Contention, Resistance, and International Institutions
Lecture Series "Beyond Anarchy: Rule and Authority in the International System"Prof. Clifford Bob, Duquesne University
22 January 2014, 6.15pm
Goethe-University Frankfurt am Main
Campus Westend, Hörsaalzentrum HZ 10
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Abstract
Recent decades have seen a proliferation of international institutions. Realists dismiss these as existing merely at sufferance of states and as having little independent effect—a normative order of power. By contrast, liberals highlight the growth of centralized authority and cooperation a normative order of law. Using empirical examples, my paper argues that international institutions today offer new forums and objects of contention, not only for states but also and just as importantly for national interest groups. Even domestic actors that have traditionally eschewed international organizations/laws because of their alleged threat to sovereignty or tradition increasingly use them to advance their goals or to stymie their foes. On one hand, this shows the growing influence of international institutions. But it does not necessarily indicate that we are entering a period in which law rules. Instead, international law and organizations are one more arena of conflict, one more means to an end. Even when law is contentiously “made,” it is seldom stable, with opponents seeking the law’s reversal, evisceration, or perversion. Even those who use international institutions scorn their authority and legitimacy, if the institutions do not serve crucial interests. The ideal of law as a settled and revered moral ideal—seldom in fact the case within states—is even less so internationally.
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