropriate for the organization, and
they fear, justifiably, that if the UN were better prepared
for state-building missions, it would be called upon to
undertake them more often.
In Iraq, the failure
of the United States to plan effectively led to a breakdown of
law and order, which in turn provoked resentment and
resistance from the population and required far more time,
troops, and money than expected. The January elections may
have seemed like a magic bullet, a chance to give the people
their democracy and then get out of the way. But without peace
and security, sustainable institutions, and economic
stability, democracy won’t necessarily take hold. As
Chesterman shows, fledgling democracies can quickly devolve
into autocracy or civil war. A successful transition from
autocracy to democratic self-rule takes years, not months.
—Hadley Ross

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Hadley Ross, an attorney in
Washington, D.C., has written for Harper’s, Print, and Paper
Placemats.
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below: You,
The People
Reprinted from Spring 2005
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