@article{oai:ksu.repo.nii.ac.jp:00010443, author = {ストレフォード, パトリック and STREFFORD, Patrick}, journal = {京都産業大学世界問題研究所紀要, THE BULLETIN OF THE INSTITUTE FOR WORLD AFFAIRS KYOTO SANGYO UNIVERSITY}, month = {Mar}, note = {In ever-expanding pockets since the Industrial Revolution, and increasingly globally in the post-WWII world, the human condition has dramatically improved. There are, unfortunately, significant and serious gaps in this improvement, meaning that there are millions who have benefitted little from the incredible progress that has benefitted so many. But, generally speaking, using a plethora of indicators, we must conclude that international development over the last 200-plus years has been phenomenal. This progress has resulted from the individual and collective efforts of humans- the private sector. However, without institutions, and in particular those inculcated with the authority of the state, the collaboration and cooperation that underpins our progress would be possible only on such a small scale as to make such progress impossible. In this way, it is an axiom that public institutions are necessary for civilization. Paradoxically, those very same public institutions that enable progress have, always and everywhere, the propensity to behave in ways contrary to facilitating progress, becoming anti-developmental. Indeed, it is those very same powers endowed in the state which facilitate development, that concurrently facilitate its progress towards anti-developmentalism. Using the end goal of a Classical Liberal state, in combination with the seemingly contradictory necessity of the Developmental State, this paper attempts to provide a framework through which the following twin goals can be achieved: filling in the gaps of global development, and, correcting the tendency for developmental states to become anti-developmental.}, pages = {69--87}, title = {国家の改造と国際開発}, volume = {35}, year = {2020}, yomi = {ストレフォード, パトリック} }