a state which is no longer able, or seen to be able, to carry out its basic functions
A South Sudanese man holding an HK G3 (taken during the South Sudanese civil war). Since 2018, the Bertelsmann Transformation Index has listed South Sudan as a "failed state". A failed state is a state that has lost its ability to fulfill fundamental security and development functions, lacking effective control over its territory and borders. Common characteristics of a failed state include a government incapable of tax collection, law enforcement, security assurance, territorial control, political or civil office staffing, and infrastructure maintenance. When this happens, likely consequences include widespread corruption and criminality, the intervention of state and non-state actors, the appearance of refugees and the involuntary movement of populations, sharp economic decline, and military intervention from both within and outside the state.
The term was initially applied in the 1990s to characterize the civil war in Somalia. The country descended into disorder following a coup that ousted its dictator Siad Barre in 1991, leading to internal conflicts among the country's clans. In the early 2020s, Afghanistan, the Central African Republic, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Haiti, Lebanon, Libya, Mali, Myanmar, Somalia, South Sudan, Sudan, Syria, and Yemen have all been described as failed states.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).