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引用次数: 0
摘要
s 自 2000 年代中期以来,索马里兰的国家建设一直是各种并存、相互竞争的计划、政治愿望和外国议程的复杂混合体。本文运用辩证的方法,重点探讨了从项目设计到项目实施过程中各参与方和能力建设模式之间的标度关系。借鉴科技研究,我用 "复杂性 "一词来描述项目、参与者和不同排序方式的 "多重性",它们共存并相互重叠,有时相互紧张,有时相互协调。具体而言,本文研究了索马里兰国家建设的两种方法:联合国开发计划署的机构建设项目和美国国际开发署(USAID)资助的稳定项目。本文超越了国际与地方、同质与混合、国家建设与国家形成等固定的二元对立,观察了这些二元对立是如何形成的,以及它们是如何结合在一起而非分离,从而产生技术政治安排的。索马里兰的复杂性是由技术专长和国家政治愿望共同促成的技术政治安排所构成的。技术能力建设项目,如索马里机构发展项目(SIDP)的重新设计、索马里兰国家发展计划(NDP)的制定以及美国国际开发署(USAID)赠款的分配,已成为资源再分配和国家机构控制权政治诉求的场所。
s Since the mid-2000s, state-building in Somaliland has emerged as a complex mixture of coexisting, competing programs, political aspirations, and foreign agendas. This article applies a dialectical approach to focus on the scalar relations among actors and models of capacity-building, from programs’ design to their implementation. Drawing on science and technology studies, I use the term “complexities” to describe the “multiplicities” of programs, actors, and different ways of ordering that coexist and overlap, sometimes in tension among them, other times in coordination. Specifically, this article examines two approaches to state-building in Somaliland: the United Nations Development Program’s institution-building and US Agency for International Development (USAID)-funded stabilization programs. Going beyond fixed binaries, such as international and local, homogenous and hybrid, state-building and state-formation, this article observes how these dichotomies are formed and how, rather than being separate, they combine together, generating techno-political arrangements. Somaliland’s complexity is made up of techno-political arrangements that are coproduced by both technical expertise and national political aspirations. Technical capacity-building programs, such as the redesign of the Somalia Institutional Development Project (SIDP), the creation of Somaliland’s National Development Plan (NDP), and the allocation of USAID’s grants, have become the terrain for political claims over the redistribution of resources and the control of state institutions.
期刊介绍:
International Studies Quarterly, the official journal of the International Studies Association, seeks to acquaint a broad audience of readers with the best work being done in the variety of intellectual traditions included under the rubric of international studies. Therefore, the editors welcome all submissions addressing this community"s theoretical, empirical, and normative concerns. First preference will continue to be given to articles that address and contribute to important disciplinary and interdisciplinary questions and controversies.