Governance – and the State: An Anthropological Approach
Transcription
Governance – and the State: An Anthropological Approach
ECKERT, BEHRENDS , DAFINGER | GOVERNANCE – AND THE STATE Governance – and the State: An Anthropological Approach Julia Eckert, Andrea Behrends und Andreas Dafinger New regimes of governance today emerge in connection with the effects of globally induced structural reforms, privatization and land or property reforms, and transnational economic or legal integration. These affect local relations in a broad range of settings. The comparative study of different cases requires a shared definition and a joint understanding of regimes of governance. In this contribution we as- sess existing approaches and propose a definition and understanding of governance that can be made useful for an anthropological analysis of processes of regulation, ordering and distribution. We find that many of the existing approaches and theo- ries to the study of governance are either normative teleological projects or centred in European (or Western) situations of governance that do not allow for the adapta- tion to different historical and regional situations. In this paper we provide examples from our own long-term anthropological research in West Africa (Burkina Fa- so and Chad) and in India. Governance as an analytical tool For an approach that can be made useful for anthropological research we define governance as the administration of access to and provision of rights, services and goods that imply also the definition of categories of inclusion and entitlements that are explicit or implicit in governmental practices. The concept of governance focuses our attention on processes of ordering and capacities of steering and allocation in which various organizations have a claim. Increasingly new agents of governance share in the administration of everyday life, in the organization of access to and provision of services and goods. They all explicitly or implicitly involve themselves also in the definition of rights and entitlements. We would thus like to use the concept of governance to assess these different processes of “de-centralization” and “privatization”, and the various practices of exerting governmental power under one analytical concept. This concept of gover- nance leaves behind conventional distinctions between state, civil society and the 14 EthnoScripts economy, between public and private and does not privilege one organization or in- stitution, like the state, as the “natural” or “right” centre of governance. Rather, it opens up the analysis of domination, rule or government to the interdependencies between different actors that shape these, the processes within which constellations of power between such governmental actors emerge and consolidate. It is important to us to relocate the analysis of governance from “the state” or “government” into a field shaped by various actors that produce specific governmental regimes through interaction, not simply because we observe governance in this sense to be more often than not conducted by both state and non-state actors, but also because we feel it might further an anthropological approach to the state. The concept of “states at work” (Bierschenk 2010) that Thomas Bierschenk devel1 oped together with his colleagues captures the constructed character of state insti- tutions and the labour that goes in to them. Rather than limiting the metaphor of the construction site to the ever unfinished and highly disintegrated bureaucracies that resulted from the specific African paths of colonial and post-colonial history, we suggest using this metaphor as a more general approach to the study of the everyday production of stateness that is at the core of the idea of “states at work”. While the reproduction of governing institutions in the practices of officials and cit- izens has been recognized (e.g. Fuller/Harriss 2000; Gupta/Sharma 2009; Hansen/Stepputat 2001; Mitchell 1999; Schlichte/Migdal 2005, 24), their actual construction has rarely been addressed. The notion of “States at work”, by concentrating on how these state systems actually work and what effect they have on the dynamic of governing, draws our attention to the ongoing construction work that makes the state, the shaping that state institutions are subject to when used. In a similar vein, Klaus Schlichte, Dietrich Jung and Julia Eckert used the term “the Ar- tifices of government” to inquire into the specific formation and actualization of state rule as the unintended outcome of social practices associated to the intended use and appropriation of state resources and agencies (Schlichte et al. 2006). They wanted to conceptualize the exertion of state authority as a process of complex so- cial interactions and to address the importance of the social practices of individuals, collectives, organizations, of state and non-state actors. With the term “artifice” they pointed to exactly that labour and craft, the workmanship that seems to be in- volved in “the banal, habitual, routinized functioning of what might be called the 2 ‘real’ state ‘at work’”, thus the everyday reproduction of forms of stateness through 15 ECKERT, BEHRENDS , DAFINGER | GOVERNANCE – AND THE STATE the use and appropriation of state institutions. The concept of governance is thus well suited both to understand different specific forms of stateness, as well as to describe situations in which ordering is not restricted to state, but can also not be captured by its “other”, traditional or local/indigenous institutions. Such an opposition of traditional/local and state insti- tutions would again presuppose a self-evident location of control and authority either in the state or its “other”, the traditional, and an immanent oppositional rela- tion. However, the relations between state and non-state agencies in governmental regimes are not necessarily oppositional and competitive, but might be cooperative, hierarchical, complementary or simply parallel. The emergence of governance regimes in which non-state organizations play a major part may establish them- selves independently or can be part of policies of devolving governance tasks to non-state actors as issued by state administrations and international organizations. The autonomy of the individual agencies within such constellations can differ; the state is not necessarily the one that regulates the relations among the others. The state, and its various agencies, however, are often deeply involved in the production of specific governmental regimes, and thus in the drawing of its own boundaries and limits. With the concept of governance we aim to analyse the field of interac- tions that shape regimes of governance and the effect they have for different sec- tions of society in terms of access and distribution, inclusion and exclusion. Under current conditions this more often than not necessitates an enquiry also into the role of the state, as outlined above. The processes of political and social integration of refugees in the Chadian- Sudanese borderland, examined by Andrea Behrends, for example, demands an approach that can account for the plurality of actors and institutions involved in gov- ernmental activities. These are local state institutions like the prefecture or police brigades, the military, rebel groups, representatives of various ethnic groups - present in the region or in exile - and international organizations and NGOs. Each of these organizations relates to different but specific sections of the local population depending on their categories of “target groups”: they might be one specific ethnic group, all people officially classified as refugees or internally displaced, or all “nationals”. Each of these groups also has different means of access to resources and they possibly compete over them. The concept of governance here opens up the perspective for the question of how the relation between the various governmental 16 EthnoScripts bodies also shapes the relations between different social groups. In the Indian “megacity” of Mumbai, matters of adjudication, law and order, crime and security are administered not only by state institutions such as the courts or the police but also by welfare oriented NGOs, the heads of local branches of po- litical parties, “community leaders” with effective alliances in the governmental apparatus, leaders of organised crime groups as well as the police in roles beyond their official mandate. The operative legal order in the city is more often than not determined by the interaction of these various institutions: They define legal institutions in their practices and through the frames of interpretation they offer for claims to rights and entitlements; they act on the specific interpretation and enforcement of a legal framework and themselves set rules and practice sanctions. Ju- lia Eckert looks at the emerging configuration of these actors and traces the processes of how they were shaped by the (democratic) competition amongst political contenders. She examines how they affect the organization of the state and ideas of citizenship, and how they delimit security and belonging differentially for different sections of society. Andreas Dafinger works on governmental and non-governmental organiza- tions and administration in Western Africa: many of these institutions offer new economic, political and judicial resources. These organizations promote agribusi- ness, provide administrative positions, and implement institutional bylaws - most of which crosscut and overlap local practice of resource access and distribution. Newly provided resources like water wells, dispensaries and schools, often bring their own mechanisms of distribution, access rules and their own mediation au- thorities, and provide new options for agents in the local social and political field. As providers of these services and goods, the state and non-governmental organiza- tions also compete with traditional institutions, whose established distribution and conflict resolution mechanisms often fail to integrate these new forms of resource access and distribution control. The anthropological approach explores how indi- vidual actors and groups manoeuver between existing normative backgrounds and newly established forms of social control. This approach describes institutions and policies as the result of individual, yet concerted action. In the case in question, non-governmental, national and international organizations all operate within the state’s legal framework, in many cases pioneering the state’s rule of law. The re- vised 1994 land legislation in Burkina Faso, as one example, had only been put into 17 ECKERT, BEHRENDS , DAFINGER | GOVERNANCE – AND THE STATE practice by international development organizations in an attempt to restructure agricultural production systems (Dafinger and Pelican 2006). In the arena of everyday politics, the bylaws of these organizations are as powerful as the national legislation. At the same time many of the development agencies are powerful international actors with their own global agendas and with budgets easily exceeding what a large part of developing countries receive in foreign investments. (British based Oxfam’s annual [2010] income of 575mio US$ was significantly higher than what a 3 majority of sub-Saharan states have received in foreign direct investment). This invokes the question as to which degree multinational organizations are actually bound by the respective national legal frameworks within which they operate, and to which extent they can negotiate regulatory autonomy or legislative changes fitting in with their interests. Critical governance studies address these is- sues and the factors that constitute such possibilities. The degree and mechanisms of organizations’ accountability toward their donor constituency are a major concern in this field. Likewise, critical governance studies consider the reach of what has been termed “project law”, the factors contributing to effective non-intervention by state agencies, as well as regulatory and legal gaps that emerge in new constellations of legal pluralism produced in such constellations of governance (cf. Benda-Beckmann et al. 2009). The three case studies sketched out here span a wide thematic, regional and historic range; at the same time they overlap in their question of the state’s role as an actor in these unfolding processes. They look at the different actors involved in these changes (including govern- ment, administration, NGOs, local elites, international organizations) and they address the different scales of governance (not only local, regional, or global etc. but also material and discursive). They each investigate how different governmental regimes affect different sections of society (local or national) differently by either changing channels of distribution, by introducing new categories of entitlements and rights, or by re-configuring the relations between actors involved in govern- mental practices. All three studies examine the processes in which relations among various institutions of governance are shaped and they use the analytical concept of governance to look at steering capacities beyond the state and government and at how these capacities are constituted. 18 EthnoScripts Approaches to the study of governance a) Good governance As has been abundantly highlighted, governance as a concept has been used to de- fine certain standards of “Good governance”. “Good governance” as a policy tool advocates specific governmental regimes, that is, specific divisions of labour be- tween state, local community, trans-national or international and private (business) organizations as most beneficial for the efficient management of national welfare. It proposes to be about the rational management of public affairs. Such policies in as much as they are connected to incentives and sanctions of monetary or market access, reconfigure (and intend to reconfigure) constellations of the actors involved in governance. Conditional ties are connected to aid, which regulate the transfer of agency to (sometimes newly and specifically created) non-state or international bodies. These conditions are also meant to directly influence governmental decisions of resource allocation. This is the case in Chad, for example, which, in the process of turning into an oil exporting country in 2003, was given a credit by the World Bank to finance the building of a bi-national pipeline. This was connected to the demand for democratization and the condition that money flows gained from oil returns would be moni- tored by independent NGOs (Pegg 2005). When the first returns were used by Chad’s president Idriss Déby to buy weapons for the ongoing civil war the World Bank installed an independent commission to watch over the organization of the entire project and report suggestions for its improvement and organization to the World Bank, the consortium of oil companies involved in the building of the pipeline and the government of Chad (Guyer 2002). A Revenue Management Law was passed by the Chadian regime to guarantee that the oil revenues were used in the way intended by the World Bank and to have the distribution of oil related funds overseen by an independent committee. Rather than being effective, however, it mirrored this commission’s main preoccupation, which was the Chadian regime’s ambiguous desire to keep a balance between its internal support of militia or ethnic groups on the one hand and on the other hand to create an outside ap- 19 ECKERT, BEHRENDS , DAFINGER | GOVERNANCE – AND THE STATE pearance of international cooperation and “good governance”. Almost ten years af- ter the first extraction of crude oil in Chad, it turned out that much of this process was flawed. In spite of the Revenue Management Law the temporal development of the pipeline building and oil extraction process was much faster than the instal- ment of supervisory institutions and the planning of social infrastructure. Thus the Chadian regime – not actually intending to provide for transparency in spending procedures – had already let much of the money pass through channels hard to re- cover for the overseeing committee once it was ready to operate (Ndika 2005). Anthropological analysis also needs to scrutinize the unintended outcomes of good governance policies. One example of the more subtle levels of good gover- nance schemes are the incentive structures that privilege specific forms of social organization over others, i.e. giving preference to types of existing administrative organization that are considered more compatible with state administration and other institutions. While such preference for state-like local political organization has its roots in the colonial practice of indirect rule, post-colonial principles of good governance generally propagate a more participatory approach. Local communities are encouraged to organize around forms of open civil organizations and corporations as counterparts for administrative politics. Dafinger’s studies redraw how Burkina Faso encouraged the formation of administrative communities as counterparts for the state’s and civil organizations in the wake of decentralisation and administrative re- form. The aim was to incorporate local forms of leadership, along with newly em- powered marginal groups and other local social units into the national administra- tive and political sector, and achieve an even distribution of economic and political resources. The official parameters defining such administrative communities tend to privilege territorially conceived political organization over non-spatial types of communal organization. Farmers generally attain a higher visibility for state and civil organizations than mobile or dispersed herding communities. Assessing criteria of good governance and assessing the “success” of good gov- ernance practice cannot be left to the governing institutions alone. Anthropology offers the tools to study developmental policies and related policy requirements beyond their explicit self-declared goals and puts a special emphasis on seemingly unintentional processes. Alongside the impact of specific economic models on administrative organization, these (so called) “conditionalities” are likely to affect 20 EthnoScripts relations between various state and non-governmental organizations on a far broader scale. An anthropological analysis of governmental regimes will also have to address the question of how these regimes are particularly structured by policies and practice of “good governance” and similar concepts. As a part of critical governance studies, “good governance” narratives will have to be explored under aspects of the realization and reification of policy concepts, their interaction with regimes of distribution and access, but also with regard to the ”social lives” of such policies and the economic and institutional power behind the normative concepts which are embedded in such policies. These processes of reification and realization of policy concepts, as well as the categories that become oper- ative in their implementation are particularly relevant with respect to changing def- initions of entitlement and communal/national inclusion and with regards to the interplay between social organization and the organization of governance. b) Governmentality In searching for a basis to criticize such normative concepts of good governance as well as neo-liberal economics and its governmental effects, Foucault’s concept of governmentality has provided a framework for ethnographic investigations. To Foucault government by the state is only one specific form of governing. He under- stands his more encompassing concept as an overall mentality regarding the “art of governing”. The importance of the state and state-based governance is downgraded in favour of a notion of power that is constituted through society in networks and alliances, including state, non-state or semi-state actors. It stresses the “importance of the active subject as the entity through which and by means of which power is actually exercised beyond traditional state boundaries” (Morison 2001: 288). The term “government” in connection to this understanding thus implies the involve- ment and “willing cooperation of each individual subject, participating in their own governance” (ibid.: 289), whereby “governmentality” – as Foucault defined it in an interview at a later stage of his life – stands for “the whole range of practices that constitute, define, organize, and instrumentalize the strategies that individuals in their freedom can use in dealing with each other” (Foucault 1997). Foucault’s concepts have been applied mainly to western states and citizens. But recently a grow- ing number of studies on non-western societies have begun to use the Foucauldian 21 ECKERT, BEHRENDS , DAFINGER | GOVERNANCE – AND THE STATE notion of governmentality as ranging across national boundaries or national fields of influence. While humanitarian and development aid agencies are some of the most likely research fields for this kind of long-distance government (Mosse 2005), recent studies have also focused on security measures surrounding resource extrac- tion sites, where externally driven forms of governing are meant to guarantee unhindered production (Sawyer 2004; Barry 2006). Escobar, following Foucault, has also been looking for alternative views on the distribution of power. He shows how international development and humanitarian organizations historically made and continue to make and unmake the third world by fixing and controlling the terms by which development is measured and the ways it is countered. He comes to the conclusion that by controlling and countering sup- posed underdevelopment, the third world’s condition is actually perpetuated (Esco- bar 2006). His work is an example for Foucault’s notion of power, which, as Harvey points out, is not ultimately located within the state, but in “infinitesimal mecha- nisms, which each have their own history, their own trajectory, their own tech- niques and tactics” … being “invested, colonized, utilized, involuted, transformed, displaced, extended etc. by ever more general mechanisms and by forms of global domination” (Foucault 1972 quoted in Harvey 1989: 45). Still, doubt exists as to how far Foucault’s European based historical deduc- tions can actually be applied to regimes outside these contexts: in a broad interpretation, all forms of social organization and social control, and most forms of rule rely to some degree on “the conduct of conduct” rather than direct coercion; under- stood in this way, governmentality would be coterminous with social control, a rather unsatisfactory breadth of the concept. In her study on the effects of improve- ment strategies in Indonesia, Li (2007) aims to narrow down and operationalize Foucault’s concept of governmentality. With power often operating at some dis- tance, she claims that people are not necessarily aware of “how their conduct is being conducted” (ibid.: 6). For an anthropological analysis of governance, Li thus decided to focus on individuals “involved in devising particular interventions and programs of improvement”. Engaging in their “routinized practices”, we agree with Li in maintaining that it is these practices an anthropological research on gover- nance and power should follow (ibid: 6). The analysis of genealogies of governmental reason or the dissection of gov- ernmental technologies account for the actual processes within which they become 22 EthnoScripts effective. Anthropology permits to complement such “histories of the present” with a perspective that also analyses the ways and processes, in which such social technology and “knowledge” is put to use, the transformations they undergo in practice, their failures, and the contradictions that arise out of the contingent interactions of various strategies and agendas. Earlier studies of governmentality have given little attention to conflicting interests and practices even within one governmental or- ganization, nor to the effects of their incoherence and thus the specific configuration of practices that come to play in a specific field at a specific time. Following the above mentioned more recent studies, we consider governmental regimes to be shaped also by the unintended consequences of these interactions and thus focus on the practices and interactions of various actors. Having established this, the ex- ploration of the production of governmentalities remains an important subject, both within western types of governance regimes, and with regard to transnational governance regimes, developmental or security policies and their categories of social organization, efficiency and operative frameworks. c) A processual and practice approach We share, however, the emphasis of several anthropological studies for a combina- tion of structural and choice-based approaches. We consider it important to ad- dress clearly the actors behind changes in governance regimes and particular strategies, without identifying certain regime outcomes with particular interests but rather with the aggregation and the unintended effects of their interaction. This focus on the actors and the aggregation of their strategies appears as a major advantage of the anthropological approach that allows us to relate observable micro-political interactions and dynamics to processes observable at a larger scale of social organization. Therefore, we focus in our use of the concept of governance on actors, their relations and how these have evolved historically, and the intentioned and unintended outcomes of their interactions. The study of how strategies of agents are shaped and redefined in the local dis- course not only contributes to the understanding of specific local settings but, more- over, offers an approach to the configuration of transnational policies. Strategies that prove successful in the interaction with local and transnational actors in a specific setting may be employed in other cases. The remodelling of organizations’ 23 ECKERT, BEHRENDS , DAFINGER | GOVERNANCE – AND THE STATE policies can thus not only be interpreted as the result of centralised decision processes, but also as the outcome of specific local constellations (Rottenburg 2009). This idea of governance as shaped in its specific form by the interaction of var- ious organizations and groups, by their various interests and their power relations, but also by the unintended outcomes of their interaction implies that governmental regimes are most likely always subject to change precisely because they are pro- duced in the interaction of various actors. As an example of such unintended outcomes actively produced by various actors we would like to return briefly to the Revenue Management Law proposed by the World Bank as a mechanism to counter the “resource curse” in Chad. Not only did it produce very different kinds of civil so- ciety and advocacy groups who now counter the national government’s action by recurring to the internationally devised law, but the Chadian regime also made use of the law in its own interest: in order to justify, in a later amendment, the inclusion of “security” as part of the measures for which to spend oil money – and thus, effectively, to justify the purchase of heavy arms and artillery for its own defence against rebel groups. As a general statement, we advocate a practice oriented approach that also considers apparent stability of specific governmental regimes as a process that is actively produced by those involved. The governance concept therefore also opens up a perspective that moves beyond assumptions that consider power to be imbued and situated in specific positions which still prevail in much thought on governmen- tal issues. Rather, we consider it necessary to trace the production of certain power relations, their persistence and possibly their specific forms of transformation. The role of the state (different regimes of governance) Such an approach does not make any presumptions about the specific role of the state or various state agencies in such governmental regimes. A preliminary classification allows to differentiate three patterns, which see either a (partial) retreat (“departure”) of the state, an arrival of state institutions and regulation, or the state as a persistent but “internally” changing actor. Each of these major categories may be further differentiated and on the empirical level boundaries between the ideal types will be blurred. They have normatively been valued differently by different 24 EthnoScripts theoretical approaches. Processes of “privatization” have been seen either as a sign of or a solution to state crisis; which specific processes of “privatization” or de-etatization, of retreat, arrival or structural changes of the state contribute to “better management”, and which lead to disintegration have not always been evaluated unanimously. The effected shifts in the role of the state will differ depending on the context in which they occur and might mean even the simultaneous or incorporated forms of these processes, i.e. the simultaneous withdrawal and increased relevance of the state. We seem to find evidence in our material for paradoxical processes regarding the role and relative significance of the state, that is of the state increasing its role by devolving tasks to non-state actors. a) retreating states The processes of the formal or informal devolution of governmental competences of the state to alternative organizations can take at least three principal forms: a) the devolution of the state’s productive and distributive tasks to private organizations like charitable organizations or commercial enterprises – that possibly devolve informally also regulation as much as it is inherent in distribution and production; b) the formal decentralisation and devolution of regulatory tasks in specific fields, be they of the kind of personal status regulations or the devolution of re- gulation for and jurisdiction over the internal affairs of corporations, but also of development projects and international NGOs. c) The third process is the independent establishment, or persistence of parallel centres of governmental authority that wield control over specific territories, specific groups of people or specific economic spheres and they do not stand in a subsidiary, complementary relation to the state but in a parallel and autonomous one. We observe that many of these processes affect certain configurations of governmental regimes simultaneously, and affect each other: internationally driven and financed policies to relocate certain governmental tasks (like education, health care or adjudication) out of state institutions, for example, often lead to their appropria25 ECKERT, BEHRENDS , DAFINGER | GOVERNANCE – AND THE STATE tion by “private” or “community” organizations that were not target of the initial policies, but that are strengthened in their governmental significance thereby also in other fields of governmental activity. Frequently such autonomy and the associated ruptures of the integrity of the ideal type modern state, and thus signs of its failure, have been seen in the estab- lishment of sub-state local fiefdoms of (neo-) traditional authorities, “big men”, warlords, or etc. (Trotha 2000; Humphrey 1999; Schlichte/Wilke 2000). But in- fringements on state sovereignty have been associated also with the autonomy of trans-national corporations and their regulatory autonomy and recently also with the “project law” established by international development organizations (BendaBeckmann 2001; Risse et al. 2000). Many countries, but most dramatically in post- socialist contexts, have seen state monopolies fall that were taken over by semi- state and non-state organizations. These organizations fill the vacuum a retreating state leaves behind. These processes can be but are not necessarily intended by the governments involved. The state’s presence or absence, withdrawal or arrival might also affect different sections of society differently, and might actually mean less access to state provisions for some groups, and at the same time more access to these, or more control by state agencies to others. In the Chad research project, for example, one party to the recent armed conflict had good access to state institutions like the prefecture and police brigade on the Chadian as well as the Sudanese side of the border. This access served them in questions of land-use or ownership of land and other legal or economical claims. The other party to the conflict had less access to and therefore less trust in agencies of the state on both sides of the border and thus came to rely on services provided by non-state organizations such as international agencies and NGOs, which previously had been given the right to operate in the region by the central state, but soon developed their own legal and institutional struc- tures on the ground (Behrends 2007; 2008; Behrends & Schlee 2008). b) arriving state (the vertical expansion of the state) Decentralization of state power and the appearance of new non-state governance agents do not always mark the state’s retreat, nor necessarily decrease its importance as a local actor. In many cases we witness that new non- and semi-govern- mental organizations pioneer the implementation of administrative norms and 26 EthnoScripts state regulation in fields where national institutions had so far been of only margin- al relevance. Subsistence livelihoods in remote rural areas, as well as informal eco- nomic activities in urban areas are major fields for organizations which, despite their civil character, still operate within the legal and political framework of the state. Many actively propagate national rules and regulations, and often explicitly aim at the transition of local, informal, or subsistence based livelihoods into formal social and business practice. Slum dwellers organizations or garbage recycling schemes are only some of the attempts to permeate the formal-informal boundaries, promoting for full citi- zenship rights of the marginalized urban poor, and pushing the state into areas that have very much been excluded from its infrastructural and administrative schemes. Rural areas witness the arrival of the state often in more legalistic terms. In most West African states, land legislation had been of no practical relevance for rural communities. Until recently, a landed gentry allocated access rights based on rules of kinship and residence; the fact that the state was legally the allodial landowner was simply deemed relevant by – and in fact unknown to – a majority of the population. Only when non-governmental organizations set out to restructure local production systems from the mid 1990s onwards, have national titling schemes become a viable option for individuals and rural communities. By giving up its exclusive claim and allocating limited property rights to these local groups in the course of privatization programs, the state created incentives for local groups to adapt to the administrative framework and get registered as administrative units within the territorial state. Dafinger has described how in Burkina Faso development organizations have used land reforms and titling schemes to create distinct economic zones and separate different modes of production, resettling parts of the population. As a result, everyday conflicts significantly declined, bringing down the opportunity costs of agro-pastoral cohabitation (such as crop damage or injuries to cattle). At the same time these organizations offered juridical and administrative services, safeguarding the rule of bylaws, regulating land allocation, decisions over crop types and cattle quota. The local population became subject to a blend of na- tional legislation and de facto civil-organizational jurisdiction. Donor organizations further support this process by focusing on such these communities in providing new economic and political resources, such as bore holes, or health and education institutions, reifying nationally recognised forms of community organization. To 27 ECKERT, BEHRENDS , DAFINGER | GOVERNANCE – AND THE STATE focus on the “arriving state”, i.e. the increasing vertical expansion of the state into matters of everyday life through third agents, permits to adequately describe the range of possible changes in the role of states in governance regimes. Civil organi- zation, here, in its ‘Hegelian’ guise, complements and builds, rather than competes with the state’s alleged responsibilities. c) structural changes persisting state organization The emergence of new agents of governance may see yet a third pattern, the persist- ence if not increase of the state’s importance through controlling processes of devolvement. While specific tasks that the state used to handle are being outsourced, the state and its institutions maintain control and regulate access to these fields of governance. Such control may however be exercised not by the government or the state as an integrated organizational complex, but by specific state agencies: The concept of the state as an integrated entity has long been abandoned or reformulated as an “effect” in itself (Mitchell 1999). When not examining this particular effect of a seeming coherence of “the state”, social anthropologists, if at all addressing the state, have examined the practices and relations of different state agencies, focussing on their strategies and roles among the actors that shape governance regimes. The paradoxical processes of simultaneous withdrawal and increase of state presence, for example, could be examined also by analysing the emerging institutional compositions of stateness, as well as the alliances that are formed be- tween different state agencies and specific social groups. What is of interest, and becomes accessible through a concept of governance is the question what role which particular state agencies play, how they interact with specific para-state and non-state institutions, and how this shapes a specific configuration of stateness. In urban India, for example state governance is characterized by different forms of the division of labour in different geographic areas, relating to different segments of the population, or to particular fields of governance such as law making, adjudication, infrastructure, service delivery, etc. Different state agencies enter into different forms of alliances, cooperative or competitive relations with various non-state agencies involved in governmental activities, such as NGOs, residents’ associations, local politicians, leaders of organized crime groups or other local strongmen. The state is often deeply involved in the so-called “informal”, in the shaping of alliances 28 EthnoScripts and cooperations, and thus in the drawing of its own boundaries and limits. This results not necessarily from an integrated strategy but evolves from possibly contradictory strategies of different state and non-state actors. The competitions and contradictions between and within different state agencies are constitutive of the alliances that they form with different non-state actors; these determine the shape that the state acquires. In urban India, the police appear firstly as one of the critical institutions which mediate the relations of various centres of authority. They are the middlemen between party bosses and leaders of criminal gangs; they determine the scope of action of competing organizations, such as NGOs, self-help associations or local party offices. The police have thereby also a significant role in organizing access of ordinary citizens to state and non-state agencies. Secondly, within this system of “graduated sovereignty” (Ong 2000: 57) different segments of the populations are subject to different modi of power (cf. Nuijten and Lorenzo 2009); the police and their legally sanctioned coercive force - as well as their not legally sanctioned forms of violence - have been present most prominently to the large section of the Indian population which live in circumstances defined by aspects of illegality. In urban In- dia the ones who are present for the police most immediately, and for whom in turn the police are present on a regular basis involving themselves in their every con- cerns, are those living or working in the urban slums. They are the ones who en- counter the police most often and in the most varied of issues. In India we can ob- serve in many ways what Neocleous (2006: 23) has considered the original concern of the term police, namely “the question of the poor and the potential threat posed by the new class of poverty to the emerging structures of private property”. This points towards a general trajectory of Indian state organization that sees a devaluation of the distributive and productive role of the state and the agencies concerned with the latter, and an increased importance (also in terms of budgetary allocations) of state agencies of control and security. The domestic adoption of re- cent international discourses on security (e.g. “the war on terror”) have made possi- ble the expansion of executive powers in various legal reforms, and has thus reconfigured the relations between different state agencies. Histories of such state-configurations will provide also a denser picture of state organization than dichotomies like that of the weak vs. the strong state can provide. Only then can we conclude about the influence of different state models or 29 ECKERT, BEHRENDS , DAFINGER | GOVERNANCE – AND THE STATE state situations on local modes of governance, and the relations between governmental regimes and specific organizations of the state system. Conclusion The concept of governance provides us with an analytical tool to examine the changing character of states and the increasing impact of national and transnation- al organizations that have become a major issue in social anthropological research. Existing approaches are only partially apt to explain and describe the heterogeneity of governmental regimes and their effect on social life. A concept of governance that can be made useful for comparative anthropological research focuses on various loci of capacities of steering and ordering, and on the processes that constitute such capacities. 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The authors are former senior research fellows at the Max-Planck Institute for So- cial Anthropology, Halle. Julia Eckert is Professor for Political Anthropology at the University of Bern, Switzerland. She specializes in legal anthropology, the anthropology of the modern state, conflict theory, and social movements. Her current research interests are in the anthropology of crime and punishment; changing notions of responsibility and liability; security and citizenship. Andrea Behrends is an assistant professor in anthropology at the University of Halle-Wittenberg. She recently published an edited volume with Stephen P. Reyna and Günther Schlee: Crude domination. An anthropology of oil. Oxford, New York: Berghahn. Andreas Dafinger is a social anthropologist and has worked on local politics and de- velopment organizations in Western Africa since the 1990s. He is associate profes- sor at the Central European University in Budapest. His forthcoming monograph, Economics of conflict, looks into the politics of ethnic conflict in the development context. 34