Do Human Rights Require a Strong State?

by Francis Fukuyama Francis Fukuyama is author of the seminal post-Cold War book The End of History and the Last Man. This article first appeared on The American Interest Web site (www.the-american-interest.com) and was syndicated by NPQ's weekly column, Global Viewpoint. 20.09.2008
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Washington - The fiasco of the Olympic torch relay has focused attention on the condition of human rights in China. What is the source of human rights abuses in that country today? Many people assume the problem is that China remains a Communist dictatorship, and that abuses occur because a strong centralized Chinese state ignores the rights of its citizens. With regard to Tibet and the suppression of the religious movement Falun Gong, this may be right. But the larger problem in today's China arises out of the fact that the central Chinese state is in certain ways too weak to defend the rights of its people.

The vast majority of abuses of the rights of ordinary Chinese citizens today-peasants who have their land taken away without just compensation, workers forced to labor under sweatshop conditions, or villagers poisoned by illegal dumping of pollutants-occur at a level far below that of the government in Beijing. China's peculiar road toward modernization after 1978 was powered by so-called "township and village enterprises" (TVEs), which were local government bodies that were given the freedom to establish businesses and enter into the emerging market economy. The TVEs were enormously successful, and many today have become extraordinarily rich and powerful. In cahoots with private developers and companies, it is they who are producing conditions resembling the "satanic mills" of early industrial England.

The central government, by all accounts, would like to crack down on these local government bodies but finds itself unable to do so. It both lacks capacity to do this and depends on local governments and the private sector to produce jobs and revenue. The Chinese Communist Party understands that it is riding a tiger. Each year there are several thousand incidents of violent social protest, each one contained and suppressed by state authorities, who nevertheless cannot seem to get at the underlying source of the unrest.

Americans traditionally distrust strong central government and champion a federalism that distributes powers to state and local governments. The logic of wanting to move government closer to the people is strong, but we often forget that tyranny can be imposed by local oligarchies as much as by centralized ones. In the history of the Anglophone world, it is not the ability of local authorities to check the central government but rather a balance of power between local authorities and a strong central government that is the true cradle of liberty.

The 19th-century British legal scholar Sir Henry Sumner Maine in his book Early Law and Custom points to this very fact in a fine essay entitled " France and England." He notes that the single most widespread complaint written in the cahiers produced on the eve of the French Revolution (which Alexis de Tocqueville also refers to in The Old Regime and the French Revolution) were complaints by peasants over encroachments of their property rights by seigneurial courts. According to Maine, judicial power in France was decentralized and under control of the local aristocracy.

By contrast, from the time of the Norman Conquest, the English monarchy had succeeded in establishing a strong, uniform and centralized system of justice. It was the King's Courts that protected non-elite groups from depredations by the local aristocracy. The failure of the French monarchy to impose similar constraints on local elites was one of the reasons why the peasants who sacked manor houses during the revolution went straight to the room containing the titres to property that they felt had been stolen from them over the preceding generations. In England, the legitimacy of existing property rights was much more broadly accepted.

State weakness can hurt the cause of liberty. The Polish and Hungarian aristocracies were able to impose their equivalents of the Magna Carta on their monarchs; those countries' central governments, unlike their English counterpart, remained far too weak in subsequent generations to protect the peasantry from the local lords, not to speak of protecting their countries as a whole from outside invasion.

The same was true, of course, in the United States. "States' rights" and federalism were the banner under which local elites in the South could oppress African-Americans, both before and after the Civil War. American liberty is the product of decentralized government balanced by a strong central state, one that is capable, when necessary, of sending the National Guard to Little Rock to protect the right of black children to attend school.

It is hard to know if and when freedom will emerge in 21st-century China. It may be the first country where demand for accountable government is driven primarily by concern over a poisoned environment. But it will come about only when popular demand for some form of downward accountability on the part of local governments and businesses is supported by a central government strong enough to force local elites to obey the country's own rules.


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Comments (2)

deluded by human rights!!!

by
i understand chine doesnt have human rights and live under dictatorship but at least the Chinese aren't invading other countries and killing innocent people for money and resources. This has been the case for centuaries unlike the west who although now have democracy still behave like they did two hundred years ago, colonizing any place they can...
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¿¡Fukuyama y los derechos humanos!? ¿Son los Estados Unidos la democracia que fue?

by Jorgen
Como han demostrado los sucesos posteriores al septiembre 11, 2001, el gobierno de los Estados Unidos se ha encargado de que los derechos humanos de los norteamericanos sean cosa del pasado, algo que no aparece en los grandes medios de comunicación; han destruido el estado de derecho que protegía la privacidad de sus ciudadanos: hoy sus correspondencias, sus llamadas telefónicas, sus e-mails son violados por los servicios de inteligencia de gobierno, todo legalizado por la Ley Patriótica. Los ciudadanos sospechosos de terrorismo pueden ser condenados o mantenidos en arresto sin presentación de cargos, se les niega una defensa eficaz.

Está el caso de los 5 antiterroristas cubanos condenados en Miami, personas que monitoriaban las organizaciones terroristas creadas por la CIA para atacar a Cuba, y que tienen hechos tales como la destrucción en vuelo de un avión de la compañía aérea Cubana de Aviación por una bomba en pleno vuelo y que costó la vida a 76 personas, entre ella el equipo juvenil cubano de esgrima, que regresaba de una competición en Veneuela. Pues bien los autores confesos están libres en Miami, uno de ellos, Orlando Bosch indultado por el presidente George Bush(padre), el otro Posada Carriles, libre hoy en Miami tras una farsa judicial.

Posada Carriles también es el autor intelectual de las explosiones de bombas en hoteles de La Habana, que costo la vida del joven italiano Di Celmo. Este hombre fue reconocido por el terrorista salvadoreño Raúl Ernesto Cruz como el hombre que lo contrató para poner 10 bombas en hoteles de la capital cubana.

Es oportuno decir que el proceso a los 5 antiterroristas fue declarado ilegal por un panel de 5 jueces de Quinto Circuito de Atlanta, y posteriormente tras maniobras de la Fiscalía, fueron declaradas las condenas válidas por otro panel, aunque 3 de ellas deben ser revisadas. Por su parte el Relator Especial de las Naciones Unidas tras estudiar el caso lo declaró ilegal, y que estas personas debían ser puestas en libertad.

Las condenas a estos hombres exceptuando la de uno de ellos que fue condenado a 15 años, son de varias condenas de cadena perpetua a cada uno de los otros cuatros.

El gobierno norteamericano ha declarado legal las torturas que aplican no solo en su país sino en cualquier lugar del mundo, como la ilegal base naval de Guantánamo, bajo admi nistración de los Estados Unidos de América, o en cualquiera de sus cárceles secretas en Europa o en sus buques prisiones que navegan por los océanos mundiales.

Tambiém puede hablarse de 40 millones de norteamericanos sin seguro médico, la condena de los luchadores sociales a condenas de por vida o la muerte, algunos testigos pueden ser Leonard Peltier o Abu-Jamal, luchadores sociales, condenados a muertes tras operaciones de los servicios especiales silenciarlos.

No hablemos de los centenares de miles de muertos inocentes por las bombas de los aviones norteamericanos en invasiones por robarse los recursos petroleros de terceros países.

En fin ¿qué puede decir Fukuyama?, si el fue quizás el primer apologista de esto que el mundo vive hoy, al declara (autosuficientemente) el fin de la historia y el comienzo de la hegemonía americana, el desastre humanitario de Irak y Afghanistán, Guantánamo, etc.

A Fukuyama le quedaría bien ¡CALLARSE UN SIGLO!
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