Module 14: Ending Dictatorships and Wars
Reading
Paul Collier, Wars, Guns, and Votes: Democracy in Dangerous Places (2010, HarperCollins), chapters 9-10.*
Questions to Think About
- According to Collier, what is the problem of a country being too small?
- What does Collier mean by ‘pooling sovereignty’?
- According to Collier, why are countries in the bottom billion poor at pooling sovereignty compared with, for example, the countries in the European Union?
- If the societies of the bottom billion cannot supply themselves with public goods of accountability and security, what can the international community do to help solve the problems of the bottom billion?
- Why would leaders of countries in the bottom billion accede to international accountability standards?
- Why would leaders of the international community demand international accountability standards?
Submit Reflective Comment here
*Cautionary note: The field of global politics is young, and we continue to lack widely agreed-upon answers for many of our most important questions, including those addressed in this module. Collier’s arguments are not necessarily correct. I assign his book because he covers the facts and issues well, and his arguments represent perhaps the field's most common views.