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d-36328House OversightOther

Francis Fukuyama discusses institutional development and nation‑building in interview

The passage is a routine interview with a scholar about historical theory and nation‑building. It contains no concrete allegations, financial details, or links to powerful officials or agencies, offer Fukuyama reflects on U.S. nation‑building challenges in Afghanistan and Iraq. He critiques optimistic assumptions about external institution‑building. Mentions his academic background at Johns Hopkin

Date
November 11, 2025
Source
House Oversight
Reference
House Oversight #031899
Pages
1
Persons
0
Integrity
No Hash Available

Summary

The passage is a routine interview with a scholar about historical theory and nation‑building. It contains no concrete allegations, financial details, or links to powerful officials or agencies, offer Fukuyama reflects on U.S. nation‑building challenges in Afghanistan and Iraq. He critiques optimistic assumptions about external institution‑building. Mentions his academic background at Johns Hopkin

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academianation-buildinginterviewhouse-oversightinstitutional-development

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24 FRANCIS FUKUYAMA: This really started with a practical concern I had after dealing with failed states and nation-building issues in the wake of September 11 and our nation-building efforts in Afghanistan and Iraq. It seemed to me that the United States in particular didn’t appreciate the difficulty of this kind of activity, because we didn’t adequately understand how hard it was to establish institutions. When I was at Johns Hopkins at SAIS [School of Advanced International Studies] I ran an international-development program, focusing on issues of anti-corruption and improving governance. And a lot of it seemed premised on an overly optimistic faith in the ability of outsiders to effect desired outcomes. So I decided to write a book about where institutions came from in countries that had them and could take them for granted. We’ve forgotten a lot of that history and how we’ve gotten to the present. Along the way it was also a means of revisiting a lot of The End of History 20 years later. SHAFFER: Some theorists, like Hegel, think that history doesn’t just tell us what is stable, or what works, but actually points us toward moral progress. Do you believe that? FUKUYAMA: Fundamentally, I believe in liberal democracy, that it’s the best form of government, and that the world has made moral progress. But that’s a separate question from whether the development of democratic institutions 1s inevitable and driven by an underlying historical force. I’ve become more skeptical of that latter belief over the years as I’ve become more attentive to the role of accident and contingency. And my current book is about a lot of that. For example: The reason we got to democracy in Europe is the almost accidental survival of a feudal institution — the English parliament — into the modern period. That’s something that didn’t happen in other

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