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Border Fixity And The Transformation Of International Relations

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  • Border Fixity And The Transformation Of International Relations

    BORDER FIXITY AND THE TRANSFORMATION OF INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
    by Boaz Atzili

    Harvard International Review
    September 23, 2008
    MA

    Boaz Atzili is an Assistant Professor of International politics
    at the School of International Service of American University in
    Washington, DC. He received his Ph.D. from the Massachusetts Institute
    of Technology. His publications include articles in International
    Security and SAIS Review. He writes about weak states' international
    relations, territorial conflicts and policies, and the Middle East.

    Border Fixity: What is it and why does it matter?

    International borders are seldom natural in any meaningful sense. They
    are human creations - a social construct. The functions of borders
    differ markedly across time and space. Borders could be sealed or
    permeable. They may allow some kind of transaction (say, of goods)
    but restrict another (say, people). They could be based more on people
    (as in nomadic societies) or on territory (as in the modern state
    system). Regardless of the function of borders, however, the locations
    of borders have always changed throughout human history. And these
    changes have never been easy. Ample anecdotal and statistical data show
    that disputes about the location of borders -- that is, territorial
    conflicts -- have been among the primary motivations for war. This
    was true in antiquity and probably even more so in modern times.

    Imagine, then, a world in which people do not fight over territory. A
    world in which borders are fixed and, therefore, there is no need
    to fight over their location. Would it not be a far more peaceful
    world? Wouldn't this world lack one of the chief reasons to go to
    war? We need not really imagine, because we are, to a significant
    degree, living in such a world - a world in which "border fixity"
    is the defining territorial norm. Border fixity is the prohibition of
    foreign conquest and annexation of homeland territory, a prohibition
    that became increasingly potent in the last half century.

    To be sure, the process of fragmentation of the big multinational
    empires, which began around the First World War, still
    continues. Secessions, while not common, still happen as well. Yet
    conquest and annexation of a neighbor's territory, a phenomenon
    very common until the mid-twentieth century, has become increasingly
    rare. The few such cases that took place in the last fifty years either
    involve minuscule territories, or are still not legally recognized by
    the international community. Some such well-known examples include
    Israel's 1967 conquests and Armenia's Nagorno-Karabakh territory
    (the only such case in the last thirty years, if one discounts the
    brief annexation of Kuwait by Iraq in 1990). With this transformation
    in territorial norms comes a parallel development in international
    law. As historian Martin Van Creveld notes in The Rise and Decline
    of the State, "All but gone are a whole series of terms, such as
    'subjugation' and 'the right of conquest,' which as late as 1950
    formed a normal part of legal discourse in a work on international
    law." This transformation is codified and institutionalized, moreover,
    in numerous charters, resolutions, and declarations of the United
    Nations and various regional international organizations. This does not
    mean that states are always satisfied with their territorial status
    quo. Many people in Poland, for instance, still consider parts of
    Ukraine as rightfully theirs. Bolivia still resents its territorial
    losses to Chile in the 19th century's War of the Pacific. But states
    in Europe and South America are less and less likely to go to war
    over these issues. They accept current borders as a fact of life,
    if not always fair.

    But do we really live in the world described in the aforementioned
    thought experiment? The answer is most certainly mixed. The same
    factors affect relations between states differently in different
    situations. In some parts of the world the norm and practice of
    border fixity are greatly contributing to the creation of a much more
    stable, peaceful, and cooperative environment. Ironically, in other
    parts of the world, the same principles and practices create new
    logics and incentives for conflict. What determines whether border
    fixity transforms international relations for better or for worse
    is the socio-political strength of the majority of the states in a
    given region. In regions where most states are relatively strong,
    such as Europe (save the Balkans), North America, South America,
    and to some extent north Asia, border fixity begets stability and
    eliminates border conflict. In regions where most states are weak
    or failing, such as in Africa, the Middle East, some parts of Asia,
    the former Soviet Union, and Central America, border fixity often
    generates more international conflict.

    As used here, the socio-political strength of states refers first
    to the efficiency and the extent of reach of a state's institutions
    and, second, to the level of identification of the residents with
    the state. The first component measures the degree to which the
    institutions of the state are capable of governing the state. It
    thus contains, such measures as the degree of monopoly on the use of
    violence, the ability of the state to extract taxes and to distribute
    collective goods and the efficiency and geographic reach of the
    bureaucracy of state institutions, such as the judicial system, the
    police force, and the education system. The second component measures
    the degree to which the state is socially cohesive and the citizens
    identify themselves with the state per se (not necessarily with its
    regime or government) and are loyal to the state. The stronger these
    two essential socio-political components are, the stronger the state
    is judged to be on this basis.

    Border Fixity and Strong States: Providing the Conditions for Peace

    In regions in which most states are socio-politically strong, border
    fixity contributes to peace and stability by eliminating the option
    of territorial wars, reducing anxieties of the security dilemma, and
    providing an environment for cooperation. Since territorial conflict
    has historically been among the most salient justification for war,
    the fact that borders no longer change, by itself, significantly
    decreases the likelihood of waging a justifiable war. Alsace and
    Lorraine, for example, were at the epicenter of Franco-German conflict
    for centuries, changing hands repeatedly. The provinces were given
    to Louis XIV of France in 1648, taken by Bismarck's Prussia in the
    Franco-Prussian War of 1871, annexed by France in the 1919 Treaty of
    Versailles, conquered by Hitler in 1940, and returned to France by the
    Allies in 1945. But in the era of border fixity, Alsace and Lorraine
    cannot be (and are not) a matter of international dispute. Germany
    accepted Alsace and Lorraine as permanently part of France by its
    1955 regaining of sovereignty, and nowhere in the current German
    polity can one find any significant reference to Alsace and Lorraine
    as a part of Germany. Thus, border fixity has all but eliminated this
    cause of prolonged German-Franco conflict
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