This is the time of year I devote to reviewing the year’s posts to see what sort of sense they make. Two years ago – on noticing a few common themes I actually structured the collected posts around those issues and wrote introductions to each section which you can see at Peripheral Vision – the 2020 posts. I am inclined to do so again for this year’s collected edition as several things have combined, for example, to get me writing fairly frequently this year about the quality of government – with the pandemic exposing the very different capacities of state and government in different parts of the world
Of course, it doesn’t take much to get me going on this issue – my dissatisfaction with the combination of politics and bureaucracy goes back fully 50 years to my initial experience as an elected member with a local municipality; subsequent successes in making a large Regional authority more open and democratic; and experience since 1990 as a consultant in “capacity development” in ex-communist countries.
The tragic failure of the rule of law to take root these
past 30 years in this part of the world has slowly become obvious even to
the most obtuse. Recent elections in Bulgaria and Romania have demonstrated the
extent to which people have, understandably, completely lost trust in both their
governments and the state. Adages of good governance and
anti-corruption
have been tried – and failed.
In a post in May, I posed some questions which needed to be asked about this failure -
- how do we find out what conciliation efforts
have already been attempted - let alone lessons learned - in BG and RO? South
Africa had hundreds of such efforts
- how would effective and "trustworthy"
mediators be identified? There’s an Association of Conciliators here in Romania
(presumably for commercial and family disputes) but perhaps they have relevant
resources?
- who are the key actors who would be involved in
any such meeting?
- how do we identify the positive
lessons from other efforts throughout the world to bring societies together?
Latin America clearly has had many such efforts
- how do we deal with the cynics who dismiss such experience as irrelevant to their country?
Unfortunately the state has for the past few decades been losing what capacity it had throughout Europe and the rest of the world. The global financial meltdown of 2008 and the austerity policies that produced compounded the process. The political class's dedication to the notion of the minimal state promoted by globalisation and neoliberalism has encouraged many citizens to reward the populists.
One of the limitations of blogposts is their
brevity – although I know that will make some of you laugh. But my posts do
tend to take either a positive or negative perspective on an issue – balance is
more difficult. A post this year on how
to build state capacity makes my point exactly.
An annual collection of posts, however, makes such balance possible. There have been more than 20 posts so far in 2021 dealing with the question of how ordinary citizens might rediscover their lost faith the political process – an issue which the blog has also explored in previous years. I will therefore read them carefully – along with earlier writing on the issue – and pen an introductory summary of the posts which deals with this critical question.
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