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THE GLOBALIZATION OF

WORLD POLITICS
AN INTRODUCTION TO INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS

Prepared by: ROMMEL R. REGALA, Ph.D.


Catanduanes State University
INTRODUCTION
FROM INTERNATIONAL POLITICS TO WORLD POLITICS
CHAPTER 1: GLOBALIZATION AND GLOBAL POLITICS

• Globalization involves:
• A stretching of social, political, and economic activities across political
frontiers.
• A growing magnitude of interconnectedness in almost every sphere of social
existence.
• An accelerating pace of global interactions and processes associated with a
deepening enmeshment of the local and the global.

• Globalization is considered a historical process of fast-growing


interconnectedness in every sphere of social, political and economic life, across
political and national frontiers.
CHAPTER 1: GLOBALIZATION AND GLOBAL POLITICS

• In the first wave, the age of discovery (1450-1850), globalization was decisively
shaped by European expansion and conquest.

• Globalization in the age of discovery was a result of European expansion and


conquest, which then determined the order of the world system.
CHAPTER 1: GLOBALIZATION AND GLOBAL POLITICS

• The second wave (1850-1945) evidenced a major expansion in the spread and
entrenchment of European empires.

• The second wave of globalization was characterized by the attempts of European


empires to enlarge their territories while at the same time securing them from
external interference.
CHAPTER 1: GLOBALIZATION AND GLOBAL POLITICS

• Asymmetrical globalization is the way in which contemporary globalization is


unequally experienced across the world and amongst different social groups.

• The concept of asymmetrical globalization describes the unequal effects of


globalization on different parts of the world and among different social groups
leading to a distinctive pattern of inclusion in and exclusion from the global
system.
CHAPTER 1: GLOBALIZATION AND GLOBAL POLITICS

• The disaggregated state is the tendency for states to become increasingly


fragmented actors in global politics as every part of the government machine
becomes entangled with its foreign counterparts and others in dealing with global
issues through proliferating transgovernmental and global policy networks.

• In a disaggregated state, the constituent agencies increasingly interact with their


counterparts abroad, international agencies and NGOs in the management of
common and global affairs. The image of a foreign-domestic policy divide is
replaced by formal and informal transgovernmental networks.
CHAPTER 1: GLOBALIZATION AND GLOBAL POLITICS

• Skeptical accounts of globalization dismiss its significance because they argue


that:
• By comparison with the period 1870 to 1914, the world is now less globalized
economically, politically and culturally.
• The vast bulk of international economic and political activity is concentrated
within the group of OECD (Organizations for Economic Co-operation and
Development) states.
• Globalization is at best a self-serving myth or ideology which reinforces
Western and particularly US hegemony in world politics.

• Skeptical accounts assume that globalization and interdependence have been


highly exaggerated, or even are myths to conceal that the world is much more
CHAPTER 1: GLOBALIZATION AND GLOBAL POLITICS

• State autonomy is challenged in the "post-Westphalian" order because in a more


interdependent world, national governments are forced to engage in extensive
multilateral collaboration and co-operation simply to achieve domestic
objectives.

• The capacity for self-governance of the state is compromised by new types of


problems that states cannot solve on their own. The authority to do so is
increasingly shared between the local, national, regional and global level.
CHAPTER 1: GLOBALIZATION AND GLOBAL POLITICS

• Time-space compression is the technologically induced erosion of distance and


time, which gives the appearance of a world that is, in communication terms,
shrinking.

• The progress in communication technologies allows interaction across the world


immediately and without time constraints.
CHAPTER 1: GLOBALIZATION AND GLOBAL POLITICS

• The international Convention on the Elimination of Child Labor was the product
of a complex politics involving public and private actors from trade unions,
industrial associations, humanitarian groups, governments, and legal experts.

• The Convention is one example for complex political coordination among


governmental, intergovernmental and non-state actors - both public and private -
in order to realize common purposes through the making of global rules.
CHAPTER 1: GLOBALIZATION AND GLOBAL POLITICS

• The "Post-Westphalian Order" is characterized by:


• The sovereign power and authority of national government - the entitlement of states to rule
within their own territorial space - being transformed but not necessarily eroded.
• A real dilemma: in return for more effective public policy and meeting their citizens’
demands, whether in relation to the drugs trade or employment, states’ capacity for self-
governance - that is state autonomy - is compromised.
• The emergence of a new geography of political organization and political power, which
transcends territories and borders.

• The main three elements of the Westphalian order - sovereignty, state authority
and territoriality - are affected by the consequences of globalization. Sovereignty
is increasingly shared among national, regional and global actors; state authority
is diminished by new types of transnational problems and consequently, a strict
principle of territoriality cannot be maintained.
PART 1

The Historical Context


CHAPTER 2: THE RISE OF MODERN INTERNATIONAL ORDER

• 'International orders' refers to regularized practices of exchange among discrete


political units.

• International orders are regularized practices of exchange among discrete


political units, which recognize each other to be independent. International orders
have existed ever since political units began to interact on a regular basis,
whether through trade, diplomacy or the exchange of ideas. In this sense, world
history has seen a great many regional international orders.
CHAPTER 2: THE RISE OF MODERN INTERNATIONAL ORDER

• International society is regulated by diplomacy, law, and the balance of power.

• The three regulating mechanisms of international society are diplomacy,


international law, and the balance of power.
CHAPTER 2: THE RISE OF MODERN INTERNATIONAL ORDER

• Elements of international society can be found in Medieval Christian Europe,


Medieval Islam, and Ancient China.

• Ancient China, India, Rome, and both Christian and Islamic medieval civilization
bear evidence of international society.
CHAPTER 2: THE RISE OF MODERN INTERNATIONAL ORDER

• The Catholic Church helped constitute the normative basis of international


society.

• The Catholic Church, a form of supranational authority, contributed to both the


normative basis of international society, and in particular, just war theory.
CHAPTER 2: THE RISE OF MODERN INTERNATIONAL ORDER

• Both exploration and colonization of the New World and The Protestant
Reformation contributed to the emergence of international society.

• The exploration of the New World led to an interest in a political entity's relations
beyond its borders, while the Protestant Reformation implicitly strengthened the
principle of sovereign equality by challenging Catholicism's claim to supreme
authority.
CHAPTER 2: THE RISE OF MODERN INTERNATIONAL ORDER

• Skeptical accounts of international society believe both that it is a rhetorical cover


for self-serving powerful states and argue that it is unable to cope with
globalization.

• Skeptical accounts suggest both that international society is a rhetorical


justification of great power politics, and that globalization poses significant
challenges to the order of international society.
CHAPTER 2: THE RISE OF MODERN INTERNATIONAL ORDER

• Challenges to international society posed directly by globalization:


• Global warming.
• American power.
• Dissolution of the bonds of political community.

• The international society has endured for years in spite of interstate war. New
challenges involve civil conflict, environmental strain, American hyperpower,
and changing forms of political community and identity; all of these challenge the
assumption of sovereign equality upon which international society is founded.
Interstate war is not a challenge to international society posed directly by
globalization.
CHAPTER 2: THE RISE OF MODERN INTERNATIONAL ORDER

• Organized hypocrisy is a term coined by political scientist Stephen Krasner to


refer to sovereignty, which is a caution against idealistic conceptions of
international society or the legal fiction masking power relations between states.

• Organized Hypocrisy, the title of a 1999 book by Stephen Krasner, suggests that
sovereignty is a norm honored more in the breach than in the observance, and
cautions against assuming that all states will always honor the precepts of
international society.
CHAPTER 2: THE RISE OF MODERN INTERNATIONAL ORDER

• The French and American Revolutions created new challenges to international


society by raising the issue of nationalism while also leading to the creation of the
Concert of Europe.

• The American (1776) and French (1789) Revolutions brought new states and the
concept of nationalism to the forefront of inter-state relations, and led to the
creation of the Concert of Europe after the Napoleonic Wars.
CHAPTER 2: THE RISE OF MODERN INTERNATIONAL ORDER

• Hierarchical, Hegemonic, and Imperial offers an alternative to international


society as a way of organizing world politics.

• International society is distinguished from the above three ways of ordering the
world system by the principle of sovereign equality.
CHAPTER 3: INTERNATIONAL HISTORY, 1900-1999

• Historian A.J.P. Taylor argued that Hitler was no different from other German
political leaders.

• In Origins of the Second World War, A.J.P. Taylor argued that Hitler was no
different from the German political leaders who had preceded him. Fritz Fischer
argued in Germany’s Aims in the First World War that the war was caused by the
international political needs of an autocratic elite.
CHAPTER 3: INTERNATIONAL HISTORY, 1900-1999

• Under a structural explanation, the central problem of European security in the


first half of the twentieth century was the rise of a united Germany.

• The increase in German power post-unification was seen as the central security
problem that the Versailles settlement failed to solve. Although nationalism and
economic crisis were both important issues, the structural explanation focuses on
the effects of Germany's rise.
CHAPTER 3: INTERNATIONAL HISTORY, 1900-1999

• The First World War led to the dissolution of the Russian empire.

• Along with the German, Austro-Hungarian, and Ottoman Empires, the Russian
empire ended with the First World War.
CHAPTER 3: INTERNATIONAL HISTORY, 1900-1999

• Decolonization was partially determined by local or tribal factors, by the attitudes


of former colonizing powers, and was sometimes replaced by superpower
involvement.

• Decolonization varied across regions and former imperial powers, and was also
partially determined by factors in the area undergoing decolonization as well as
the level of involvement of the new superpowers.
CHAPTER 3: INTERNATIONAL HISTORY, 1900-1999

• The Warsaw Pact was the Eastern bloc's answer to NATO and gained impetus
after the 1954 rearmament of West Germany.

• The North Atlantic Treaty Alliance (NATO) was the United States' military
commitment to its European allies. Signed in 1949, it was followed in 1955 by
the Warsaw Pact, which was largely prompted by the rearmament of the Federal
Republic of Germany.
CHAPTER 3: INTERNATIONAL HISTORY, 1900-1999

• Efforts to achieve more cooperative relations between the Western and


Communist countries:
• Détente with the USSR.
• Rapprochement with China.
• German Ostpolitik.

• Détente with the USSR and rapprochement with China were both efforts by the
United States to achieve more cooperative relations with Communist states in the
1970's. The same can be said of West Germany's Ostpolitik.
CHAPTER 3: INTERNATIONAL HISTORY, 1900-1999

• The 'second cold war‘ followed the election of Ronal Reagan and described a
confrontational period in the late 1980s.

• After the election of President Ronald Reagan in 1980, relations between the
superpowers entered a more conflictual phase, which has since been dubbed the
"second cold war".
CHAPTER 3: INTERNATIONAL HISTORY, 1900-1999

• The USSR, the US, and Britain (in order) were the first three states to achieve
nuclear capability.

• The United States dropped the first atomic bomb in 1945; the USSR tested in
1949, and the British followed with a test off the Australian coast in 1952.
CHAPTER 3: INTERNATIONAL HISTORY, 1900-1999

• The Sinatra doctrine was a catchphrase for foreign policy under Gorbachev.

• The Sinatra doctrine referred to Gorbachev's policy toward Eastern Europe. It


replaced the Brezhnev doctrine and was paired with domestic policies of glasnost
(openness) and perestroika (restructuring).
CHAPTER 3: INTERNATIONAL HISTORY, 1900-1999

• Nuclear weapons crises during the cold war included the following:
• Cuba (1962)
• Able Archer (1983)
• The Arab Israeli War (1979)

• In addition to the Berlin Crisis of 1961, these crises all ran a significant risk of
escalation to nuclear war, though how close the superpowers came to war is still
debated today.
CHAPTER 4: FROM THE END OF THE COLD WAR TO A NEW
GLOBAL ORDER

• The 'unipolar moment‘ refers to US primacy since 1989.

• The 'unipolar moment' is the position in which the United States finds itself after
the end of the cold war. Although scholars debate whether multipolarity or
another international system is emerging, most believe that the US is still a global
hegemon.
CHAPTER 4: FROM THE END OF THE COLD WAR TO A NEW
GLOBAL ORDER

• Explanations for the end of the cold war include:


• Gorbachev and Reagan's leadership.
• The relative economic strength of the United States.
• The ideological attractiveness of Western democracy and capitalism.

• There is no clear consensus on the causes of the cold war; all three explanations
have been advanced.
CHAPTER 4: FROM THE END OF THE COLD WAR TO A NEW
GLOBAL ORDER

• Globalization in the post-cold war world became a defining term of international


discourse and had its extent contested by scholars such as David Held and Martin
Wolf.

• Globalization, though its precise meaning was contested, became the key
discourse of governments in the post-cold war world.
CHAPTER 4: FROM THE END OF THE COLD WAR TO A NEW
GLOBAL ORDER

• US primacy is a key feature of and a challenge in the post-cold war order.

• Very few people predicted US primacy, but it has become a defining feature of
the post-Cold-War world and as such is debated hotly inside and outside the
United States. 9/11 gave direction to a formerly drifting US foreign policy.
CHAPTER 4: FROM THE END OF THE COLD WAR TO A NEW
GLOBAL ORDER

• Europe:
• Has struggled to reconcile deepening integration with fragmentation, such as
that in the former Yugoslavia.
• Is debating the extent and depth of a "European foreign and security policy"
but remains uncertain of their future.
• Emphasizes international institutions.

• Although Europe benefited immensely from the end of the cold war, it continues
to struggle with deepening integration and civil conflict on its borders, the extent
to which it should pursue a collective foreign policy, and the role of international
institutions.
CHAPTER 4: FROM THE END OF THE COLD WAR TO A NEW
GLOBAL ORDER

• Russian President Vladimir Putin has nationalized Russian economic assets.

• Among other shifts in an authoritarian, assertive direction, Putin has brought


economic assets back under state control.
CHAPTER 4: FROM THE END OF THE COLD WAR TO A NEW
GLOBAL ORDER

• Challenges facing East Asia include North Korea's nuclear program and
outstanding territorial disputes.

• The North Korean nuclear program, territorial disputes between many of the
major powers, and the "rise of China" are examples of challenges facing East
Asia today.
CHAPTER 4: FROM THE END OF THE COLD WAR TO A NEW
GLOBAL ORDER

• The "rise of China“:


• Is an issue considered by every region of the world today.
• Is unequivocally a cause for optimism.
• Is characterized by a shift toward economic autarky.

• Regions around the world, from Europe to Africa, have had to incorporate China
into their foreign policy considerations as China has become more and more of an
international and economic player. However, realist theory predicts that the rise
of China is likely to provoke international conflict.
CHAPTER 4: FROM THE END OF THE COLD WAR TO A NEW
GLOBAL ORDER

• Inequality:
• Creates new challenges in terms of domestic social stability, migration, and
political violence.
• Has become more important as globalization empowers sub-state actors.
• Has caused scholars to reconsider the helpfulness of the term "Third World".

• Although inequality has always been present, the end of the cold war led scholars
to reconsider the utility of the term "Third World" to characterize poor and still-
developing areas. It has led to new challenges posed by the empowerment of sub-
state actors, fluctuations in domestic social stability, increased migration, and
possible political violence against the West.
CHAPTER 4: FROM THE END OF THE COLD WAR TO A NEW
GLOBAL ORDER

• George W. Bush's foreign policy:


• Argued that old methods of dealing with contemporary challenges were
obsolete and ineffective.
• Changed direction sharply after 9/11.
• Led to a controversial war in Iraq whose reasons and effects are still being
highly debated.

• After 9/11 American foreign policy took a sharp turn: military interventions in
both Iraq and Afghanistan were based on the premise that deterrence and the
balance of power were inadequate mechanisms by which to confront the threat
posed by transnational Islamic terrorism.
CHAPTER 5: RISING POWERS & THE EMERGING GLOBAL ORDER

• What is "unipolarity"?
• Unipolarity denotes the period of time after the post-cold war era, in which the US emerged
as the sole superpower. It describes the unrivalled extent and many dimensions of US power.
• Unipolartiy refers to the dense set of trans-Atlantic and trans-Pacific relations and alliance
systems.
• Unipolarity was marked by Western-dominated institutions and multilateral organizations
originally created in the wake of the Second World War.

• Unipolarity denotes the period of time after the post-cold war era, in which the
US emerged as the sole superpower. It was manifest in the dense set of trans-
Atlantic and trans-Pacific relations and alliance systems, established, in the main,
through U.S. initiative. Contemporarily, there has been much debate as to whether
or not unipolarity persists or whether we have now entered a period of
multipolarity.
CHAPTER 5: RISING POWERS & THE EMERGING GLOBAL ORDER

• Soft power is getting others to agree with you without using coercive force.

• Soft power is distinguished from hard, coercive power. In contrast to the former,
soft power refers to the power of attraction, of getting others to emulate your own
society and its values.
CHAPTER 5: RISING POWERS & THE EMERGING GLOBAL ORDER

• An example of how emerging powers have impacted the international governance


system:
• Brazil and India have joined the US and the EU as members of the WTO
inner negotiating circle.
• While there has been a lot of discussion about reforming the UN Security
Council, and possibly include new permanent members, it has so far failed to
generate any actual change. In the WTO, "major", countries, such as those in the
"new quad" wield less formal power, and groups can be formed more easily, and
based on existing verities. This illustrates the growing importance of the
emerging powers, but also how entrenched the more formalized governance
systems are.
CHAPTER 5: RISING POWERS & THE EMERGING GLOBAL ORDER

• Waiving special concessions based on their old developing country status is an


example of a nation trying to "graduate" from the developing world category.

• It has been suggested that if a nation wants truly to join non-developing countries
as a full and accepted peer; it needs to forego the special privileges that came
with its old status as a somehow subordinate power. This will likely be a test of
the resolve of such an ambition, as short-term pain must be weighed against less
tangible longer-term legitimacy and peer recognition.
CHAPTER 5: RISING POWERS & THE EMERGING GLOBAL ORDER

• The Washington Consensus is a set of policy aims thought, by its promoters, to


maximize global welfare, by pushing for (among other things) market
liberalization and a reduced role for the state.

• The notion is that a set of preferences how to maximize global welfare was
gradually turned into a "standardized" package of policy recommendations
adopted and promoted by influential Washingtonites and others. The influence of
these policy shapers meant that the resulting "policy recipes" were in turn pushed
by international - but Washington-based - institutions such as the International
Monetary Fund and the World Bank. Critics have argued that this in fact meant
the forced adoption of neo-liberal ideas by countries in need of assistance (and
thus less able to resist any reciprocal demands).
CHAPTER 5: RISING POWERS & THE EMERGING GLOBAL ORDER

• Creating new formal organizations (such as the G20) to organize countries is an


example of increased "concert diplomacy“.

• Concert diplomacy is nothing new, but a resurgence of the idea that great powers
need to collaborate to organize norms of international interaction, and thus the
very order of international society. Organizations such as the G20 provide venues
for recurring talks about such issues, and the realization that more than just a
handful of states (compare the veto-wielding powers in the UN Security Council)
are in fact required to partake in these processes.
CHAPTER 5: RISING POWERS & THE EMERGING GLOBAL ORDER

• No reform(s) have been implemented during the tenure of General Kofi Annan as
Secretary despite of making it a priority to reform the United Nations, including the
Security Council.

• The structure of the UN Security Council is based on the political realities of the late
1940s. Reform and modernization of its governance system have been identified by
numerous actors, including Annan and Ban Ki-Moon, as crucial to reflect a changing
world, and so keep the organization relevant. Suggestions have included the
expansion of the number of permanent members, the expansion of the number of
non-permanent members or both. Because change requires the agreement of at least
two-thirds of UN members and all the five veto-wielding powers, it has so far proved
impossible to reach a consensus. Problems are compounded by conflicting demands
by hitherto "excluded" (i.e. non-permanent members) states.
CHAPTER 5: RISING POWERS & THE EMERGING GLOBAL ORDER

• The BASIC is a group of developing countries (Brazil, South Africa, India and
China) that have in some cases acted in unison to strengthen their negotiation
position vis-a-vis traditionally strong parties such as the United States.

• The growing willingness of geographically far-flung emerging powers to set up


separate venues to explore and consolidate positions, and then act in unison to
push a common agenda more forcefully is challenging entrenched international
negotiating norms and procedures - in some cases forcing a sobering revision of
presumed influence of these nations. BASIC like IBSA and the BRICS developed
out of the dissatisfaction of the developing world with globalization and indicated
a greater willingness among these nations to act in pursuit of its collective
interests and against the developed world
CHAPTER 5: RISING POWERS & THE EMERGING GLOBAL ORDER

• Evidence that the United States has primarily been a status quo power includes
the statement is fundamentally flawed: the United States has primarily been a
revisionist power.

• The United States has often tried actively to promote values and modes of
governance that it subscribes to, with the implicit or explicit aim to mold other
nations in its own image. Such activism also has an indirect component where
guiding norms are embedded in international organizations which will then in
turn promote them elsewhere in the world - sometimes to the chagrin of regimes
that do not naturally endorse such values. In this sense, the US is not so much
interested in the sustenance of the contemporary mode of conduct across the
world, as it is in global reformism.
CHAPTER 5: RISING POWERS & THE EMERGING GLOBAL ORDER

• The "liberal global order“ is a 1990s assumption that liberal values, as defined
and promoted by the United States, were "winning", leading to a more tranquil
world.

• In the 1990s, there was a sense that the United States would be - for the
foreseeable future - be threatened by any competing powers, and that the Western
order was working. Weaker states would have to submit, and the liberal order
would gradually expand. The predominance of this view in part obscured
competing claims, and third world dissatisfaction with the envisaged global order.
The rise of emerging powers, and their growing influence in world affairs have
further undermined the idea that a global liberal order is achievable.
PART 2

Structures and Processes


CHAPTER 6: WAR AND WORLD POLITICS

• Traditional view of state-to-state war:


• Inter-state war may be becoming increasingly obsolete.
• Inter-state war is rooted in our understanding of a Westphalian state system.

• Traditional understandings of interstate war argue that it is based on a


Westphalian state system which assumes national sovereignty, and that the
prevalence of non-state actors and civil conflict, coupled with processes of
globalization, render interstate war less likely.
CHAPTER 6: WAR AND WORLD POLITICS

• Hedley Bull defined war as an "organized violence carried on by political units


against each other“.

• This definition was propagated by English school theorist Hedley Bull in 1977.
CHAPTER 6: WAR AND WORLD POLITICS

• "War made the state, and the state made war."


• It comes from the work of historical sociologist Charles Tilly.

• Charles Tilly examined the effect of war as a force both requiring and creating
large-scale political organization in Europe during the era 1000-2000 A.D.
CHAPTER 6: WAR AND WORLD POLITICS

• The characteristics of the Revolution in Military Affairs (RMA):


• It emphasizes the role of advances in military technology as bringing about
radical change in the character of war
• It neglects the complex political dimensions of warfare.

• The Revolution in Military Affairs focused on the effect of superior technological


and doctrinal development on modern warfare, and became prominent in the
1990's. However, critics charge that it omits discussion of war as a political
struggle and thereby grossly oversimplifies our understanding.
CHAPTER 6: WAR AND WORLD POLITICS

• ‘War's character has changed, though its nature has not’ is a major theme of this
chapter.

• As the title of the chapter indicates, the form, or character, of war has changed to
reflect modern conditions, but the nature of warfare, as organized violence
between political units, remains unchanged.
CHAPTER 6: WAR AND WORLD POLITICS

• State autonomy challenged in the "post-Westphalian" order because:


• Identity politics are increasingly important.
• Economic insecurity provokes civil conflict.
• Technological development and 'virtual war' have enabled Western
intervention.

• Today, economic insecurity exacerbated by interdependence and the rising


importance of identity politics have created civil conflict which challenges the
autonomy of the state. This is especially true since 'virtual' high-tech war has
facilitated Western involvement in these conflicts.
CHAPTER 6: WAR AND WORLD POLITICS

• The following best describes Clausewitz's philosophy of war:


• War always involves passion, in the motives for fighting and in the enmities
that inspire and sustain killing in war.
• War is a sphere of sheer chance. Anything can happen.
• War involves reason. Political leaders and military staffs seek to achieve
objectives through war.

• Clausewitz's philosophy of war is premised on his trinities: passion, chance, and


politics. These, he argued, come together in varying combinations in any given
historical instance of war.
CHAPTER 6: WAR AND WORLD POLITICS

• Roles that have been changed by contemporary warfare:


• The media.
• Women.
• Children.

• Post-modern war is characterized by increased media transparency, while 'new


wars' often involve child soldiers and women as combatants, in comparison to
traditional understandings of combatants as uniformed men.
CHAPTER 6: WAR AND WORLD POLITICS

• 'New wars' are supported by these types of activities:


• Hostage-taking.
• Illegal trafficking of diamonds and drugs.
• Arms smuggling across weakly enforced borders.

• Kaldor characterizes 'new wars' as those taking place in failed or near-failed


states where the government lacks authority or ability to enforce the state's
monopoly on violence; borders are therefore permeable and a range of criminal
activities occur to facilitate the combatants' ability to conduct conflict.
CHAPTER 6: WAR AND WORLD POLITICS

• 'Total war‘ means that a state or other political entity is fighting for its existence.

• A total war occurs when a state or other political entity is fighting for its
existence. In the Second World War, the Allies demanded unconditional surrender
from Nazi Germany. The war ended Adolf Hitler's regime, the Third Reich. Note
that a war can be limited for one participant, and total for another.
CHAPTER 7: INTERNATIONAL AND GLOBAL SECURITY

• National security is a security largely defined in militarized terms.

• "National security" was the dominant conceptualization of security during the


Cold War. Thinking about national security during this time was mainly defined
in militarized terms.
CHAPTER 7: INTERNATIONAL AND GLOBAL SECURITY

• “Uncertainty" so crucial to the realist account of security because it leads to lack


of trust in the international system.

• Uncertainty implies that states can never be sure of the intentions of their
neighbors and therefore they must always be on their guard. Concepts closely
linked to realist understandings of uncertainty are the security dilemma and arms
race.
CHAPTER 7: INTERNATIONAL AND GLOBAL SECURITY

• Security dilemma is a structural notion in which self-help attempts of states to


look after their security needs, tend regardless of intention to lead to a rise in
insecurity.

• The "security dilemma" is a constant feature of international politics. Due to


anarchy and uncertainty, any attempt by a state to increase its security, regardless
of its intentions, has to be interpreted by other states as a threat to their security.
The total effect is a dynamic action-reaction which enhances insecurity.
CHAPTER 7: INTERNATIONAL AND GLOBAL SECURITY

• The realist pessimist position is based upon the assumptions about the way the
international system works:
• The international system is anarchic.
• States that are claiming sovereignty will inevitably develop offensive military
capabilities to defend themselves and extend their power.
• States will want to maintain their independence and sovereignty and therefore
survival will be the driving force influencing their behavior.
• The realist pessimist view stems from Hobbes, Machiavelli, and Rousseau
viewing the international system as a brutal arena in which states seek to further
their own security at the expense of those around them. Waltz and Mearsheimer
also take this stance.
CHAPTER 7: INTERNATIONAL AND GLOBAL SECURITY

• “Institutionalized cooperation“:
• Cooperation through international institutions as an approach to international
security.
• Cooperation through institutions to creating mature anarchy

• The term "institutionalized cooperation" points out the role institutions play in
enhancing security. Cooperation through international institutions can develop
into more durable and stable security systems and thus opens up the opportunity
to achieve greater overall international security.
CHAPTER 7: INTERNATIONAL AND GLOBAL SECURITY

• How does democratic peace theory challenge realism?


• It places importance on internal norms and institutions.
• It challenges realist occupation with balance of power.
• It argues that war is a function of a state being liberal or not.

• Democratic peace theory argues that internal norms and institutions of liberal
democracy do make a difference in international politics. The balance-of-power
mechanism thus is not a general feature of inter-state relations; the actual
behavior of a state in the system is a function of its regime type.
CHAPTER 7: INTERNATIONAL AND GLOBAL SECURITY

• “Security community“ is a group of people who become integrated and within a


territory develop a sense of community.

• Deutsch's concept of "security communities" points to the possibility that a group


of people within a territory, via the development of institutions and common
practices, can develop a sense of community that enhances the belief that
common social problems must and can be resolved by processes of peaceful
change.
CHAPTER 7: INTERNATIONAL AND GLOBAL SECURITY

• Walter Lippmann said:


• "A nation is secure to the extent to which it is not in danger of having to
sacrifice core values if it wishes to avoid war, and is able, if challenged, to
maintain them by victory in such a war“.

• Walter Lippmann offered this as his definition of national security. It is only one
of several notions of the concept of 'security'.
CHAPTER 7: INTERNATIONAL AND GLOBAL SECURITY

• The problems with collective security:


• States find it difficult to distinguish between victim and aggressor in
international conflicts.
• It assumes that all aggression is wrong.
• Historical enmity or friendship complicates the working of the system.

• According to J. Mearsheimer, the idea of collective security is problematic as


(among other reasons) states find it difficult to distinguish between aggressor and
the victim in international conflicts; it considers all aggression to be wrong
whereas there may be circumstances where its use is necessary against a
threatening neighbor and it underestimates the effects of historical enmity.
CHAPTER 7: INTERNATIONAL AND GLOBAL SECURITY

• Post-modernists view realism as:


• A central problem of international security because it is the dominant
discourse of power and rule.
• A statist ideology out of touch with the reality of globalization.
• Unable to take into consideration the enormous complexity and indeterminacy
of human behavior across its cultural, religious and historical roots.

• Realism as the dominant discourse in international politics has provided an image


of the world that encourages behavior that helps to bring about war. Thus,
Realism cannot grasp the globalizing tendencies in world politics that is part of
the complexity and indeterminacy of human life.
CHAPTER 8: GLOBAL POLITICAL ECONOMY

• Increased trade barriers and devalued currencies resulted from the Great
Depression.

• While each of the countries involved in the Great Depression believed that by
increasing trade barriers and devaluating currencies it could manage to keep its
economy afloat, the Great Depression demonstrated that this did not work.
CHAPTER 8: GLOBAL POLITICAL ECONOMY

• The main role of the IMF is to ensure a stable exchange rate regime and provide
emergency assistance to countries facing crises in balance of payments.

• The IMF was created to promote international monetary cooperation and resolve
the inter-war problems of the Great Depression. The main goal of IMF is to
achieve stable exchange rates and one of its main tools is the provision of
emergency assistance to countries facing serious payment challenges.
CHAPTER 8: GLOBAL POLITICAL ECONOMY

• The main role of the World Bank is to assist countries in development.

• What we now call the World Bank started as the International Bank for
Reconstruction and Development and has since become the world's largest source
of development assistance, providing nearly $16 billion in loans annually.
CHAPTER 8: GLOBAL POLITICAL ECONOMY

• The "Washington Consensus“ is the ten point guideline to liberal economic


reform for development around the world.

• The term "Washington consensus" originally referred to a set of policy advice on


liberal economic reform being given by Washington-based institutions to Latin
America. Nowadays the term is often used interchangeably with the phrase
American "neoliberal policies."
CHAPTER 8: GLOBAL POLITICAL ECONOMY

• States undertake protectionist measures to keep competitive foreign goods from


flooding the market.

• When using protectionist measures, states try to "shield" their internal production,
and hence domestic business and employment, from international competition.
CHAPTER 8: GLOBAL POLITICAL ECONOMY

• Structural adjustment involve:


• Measures to reduce inflation.
• Measures to curb government expenditure.
• Deregulation.

• The term "structural adjustment" is usually used when referring to the IMF's
policy towards indebted countries. Structural adjustments mean immediate
measures to reduce inflation and, more broadly, mean the correction of the role of
the government in the economy.
CHAPTER 8: GLOBAL POLITICAL ECONOMY

• The nationalist/realist view of International Political Economy (IPE):


• The world economy is where states seek to maximize their wealth and
independence relative to other states.

• The nationalist/realist tradition stands in stark contrast to a liberal perception. As


mercantilists share the presumptions of realists in international politics, states will
attempt to ensure their self-sufficiency and hence their relative strength and
power in key strategic industries and commodities.
CHAPTER 8: GLOBAL POLITICAL ECONOMY

• Dependency Theory refers to economic activity in the richer countries that often
leads to serious economic problems in the poorer countries.

• Dependency Theory is part of the Marxist tradition in IPE and has traditionally
focused on Latin America to explain how underdevelopment and poverty is
caused by economic, social and political structures in the core countries and the
type of exchange this is generating.
CHAPTER 8: GLOBAL POLITICAL ECONOMY

• The constructivist approach pays attention to how states and other actors
construct their preferences, highlighting the role of identities, beliefs, tradition
and values.

• The constructivist approach focuses on the role of historical and sociological


factors and examines the beliefs, roles, traditions, ideologies and patterns of
influence that shape preferences and behavior of states and other actors.
CHAPTER 8: GLOBAL POLITICAL ECONOMY

• Under what conditions will states create international institutions?


• It depends on the school of thought.

• Competing accounts of institutions will make different statements about the


possibility and probability of cooperative behavior and international institution
building. For example, institutionalism emphases the role of institutions in
achieving absolute gains, whereas realists argue that institutions will only be
created when dominant states wish to do so.
CHAPTER 9: GENDER IN WORLD POLITICS

• “Emancipatory knowledge“ is a knowledge that will lead to changes in favor of a


normative ideal, such as gender equality.

• Much feminist theory is based on the idea of emancipation - the belief in the
capacity of knowledge to drive positive normative change - specifically related to
the improvement of women's lives worldwide.
CHAPTER 9: GENDER IN WORLD POLITICS

• The myth of protection:


• It characterizes men as protectors and women as protected.
• It is used to justify and shape national security policies.
• It is a myth challenged by changing gender roles in contemporary warfare.

• The protection myth is a popular assumption that men fight wars to protect the
vulnerable, including women and children, and has been used to justify national
security efforts. However, changing roles of women as both the objects of
violence in warfare and in terms of increased participation as combatants has
prompted some revision of this myth.
CHAPTER 9: GENDER IN WORLD POLITICS

• The gendered division of labor is based on gender-structured conceptions of


appropriate work.

• The gendered division of labor results in women doing a high proportion of


unpaid labor in the home, while men work outside for wages; it creates a "double
burden" for women who seek to work outside the home and has reinforced
women's lower pay in the global economy.
CHAPTER 9: GENDER IN WORLD POLITICS

• The idea of the gender-sensitive lens came from the feminist theorists: Peterson
and Runyan.

• Various "lenses" help us focus our attention and formulate questions with regard
to world politics. A gender-specific lens, as proposed by Peterson and Runyan,
helps us see how gender structures world politics.
CHAPTER 9: GENDER IN WORLD POLITICS

• The gendering of world politics is seen in the following areas:


• Prostitution and human trafficking.
• Civil wars and refugee flows.
• Trade and development.

• In addition to many other areas of world politics, gender shapes the three named
above by defining roles and framing debates.
CHAPTER 9: GENDER IN WORLD POLITICS

• Intersectionality describes:
• Overlapping global structures of inequality
• A concept developed by feminists to analyze how sex and gender play out in
the everyday lives of women across the globe
• The intertwining of economic and social status of women

• Intersectionality describes overlapping global structures of inequality, which


define the everyday lives of people simultaneously. This means that gender is
often found alongside other forms of oppression/domination. In this sense, the
experience of gender domination is always located, while gender becomes a
global phenomenon.
CHAPTER 9: GENDER IN WORLD POLITICS

• Gender theorists see the following developments as progress (but it depends on


which gender theory you pick):
• The establishment of the UN Gender Development Index.
• The election of US Speaker Nancy Pelosi.
• The incorporation of "gender mainstreaming" into policy discourse.

• Although all of these developments have positively influenced women around the
world, different theorists would have different views of the extent of this
'progress'. For example, postcolonial feminists would argue for diversifying the
focus of gender scholarship to include more women outside the West.
CHAPTER 9: GENDER IN WORLD POLITICS

• The impact of globalization for women:


• It has created new areas for women's advancement.
• It has led to new challenges and dangers for women.
• It has not changed the fundamental inequality of gender relationships in the
world enough.

• Globalization has created new opportunities as well as challenges for women, but
most feminists would agree that the gender structure of world politics remains
fundamentally unequal and that continuing advocacy for change is needed.
CHAPTER 9: GENDER IN WORLD POLITICS

• The feminized labor refers to less desirable or secure work, which has come to be
associated with specific 'female' qualities.

• Feminized labor refers to less desirable or secure work, which has come to be
associated with specific 'female' qualities. This is often accompanied with lesser
liberties and freedoms and higher violations of human rights at the work place.
CHAPTER 9: GENDER IN WORLD POLITICS

• “Double burden“:
• It refers to the disproportionate share of housework done by women.
• It dates to the 17th century.
• It is rooted in gendered conceptions of the distinction between public and
private life.

• The "double burden' arose in the 17th century and refers to the situation in which
women were restricted to low-paying production or service industries and also
responsible for significant amounts of unpaid domestic labor.
CHAPTER 10: RACE IN WORLD POLITICS

• 'White privilege‘ refers to the social advantages that accrue to white persons

• The legal concept of 'white privilege' refers to the social advantages that accrue to
white persons due to their transparent and fundamentally unquestioned
competence and humanity. It is examined by 'whiteness studies', where scholars
now seek to explain how the (often unspoken) privileges enjoyed by white
persons depend upon (often violent) processes of exclusion. Answers a. and c.
refer to the concept of 'whiteness'. While this is, of course, related to notions of
'white privilege' it does not define it directly.
CHAPTER 10: RACE IN WORLD POLITICS

• The cultural calculus of racism describes the racial ordering of children of mixed
race.

• The cultural calculus came out of the theological debate over indigenous peoples.
It was used to adjudicate the cultural competencies of a group whose heritage lay
outside of the 'old' Biblical world, and the degree to which these competencies -
the ability to reason especially - allowed them to enjoy basic protections as
human beings.
CHAPTER 10: RACE IN WORLD POLITICS

• A 'Mulatto' described the cross between white and negro in the official color
hierarchies of the French Caribbean colony of St. Dominque.
CHAPTER 10: RACE IN WORLD POLITICS

• Karl Marx argues that capitalism was premised on the 'turning of Africa into a
warren for the commercial hunting of black-skins‘.

• It was Karl Marx who argued that capitalism was premised on the 'turning of
Africa into a warren for the commercial hunting of black-skins'. Indeed, this is
related to his more fundamental claim that capitalist economic development for
some/in some places requires the exploitation of others/other places.
CHAPTER 10: RACE IN WORLD POLITICS

• ‘Standard of civilization‘ is a hierarchical ordering of humanity, travelling


through savagery, barbarism and civilization, which was informed by
enlightenment thinkers in Europe.

• The 'standard of civilization' denoted hierarchical stages of humanity that


travelled through savagery, barbarism and finally civilization. It was developed in
Europe during the mid-19th century, but drew on enlightenment thinkers such as
Baron de Montesquieu.
CHAPTER 10: RACE IN WORLD POLITICS

• Distinctive characteristics of international legal arguments:


• They are limited to the scope of the legislation at hand.
• They are rhetorical as well as logical.

• International law is characterized by a peculiar language and practice of


justification or legal arguments. As interpretation plays a central role in
determining which rule applies, its meaning and the nature of the case at hand,
legal arguments are logical as well as rhetorical.
CHAPTER 10: RACE IN WORLD POLITICS

• In 1848 Algeria became a departement of the French Republic.

• In 1848, Algeria became a departement of the French republic. It was, therefore,


no longer a colony. Therefore while citizens of Algeria would have formerly
enjoyed equal rights to French citizens, when the French republic proposed
equality among all citizens, the culture of Algeria's indigenes (indigenous
peoples) was deemed too barbaric to be included in this equality.
CHAPTER 10: RACE IN WORLD POLITICS

• 'Scientific racism' was particularly prominent in the following era:


• Graeco-Roman antiquity.
• Age of the Enlightenment.
• The end of the 19th century.
• The beginning of the 20th century.

• 'Scientific racism' has a long-standing history in world politics. While some


periods of time were more prominently influenced by the cultural calculus of
racism, 'scientific racism', premised on the biological calculus of racism, never
completely vanished. It is important to remember that 'scientific racism' is no
more than a kind of 'pseudoscience', though policy practices have had a real and
devastating impact on human lives.
CHAPTER 10: RACE IN WORLD POLITICS

• UNIA stands for Universal Negro Improvement Association.

• UNIA stands for Universal Negro Improvement Association. It collaborated with


the African Communities League and was founded in colonial Jamaica. Over the
years the organization developed branches in almost all continents and came to
take on outward trappings of a state, responding directly to the legacies of
slavery, colonialism and racism.
CHAPTER 10: RACE IN WORLD POLITICS

• 'New Racism‘:
• Denotes the claim that 'ethnic minorities' migrating to Europe culturally lack the institutional
and moral sophistication to integrate into advanced liberal-democratic societies.
• Is fundamental to development and security policies in the era of the Global War On Terror.
• Is present in the arguments of 'liberal peace' proponents, who claim that societies of the
Global South can only avoid poverty and conflict by adopting Western systems of
governance.

• The "New Stream" critique of Liberalism (also termed "Critical Legal Studies")
challenges the inherent Liberalism of modern international legal thought. The
three given propositions all refer to the claim that traditional legal theory is
somewhere stuck between "apology" (a rationalization of the status quo) and
"utopia" (a naive image that international law can civilize the world of states).
CHAPTER 11: INTERNATIONAL LAW

• "Jus ad bellum“ refers to laws of war governing when it is legal to use force or
wage war.

• The legal concept of "jus ad bellum" refers to those laws that determine when it is
legally permitted to use force or wage war. For instance, Chapter 7 of the UN
Charter restricts the legitimate use of force to international peace enforcement
actions authorized by the Security Council and individual and collective self-
defense.
CHAPTER 11: INTERNATIONAL LAW

• The following are necessary before a rule can be considered customary


international law:
• Evidence of general state practice.
• Evidence that states accept such practice as law.

• Evidence of general practice means that states habitually act in a manner


consistent with the rule. The Opinio juris claim implies that states are convinced
that they act according to a law when they carry out this practice. In that case,
customary law is binding upon all states.
CHAPTER 11: INTERNATIONAL LAW

• The three levels of institutions in modern international society:


• Constitutional institutions, fundamental institutions, and regimes.

• In modern international society, states have created these three levels of


institutions. Constitutional institutions are deep institutions, such as the principle
of sovereignty; fundamental institutions provide the basic rules and practices of
states; regimes (or issue-specific institutions) enact fundamental institutional
practices in particular realms.
CHAPTER 11: INTERNATIONAL LAW

• Distinctive characteristics of the modern institution of international law?


• A peculiar language of reasoning and argument.
• Multilateral form of legislation.
• A strong discourse of institutional autonomy.

• Contemporary international law is structured by the social and political


conditions of modernity and contains imprints of its revolution for social thought.
Hence, the language of reasoning and argument, a distinct multilateralism in
lawmaking and a discourse of institutional autonomy are some of its
characterizing features.
CHAPTER 11: INTERNATIONAL LAW

• Ways that the nature and scope of international society have been conditioned by
international legal instruments:
• They have defined the nature of legitimate statehood.
• They have clarified the bounds of rightful state action, international and
domestic.

• Referring to the constitutional dimension of international law, some legal


instruments in history have been decisive in defining the nature and scope of
international society, such as the Treaties of Westphalia. This helped to define the
nature of legitimate statehood and the Charter of the United Nations, clarifying
the bounds of legitimate action towards other states.
CHAPTER 11: INTERNATIONAL LAW

• Distinctive characteristics of international legal arguments:


• They are limited to the scope of the legislation at hand.
• They are rhetorical as well as logical.

• International law is characterized by a particular language and practice of


justification or legal arguments. As interpretation plays a central role in
determining which rule applies, its meaning and the nature of the case at hand,
legal arguments are logical as well as rhetorical.
CHAPTER 11: INTERNATIONAL LAW

• Legal positivism:
• The idea that legal rules have legitimacy from their logical and practical
derivation from a fundamental "grundnorm".
• The idea that authority of legal rules comes from their status as the commands
of a sovereign authority.

• Legal positivism has dominated international legal theory in the 20th century. It
assumes the authority of the law lies in the legal rules themselves and thus can be
derived from either their status as commands of a sovereign authority or from
their derivation from a fundamental "grundnorm".
CHAPTER 11: INTERNATIONAL LAW

• Neo-liberal approach to international law is NOT limited through:


• By its inability to explain the development of law in areas where the self-
interests of states are unclear.
• By the failure to explain the origins of the modern system of international
law.
• By its rejection of the idea that international law constitutes the identities and
interests of states.

• The neo-liberal approach emphasizes the domestic origin of state preferences as,
in turn, international law. Hence, its principal limitation is that it neglects the role
international law can play in constituting the domestic realm.
CHAPTER 11: INTERNATIONAL LAW

• New Haven School is also known as the policy approach.

• The New Haven School is one attempt to move beyond legal positivism in
international legal theory. It is a "policy-oriented" approach that assumes that the
authority of international law rests upon an empirically derived normative
philosophy of human justice.
CHAPTER 11: INTERNATIONAL LAW

• "New Stream" critique of Liberalism:


• The determinacy of international legal rules is questionable.
• The underlying logic of Liberalism in international law is incoherent.
• International legal thought operates within a confined intellectual structure.

• The "New Stream" critique of liberalism (also termed "Critical Legal Studies")
challenges the inherent liberalism of modern international legal thought. The
three given propositions all refer to the claim that traditional legal theory is
somewhere stuck between "apology" (a rationalization of the status quo) and
"utopia" (a naive image that international law can civilize the world of states).
CHAPTER 12: INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATIONS IN
WORLD POLITICS

• International Organizations means a catch-all term, which is concerned with


intergovernmental collaboration in organizations.

• IO is a catch-all term, which includes any organization operating at the


international level, comprised of actors from at least three states. NGO's are only
sometimes included in such terminology.
CHAPTER 12: INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATIONS IN
WORLD POLITICS

• The first modern IO was the Central Commission for the Navigation of the Rhine

• The first modern IO, the Central Commission for the Navigation of the Rhine,
was established in 1815 to facilitate states' riparian relations (between land and
water).
CHAPTER 12: INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATIONS IN
WORLD POLITICS

• The creation of 'spin-off' IO's occurs through the process of Emanation.

• It is becoming more common for IOs to be established by approval of the


members of a pre-existing IO through a process known as emanation.
CHAPTER 12: INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATIONS IN
WORLD POLITICS

• The ILO is a tripartite decision-making body.

• The International Labor Organization (ILO) has a tripartite decision-making


process that gives equal voice to states, workers, and employers at its labor
conference, in its governing council, and in its office.
CHAPTER 12: INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATIONS IN
WORLD POLITICS

• Hybrid international organization refers to an international organization


comprised of both state and non-state actors.

• Hybrid international organizations have multi-level members, which illustrates


the complexity of public-private, multi-actor governance at the global level. An
example of a hybrid international organization is International Standard
Organization (ISO).
CHAPTER 12: INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATIONS IN
WORLD POLITICS

• PIU stand for Public International Unions.

• Many of the first modern IOs in the 19th century were 'apolitical' technical
organizations created to devise solutions to the differing standards among states,
known as Public International Unions (PIU).
CHAPTER 12: INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATIONS IN
WORLD POLITICS

• Multilateralism refers to the practice of coordinating national policies in groups


of three or more states.
CHAPTER 12: INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATIONS IN
WORLD POLITICS

• According to this chapter, an IO must be comprised of actors from at least three


states.
CHAPTER 12: INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATIONS IN
WORLD POLITICS

• The United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) was established
in 1951.

• In 1951 states created the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees
(UNHCR) to aid states in meeting their obligations under the Refugee
Convention. This is an example of the relevance of moral authority for the
establishment of IO's.
CHAPTER 12: INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATIONS IN
WORLD POLITICS

• 'Collective action' means that States can benefit from international cooperation.

• Collective action is a term most commonly associated with liberalism and neo-
liberalism. It denotes the idea that states can benefit from international
cooperation, in the context of the anarchic international system.
CHAPTER 13: THE UNITED NATIONS

• The main powers and duties of the UN Secretary-General:


• Provide support for peacekeeping activities.
• Carry out a number of research functions and quasi management functions.

• The Secretary-General as head of the Secretariat is responsible for the substantive


and administrative work as directed by the General Assembly and the Security
Council. Hence, support of peacekeeping activities and execution of management
functions are among his tasks, but not the approval of UN resolutions.
CHAPTER 13: THE UNITED NATIONS

• The permanent members of the UN Security Council:


• France, Russia, USA, Britain, China.

• These five permanent members (France, Russia, USA, Britain and China) were
seen as the major powers when the UN was founded in 1945. They were granted
veto rights on the view that if big powers were not given a privileged position the
UN would not work.
CHAPTER 13: THE UNITED NATIONS

• Specialized UN agencies refers to large institutions which are part of the UN


system that have their own constitutions, regularly assessed budgets, executive heads,
and assemblies of state representatives, not subject to the management of the central
system.

• Institutions such as the World Health Organization, the International Labor


Organization and the Food Agriculture Organization, even though part of the
large UN system, are self-contained constitutionally, financially, and politically.
CHAPTER 13: THE UNITED NATIONS

• The current members of the Trusteeship Council are the permanent members of
the Security Council.

• The Trusteeship Council, which completed its work in 1994 with Palau attaining
independence, consists of the five permanent members of the Security Council.
CHAPTER 13: THE UNITED NATIONS

• Classical peacekeeping involves the establishment of a UN force under UN


command to be placed between conflicting parties after a ceasefire.

• Classical peacekeeping mandates are based on Chapter VI of the UN Charter. It


involves the consent of the host state and can only take place after the negotiation
of a cease-fire. UN forces are placed between the parties to secure this ceasefire
and will only use weapons in self-defense.
CHAPTER 13: THE UNITED NATIONS

• Main ways in which the UN became involved in maintaining peace and security
in the mid-1990s:
• By resisting aggression between states and attempting to resolve disputes
within states,
• By focusing on conditions within states, including economic, social, and
political conditions.

• In the 1990s, the UN started to address international conflicts as well as civil


wars. In doing so, the concept of international stability and peace was broadened
to issues of economic, social and political conditions within states.
CHAPTER 13: THE UNITED NATIONS

• Argument against relaxing the principle of non-intervention:


• Because it may lead to military action by individual states without UN
approval.

• Even though the UN has been more ready to intervene within states, state
sovereignty and non-intervention remain important. Actions within the territory
of another without a clear UN authorization such as the US-led action against Iraq
in 2003 could illustrate the danger of relaxing the principle of non-intervention.
CHAPTER 13: THE UNITED NATIONS

• Country strategy notes:


• They are statements about the overall development process tailored to the
specific needs of individual countries, setting out targets, roles and priorities.
• They are country-specific strategies set out by the United Nations General
Assembly, later ratified by ECOSOC as part of the reform process to the UN.

• "Country Strategy Notes" are a result of attempts to professionalize and reform


the country level process of the UN economic and social programs. Specialized
agencies and programs develop a country-specific development strategy that sets
out a clear set of target, roles, and priorities.
CHAPTER 13: THE UNITED NATIONS

• Human security refers to the security of individuals, including: their physical


safety, their economic and social well-being, respect for their dignity, and the
protection of their human rights.

• The concept of "human security" represents one attempt to broaden the traditional
concept of security by including social, political, economic and environmental
threats to the security of people.
CHAPTER 13: THE UNITED NATIONS

• Why will further UN reform be necessary?


• Because of the heightened concern over terrorism and security threats from
non-state actors, the pervasiveness of inequality and injustice around the
world, and the predominance of United States military power, and the need
for regional representation in the UN Security Council.

• Changes in the nature of international politics and sovereign states and the rise of
new threats and challenges have to be reflected in changes and adaptation within
the UN system in order to improve the capacity of the UN of providing solutions
to those problems.
CHAPTER 14: NGOS IN WORLD POLITICS

• Transnational actors refers to any civil society actor from one country that has
relations with any actor from another country or an international organization.

• The term "transnational actors" is very broad and entails any actor involved in
international relations that are society-based rather than state-based.
CHAPTER 14: NGOS IN WORLD POLITICS

• Problems with the state-centric approach to IR:


• There are different meanings to the term "state".
• There is a difference between nation and state.
• There is a lack of similarity between countries.

• "State" is a contested concept as there are many different and inconsistent


meanings to the term and the entities that we normally describe as states are in
themselves very different from each other. In particular differences between the
concepts of "nation" and "state" are often confused.
CHAPTER 14: NGOS IN WORLD POLITICS

• The term 'nongovernmental organization' was first used by Dwight W. Morrow,


the US politician and diplomat, in 1919.
CHAPTER 14: NGOS IN WORLD POLITICS

• "Nongovernmental organizations“:
• Can be initiated by states.
• Can be initiated by individuals.
• Is an umbrella term applied to a broad range of organizations that differ in
size, scope, motives, and functions.

• NGO is an umbrella term applied to a broad range of organizations that differ in


size, scope, motives, and functions. Despite its name, some NGOs have been
initiated by states rather than individuals
CHAPTER 14: NGOS IN WORLD POLITICS

• A "network“ is any structure of communication for individuals and/or


organizations to exchange information, share experiences, or discuss political
goals or tactics.

• Compared to an NGO, a network is a broader term comprising any form of


structured communication on an issue-area. It normally has a less permanent
organizational form, no formal leadership or declared membership and rather
focuses on exchange of information than on collective action.
CHAPTER 14: NGOS IN WORLD POLITICS

• Partnerships of the kind that Oxfam maintains with the British department store
Mark and Spencer is an example of Public-Private Partnership.

• Partnerships of the kind that Oxfam maintains with the British department store
Mark and Spencer is an example of a public-private partnership. These are
governance arrangements intended for mutual benefit and to ensure adherence to
agreed rules.
CHAPTER 14: NGOS IN WORLD POLITICS

• Hybrid INGO is formed when a government and an NGO form joint


organizations of which both can be members.

• The normal sharp distinction between inter-governmental organizations and


international non-governmental organizations does not apply for hybrid INGOs in
which governments work with NGOs. Among the most important hybrids are the
International Red Cross and the World Conservation Union.
CHAPTER 14: NGOS IN WORLD POLITICS

• The term 'transnational NGO' make reference to the fact that national NGOs
increasingly mobilize at the international level.

• Transnational NGOs (TNGOs) has become a popular term to take account of the
fact that national NGOs increasingly mobilize at the international level. This
means that there is wider cooperation among TNGOs and other civil society
actors, whose interests TNGOs claim to represent.
CHAPTER 14: NGOS IN WORLD POLITICS

• Policy domain refers to a set of political questions that are seen as being related.

• A policy domain may cover several issues as it comprises a set of political


questions that are linked by the political processes in an international
organization, e.g. financial policy is resolved in the IMF.
CHAPTER 14: NGOS IN WORLD POLITICS

• 'Track-tow-diplomacy' refers to the idea that TNGOs have become an alternative


to the official negotiations of government diplomats.

• Track-two-diplomacy refers to the idea that TNGOs have become an alternative


to the official negotiations of government diplomats.
CHAPTER 15: REGIONALISM IN INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS

• Regionalism refers to development of institutionalized cooperation among states


and other actors on the basis of regional contiguity as a feature of global politics.

• Regionalism is, alongside globalization, one of the major trends in global politics.
It refers to the cooperation and integration on a regional (meaning continental)
scale.
CHAPTER 15: REGIONALISM IN INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS

• Supranationalism refers to a concept in integration theory that implies the


creation of common institutions having independent decision-making authority
and thus the ability to impose certain decisions and rules on member states.

• Supranational organizations have to be viewed in contrast to merely intra-


governmental international organizations in that they create an independent
decision-making authority to which governments delegate their decisions. This
allows organizations to impose certain decisions and rules on member states.
CHAPTER 15: REGIONALISM IN INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS

• European Court of Justice refers to the EU's highest court, ruling in disputed
matters of EU law between member states.

• The European Court of Justice is one of the organizations at the supranational


level of the European Union. It is the highest juridical authority for EU law and
rules in disputes between member states and institutions.
CHAPTER 15: REGIONALISM IN INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS

• Role of the European Commission:


• Initiating, administering and overseeing the implementation of EU policies
and legislation.

• The European Commission is the central supranational institution of the EU. It is


the 'guardian of the treaties' and has the right to initiate, administer, and oversee
EU policies and legislation.
CHAPTER 15: REGIONALISM IN INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS

• Role of intergovernmental conferences:


• It is where representatives of national governments negotiate the legal
framework within which the EU institutions operate.

• The IGCs set the future direction of the European Union by negotiating the
further development and changes of the legal framework within which the EU
institutions operate. They are considered as the "great bargains" in the evolution
of the EU.
CHAPTER 15: REGIONALISM IN INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS

• MERCOSUR is a Latin American regional institution.

• MERCOSUR (or "Common Market of the South") is the result of regional


integration efforts in Latin American. Its contracting states are Argentina, Brazil,
Paraguay, and Uruguay.
CHAPTER 15: REGIONALISM IN INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS

• What did the Single European Act of 1985 create?


• It removed all non-trade barriers to the mobility of goods, people, services
and capital.

• The Single European Act is the result of efforts to accomplish the project of the
"Single Market". It removed all non-trade barriers by establishing a general
freedom of movement for goods, people, services and capital throughout the EU.
CHAPTER 15: REGIONALISM IN INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS

• The 2001 Nice Treaty led to the expansion of majority voting.

• The Intergovernmental Conference in Nice aimed at dealing with the so called


"Amsterdam leftovers," which included an expansion of the majority voting in
order to make EU decision-making more efficient on the eve of enlargement.
CHAPTER 15: REGIONALISM IN INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS

• The 2004 Constitutional Treaty:


• Simplified the earlier treaties.
• Creates the post of President of the Council and EU Foreign Minister.
• Incorporates the Fundamental Rights Charter.

• The agreement to adopt a Constitutional Treaty is regarded as a step towards


greater political union. By simplifying earlier treaties, the creation of the post of a
President and the incorporation of the Fundamental Rights Charter, more
transparency and thus options for identification of the citizens with the EU should
be achieved.
CHAPTER 15: REGIONALISM IN INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS

• Dynamics of globalization that have been mirrored by the developments in the


EU:
• EU integration has fed on and contributed to the global trend towards neo-
liberal economic policy.
• The trend towards greater social and cultural exchange has intensified.
• Despite the growth of an integrated market there is a limited integrated civil
society.

• From this perspective, the EU reflects global trends prevailing in the current
international economy. Trade barriers have been replaced by an open, internal
market, which in turn enhances not only economic but also social and cultural
exchange. These effects however have not entirely trickled to the level of
PART 3

International Issues
CHAPTER 16: ENVIRONMENTAL ISSUES

• Traditional environmental issues include the following:


• Natural resource conservation.
• Pollution.
• Exploitation of maritime resources

• From the 1960s, environmental attention focused on conservation of natural


resources and pollution problems. Climate change gained increasing attention on
the agenda during the 1990s.
CHAPTER 16: ENVIRONMENTAL ISSUES

• The tragedy of the commons:


• It results from an inherent tension between collective and individual
responsibility.

• The tragedy of the commons is based on inherent conflict between individual and
collective interest and rationality in the use of property that is held in common; it
is mitigated by a high carrying capacity of the good in question and, in non-IR
models, is often solved through privatization and nationalization. However, this
solution is not always feasible for global political commons.
CHAPTER 16: ENVIRONMENTAL ISSUES

• Realist approaches to environmental politics:


• Realist theories focus on questions of state power and interest.

• Realist theories of environmental politics refer to questions of state power and


interest rather than the role of ideas, communities, or institutions.
CHAPTER 16: ENVIRONMENTAL ISSUES

• “Precautionary principle“:
• It is German in origin.
• It advocates for a higher standard for environmental action.
• It has become increasingly popular.

• The precautionary principle, originally coined by German policy-makers, states


that where there is a likelihood of environmental damage, banning an activity
should not require full and definitive scientific proof.
CHAPTER 16: ENVIRONMENTAL ISSUES

• Norms of environmental protection includes the following:


• The precautionary principle.
• The polluter pays.
• Prior informed consent.

• Various norms of increased environmental protection have been increasingly


disseminated throughout the international system, including the ones listed above.
CHAPTER 16: ENVIRONMENTAL ISSUES

• Capacity building involve:


• Arrangements for the transfer of funds, technology and expertise.
• Environmental projects in developed countries.

• Most environmental conventions now aim at 'capacity building' through


arrangements for the transfer of funds, technology and expertise to developing
countries, because most of their member-states simply lack the resources to
participate fully in international agreements.
CHAPTER 16: ENVIRONMENTAL ISSUES

• Influences of scientific knowledge:


• It is disseminated through epistemic communities.
• It has played a key role in the creation of framework conventions and control
protocols.
• It has particularly influenced the discourse of climate change.

• Scientific knowledge, disseminated through epistemic communities, has played a


key role in the creation of legal and institutional mechanisms to address
environmental issues, particularly climate change.
CHAPTER 16: ENVIRONMENTAL ISSUES

• Estimating the area of productive land or aqua system required to sustain a


population at its specified standard of living creates ecological footprint.

• Used to demonstrate the load placed upon the Earth's carrying capacity by
individuals or nations, an ecological footprint estimates the area of productive
land or aquasystem required to sustain a population at its specified standard of
living.
CHAPTER 16: ENVIRONMENTAL ISSUES

• The regime under which the production and trading of CFCs and other ozone
depleting substances would be progressively phased out is called the Montreal
Protocol.

• The Montreal Protocol negotiated a regime for the cessation of production of


CFC's and other substances responsible for depletion of the ozone layer.
CHAPTER 16: ENVIRONMENTAL ISSUES

• Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change:


• Was set up in 1988 under the auspices of WMO and UNEP.
• Focuses on climate science, impacts, and economic and social dimensions of
climate change.
• Has concluded that warming of the climate system is unequivocal.

• The IGCC began in 1988 and focuses on the consequences and causes of climate
change, which it concluded in February 2007 is undeniably taking place.
CHAPTER 17: TERRORISM AND GLOBALIZATION

• Which characteristic do globalization and terrorism share?


• Both are complex and open to subjective interpretation.

• Both are complicated, interdisciplinary phenomena that defy simple


characterization. Definitions of terrorism vary widely but all include the use of
violence as a main feature; beyond that, definitions involve, as for globalization,
different elements and value judgements.
CHAPTER 17: TERRORISM AND GLOBALIZATION

• The realists suggested that the State has a monopoly on the legitimate use of
physical force.

• Realists suggest that the political violence used by terrorist groups is illegitimate
on the basis that states alone have a monopoly on the legitimate use of physical
force.
CHAPTER 17: TERRORISM AND GLOBALIZATION

• Factors that lead to the birth of transnational terrorism:


• The expansion of air travel.
• The wider availability of televised news coverage.
• Broad common political and ideological interests.

• Expansion of air travel, wider news coverage and broad common political and
ideological interests allow terrorism to grow from a local and regional
phenomenon into an international threat.
CHAPTER 17: TERRORISM AND GLOBALIZATION

• Elements composing bin Laden's central message:


• The defense of oppressed Muslims and the defeat of theological enemies of
Islam.
• The requirement for absolute religious piety and devotion.
• The defeat of the theological enemies of Islam.

• The message of Osama bin Laden combined a number of disparate elements such
as the restoration of the former greatness of Islam, the defense of oppressed
Muslims and the defeat of the theological enemies of Muslims, the requirement
of absolute religious piety and a rejection of secular materialism.
CHAPTER 17: TERRORISM AND GLOBALIZATION

• Global Capitalism was the target of the symbolic attacks against the World Trade
Centre in 1993 and 2001.

• Economic aspects appear to be a fundamental motivating factor in the use of


violence to effect political change. Globalization is seen as a new form of
"economic imperialism" in which the "West" dominates and forces unfavorable
policies on the underdeveloped countries.
CHAPTER 17: TERRORISM AND GLOBALIZATION

• Video recordings are useful to terrorist groups to recruit members.

• Video footage has been used to record the preparations or results of attacks and
helps to "inspire" potential recruits, but is also suitable to reach the widest
audience possible through global news outlets.
CHAPTER 17: TERRORISM AND GLOBALIZATION

• Complications in the search for terrorists and terrorist cells:


• Increase in trade and commerce throughout the world.
• The use of cellular phone technology.
• The globalization of commerce.

• Added mobility and the reduced size and increased power of personal electronics
gives terrorists the capability to coordinate the activities of dispersed cells and
increased volumes of air travel and goods create control problems. Although one
of the main contemporary worries with regards to refugees is that terrorists are
able to transfer national borders more easily under this demise, increase legal
immigration should not complicated the search for terrorists and terrorist cells.
CHAPTER 17: TERRORISM AND GLOBALIZATION

• Hollywood blockbuster films has provided inspiration for terrorist attacks by bin
Laden and Islamic Fundamentalists.

• This is another element of the interconnection between terrorism and the


influence of globalized media, which is suspected to be a motivating element
behind the fascination of Al Qaeda leaders with mass casualties and spectacular
scenes of destruction.
CHAPTER 17: TERRORISM AND GLOBALIZATION

• Arguments over semantics and definitions has stalled action in the UN directed
towards terrorism.

• A rules-based attempt to fight terrorism within the framework of the UN has been
unsuccessful mainly because various debates in the General Assembly could not
resolve arguments over semantics and definitions.
CHAPTER 17: TERRORISM AND GLOBALIZATION

• What can terrorists hope for in order to be successful in the future?


• Widespread uprising of the disaffected and oppressed, or collapse of the USA.

• Globalization and a growing gap between the rich and poor might cause more
people to fight against suppression. Further, terrorism might become more
attractive if it actually reaches its goal through a collapse of their adversary after
an attack.
CHAPTER 18: PROLIFERATION OF WEAPONS
OF MASS DESTRUCTION

• Sagan's proliferation pessimism argument:


• Because of common biases, professional military organizations display organizational
behaviors that are likely to lead to deterrence failures and deliberate or accidental war.
• In the future, there will be a lack of positive constraining mechanisms of civilian control
while military biases may serve to encourage nuclear weapons use, especially during
crises. This is because future nuclear-armed states are likely to have military-run or weak
civilian governments.

• With his arguments, Sagan tries to counter the argument that the gradual spread of
nuclear weapons to additional states might be a good thing as nuclear deterrence
is the only way to maintain stability in conflict situations. Sagan argues that the
risk of deterrence failures is too big, especially in military-run and weak civilian
governments.
CHAPTER 18: PROLIFERATION OF WEAPONS
OF MASS DESTRUCTION

• Criticisms of the nuclear non-proliferation regime:


• It is not well-suited to the demands of the complex and potentially more
dangerous second nuclear age.
• It does not address the security motivation which leads states to acquire
nuclear weapons in first place.
• It is unable to alleviate the security dilemma that many states confront and it
is a discriminatory arrangement.

• Critics of the non-proliferation regime argue that it is a product of a bygone "first


nuclear age" (1945-1990). The second nuclear age presents different demands.
States face a different security dilemma and hence have some motivation to
acquire nuclear weapons due to the uncertainty of their status.
CHAPTER 18: PROLIFERATION OF WEAPONS
OF MASS DESTRUCTION

• The category "WMD" include:


• Atomic explosive weapons.
• Lethal chemical and biological weapons.

• The UN Commission introduced the concept of "weapon of mass destruction" for


Conventional Armaments in 1948 in order to distinguish nuclear weapons from
conventional forms. Any weapons should be included that have "characteristics
comparable in destructive effects to those of the atomic bomb", hence also
chemical and biological weapons.
CHAPTER 18: PROLIFERATION OF WEAPONS
OF MASS DESTRUCTION

• In 2001, the USA withdraw from the ABM treaty.

• The interest of developing a means to counter a possible ballistic missile attack


on US mainland, the so-called Ballistic Missile Defense, led to erosion and
finally the withdrawal of the USA from the ABM treaty on 13 December 2001.
CHAPTER 18: PROLIFERATION OF WEAPONS
OF MASS DESTRUCTION

• How are the motivations for having nuclear weapons best described?
• Strategic deterrence, political and prestige benefits.

• The strategic motivation focuses on the role that nuclear weapons play as war-
fighting and war-winning weapons or the deterrence of other nuclear weapons-
capable states. The political and prestige motivation refers to the conviction that
nuclear weapons are the most modern form of weaponry.
CHAPTER 18: PROLIFERATION OF WEAPONS
OF MASS DESTRUCTION

• "Atoms for Peace“ refers to the the title of an Eisenhower speech which
culminated on the creation of the IAEA.

• Eisenhower proposed in this speech an initiative to open the benefits of atomic


energy to the world community; i.e. implementing "Atoms of Peace". The IAEA
hence was a necessary and comprehensive monitoring system to ensure that
nuclear energy programs were not diverted for military use.
CHAPTER 18: PROLIFERATION OF WEAPONS
OF MASS DESTRUCTION

• The first Nuclear Weapon-Free Zone was applied in Latin America.

• The Treaty for the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons in Latin America (or Tlateloco
Treaty) was one of the first measures to prevent the nuclearization of a specific
geographical area. It was opened for signature in 1967.
CHAPTER 18: PROLIFERATION OF WEAPONS
OF MASS DESTRUCTION

• Counter proliferation is a strategy which emphasizes the use of measures such as


ballistic missile defenses and a more proactive stance in the prevention of nuclear
proliferation.

• Counter proliferation is one of the measures to prevent nuclear proliferation


during the so-called second nuclear age. It implies the use of conventional
weapons and missile defense, i.e. a more proactive or offensive policy of
prevention.
CHAPTER 18: PROLIFERATION OF WEAPONS
OF MASS DESTRUCTION

• Agreements that controls export among suppliers to constrain the proliferation of


missile technology:
• The Hague Code of Conduct.
• The Missile Technology Control Regime

• The Missile Technology Control Regime (MTCR) are guidelines established in


1987 by seven missile technology exporters to control the sale of nuclear-capable
ballistic or cruise missiles. The Hague Code of Conduct (2002) seeks to develop
standards of appropriate behavior in the transfer of missiles and missile parts.
CHAPTER 18: PROLIFERATION OF WEAPONS
OF MASS DESTRUCTION

• Which states are NOT signatory to the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT)?
• Israel
• Pakistan
• India

• The treaty has 189 State Parties, which is the largest number of any arms control
agreement. However, India, Israel and Pakistan have not signed the NPT. It
remains questionable, how, if at all, these states can be brought into the Treaty.
North Korea announced its withdrawal in 2003, and further announced that it had
conducted an underground nuclear explosion in 2006 and 2009. As of October,
2016, North Korea has conducted five announced nuclear tests between 9 October
2016 to 9 September 2016.
CHAPTER 19: NATIONALISM, NATIONAL SELF-DETERMINATION

• The basic assumptions of nationalism:


• The nation as the fundamental political unit.
• The nation as basis of political loyalty and identity.
• The demand for self-determination.

• Nationalism takes the nation as its fundamental political unit and the basis for
people's political identity and loyalty; the latter of which results in the demand for
self-determination, usually in the form of an autonomous state.
CHAPTER 19: NATIONALISM, NATIONAL SELF-DETERMINATION

• Difference between the nation and the state:


• "State" and "nation" are both contested concepts as there are many different
and inconsistent meanings to the terms, which are in addition often confused
with each other. Nationality is often correlated with ethnic identity while state
is often correlated with civic organization; however, these descriptions are not
consistent.
CHAPTER 19: NATIONALISM, NATIONAL SELF-DETERMINATION

• Primordialism refers to the theory which determines that nations are primary
groups constituted by descent and/or culture, accompanied by the idea that
nationalism arises from a prior sense of national identity.

• Primordialism suggests that nations are constituted by descent and culture, and
that this national identity creates nationalism. Ethnic nationalism is a specific
type of nationalism, which claims that the nation is based on common factors
many of which stem from common descent.
CHAPTER 19: NATIONALISM, NATIONAL SELF-DETERMINATION

• Perennialism refers to the historical claim which argues that there have been
cases of nations and even nationalism before the modern period.

• Perennialism is different from primordialism and ethno-symbolism because it is


presented as an empirical historical claim rather than a theory about primary
descent or culture or the centrality of ethnic myths and memories.
CHAPTER 19: NATIONALISM, NATIONAL SELF-DETERMINATION

• British nationalism:
• It has been attributed to Christianity, parliamentary institutions, and free trade.
• It was resisted by colonial areas.
• It can be characterized as state-strengthening, civic, and elite.

• British nationalism was civically minded, elite-driven, and state-strengthening.


While the British attributed it to Christian values, domestic institutions, and trade,
the imposition of this nationalism was resisted by parts of the British Empire in
complex historical interactions. See the India case study for an example.
CHAPTER 19: NATIONALISM, NATIONAL SELF-DETERMINATION

• In the 20th century, the following is a way in which war altered nationalism:
• By giving rise to a fascist variant.
• By giving voice to the demands for self-determination.

• War in Europe arose in part from fragmentary processes set in motion by


destabilizing nationalism; the settlement of the First World War attempted to give
voice to the demands for national self-determination but then enabled the rise of
fascism, a non-insular, aggressive form of nationalism.
CHAPTER 19: NATIONALISM, NATIONAL SELF-DETERMINATION

• German nationalism:
• Competed between ethnic nationalism and a liberal constitutional form.
• Became increasingly state-strengthening over time.
• Was facilitated by industrialization.

• German nationalism emerged as ethnic nationalism, but as the state industrialized


in ways conducive to the development of military power, it gradually emphasized
state-strengthening more and more.
CHAPTER 19: NATIONALISM, NATIONAL SELF-DETERMINATION

• Indian nationalism come from a complex hybrid of elite civic nationalism,


resistance to imperial Britain, and ethnically fragmented national identities.

• Indian nationalism emerged from the legacy of British colonialism as a form of


elite civic nationalism but from its inception had to wrestle with state-subverting
ethnic nationalisms as well.
CHAPTER 19: NATIONALISM, NATIONAL SELF-DETERMINATION

• Those entities "that claim to be national (however defined), [that] are not
challenged by powerful state-opposing nationalist movements, and [which] are
recognized internationally" are called Nation-states

• Nation-states, which are both states and nations, derive their claim to legitimacy
in part from the representation of the national identity and interest of the
community over which the state rules.
CHAPTER 19: NATIONALISM, NATIONAL SELF-DETERMINATION

• Results of the end of the cold war:


• It has led to discussion of forms of political community beyond the nation-
state.
• It has broken up some multi-national states in processes of state subversion.
• It came hand in hand with globalization.

• Globalization and the cold war's end, in tandem, fragmented some states along
ethnic national lines and prompted discussion of order based on supra-national
political community.
CHAPTER 20: GLOBAL TRADE AND GLOBAL FINANCE

• Cross-border transactions refers to the movement across borders of countries of


goods, people, money, investments etc.

• Measuring increased cross-border transactions in terms of the movements of


goods, people, money, and investments across borders is one way of conceiving
of economic globalization.
CHAPTER 20: GLOBAL TRADE AND GLOBAL FINANCE

• The Great Transformation is the name of the famous book published just before
the end of the Second World War, by Karl Polanyi.

• Just before the end of the Second World War, intellectual Karl Polanyi published
The Great Transformation, on the economic causes of the European embrace of
fascism in the 1930s. This distinguished between two generic models of the
market economy: 'embedded' and 'disembedded' markets.
CHAPTER 20: GLOBAL TRADE AND GLOBAL FINANCE

• Countries that had their own East India Companies by the eighteenth century.
• Britain.
• The Netherlands, Denmark and Portugal.
• France and Sweden.

• Britain, the Netherlands, Denmark, Portugal, France and Sweden all had their
own East India companies that allowed them to operate the trading route centred
on modern-day India.
CHAPTER 20: GLOBAL TRADE AND GLOBAL FINANCE

• When the housing market boom first began to unravel globally in 2007, banks
discovered their over-exposure to 'Toxic assets' of mortgage-backed securities

• Banks discovered their over-exposure to 'toxic assets' of mortgage-backed


securities.
CHAPTER 20: GLOBAL TRADE AND GLOBAL FINANCE

• 'The Quad' at the World Trade Organization (WTO) refers to the decision-making
structure within the WTO.

• Having over 150 members means that decision-making could be a huge potential
pitfall for the World Trade Organization. In order to balance representation and
efficiency four key groups actually participate in the final stages of decision-
making: the US, the EU, Brazil and India. These four are known as 'the quad.'
CHAPTER 20: GLOBAL TRADE AND GLOBAL FINANCE

• Major public global governance agency for trade and finance:


• Group of 8 (G8)
• International Organization of Securities Commissions (IOSCO)

• The Group of 8 (G8) conducts semi-formal collaboration on world economic


problems; the International Organization of Securities Commissions (IOSCO)
aims to promote high standards of regulation in stock and bond markets,
surveillance of transborder securities transactions and collaboration between
securities markets on detection of offences.
CHAPTER 20: GLOBAL TRADE AND GLOBAL FINANCE

• The response to the crisis conditions of the 1970s is a turn against government
intervention in the economy.

• The 1970s was a decade of crisis for rich industrialized economies, such as the
USA. Following this crisis-era, governments responded by heavily reducing their
intervention into markets and adopting a far more 'laissez faire' approach. This
was most evident in the policies of, for example, Margaret Thatcher and Ronald
Reagan.
CHAPTER 20: GLOBAL TRADE AND GLOBAL FINANCE

• By how much did the value of the currency of Thailand, South Korea, the
Philippines and Malaysia fall during the Asian financial crisis of 1997/1998?
• 30%.

• During the Asian Financial crisis of 1997/1998 Thailand, South Korea, the
Philippines and Malaysia saw the value of their currencies fall by 30% meaning
that people in these countries were able to buy approximately two-thirds of the
volume of goods at world prices after the crisis as they had been able to before.
CHAPTER 20: GLOBAL TRADE AND GLOBAL FINANCE

• Ways in which governments lure foreign investment:


• By relaxing labor and environmental standards.
• By reducing restrictions on repatriation of profits.

• Foreign investments are generally welcomed by states; hence they create


incentives and advantageous conditions of production, such as relaxing labor and
environmental standards or the reduction of restrictions on the repatriation of
profits.
CHAPTER 20: GLOBAL TRADE AND GLOBAL FINANCE

• Chronological events in global trade and finance:


• The first McDonalds
• Establishment of electronic stock exchange
• Formation of WTO

• The first McDonald's restaurant opened in 1955 (operating in 119 countries 50


years later); the electronic stock exchange (Nasdaq) was established in 1971; and
the WTO formed in 1995, incorporating the General Agreement on Tariffs and
Trade (GATT).
• 
CHAPTER 21: POVERTY, HUNGER, AND DEVELOPMENT

• Has inequality between 20% of the world's richest and 20% of the world's poorest
changed?
• It has been increasing.

• While in 1960, the income ratio of 20% of the global population in the richest
countries to 20% in the poorest was been 30:1, it had increased to 60:1 by 1990
and even further to 74:1 in 1997.
• 
CHAPTER 21: POVERTY, HUNGER, AND DEVELOPMENT

• Millennium Development Goals:


• Set, time-limited development targets.
• Quantifiable targets across 8 areas of development.
• Aimed at eradication of extreme poverty and hunger by 2015.

• With the acceptance of the Millennium Development Goals by the UN in 2000,


time-limited and quantifiable development targets in specified areas were set. The
first and primary goal was the eradication of extreme poverty and hunger, with
the target of halving the proportion of people living on less than a dollar a day by
2015.
CHAPTER 21: POVERTY, HUNGER, AND DEVELOPMENT

• The "nature-focused" account of hunger means that there is not enough food to go
around.

• The "nature-focused" account is the mainstream account of hunger, which is


challenged by critical alternatives that argue there is enough food. The problem is
distribution and entitlement.
CHAPTER 21: POVERTY, HUNGER, AND DEVELOPMENT

• According to critical alternative views, poverty refers to a monetary and non-


monetary condition where people lack access to community regulated common
resources, opportunities and income.

• Where as the orthodox view on poverty claims that it refers to a situation where
people do not have the money to satisfy their basic needs, alternative views
emphasize not simply money, but spiritual values, community ties, and
availability of common resources.
CHAPTER 21: POVERTY, HUNGER, AND DEVELOPMENT

• Embedded liberalism refers to the liberal international economic order based on


free trade but with a role for state intervention in issues of national security and
stability.

• Embedded liberalism refers to a liberal international economic order promoting


free trade but allowing an appropriate role for state intervention in the market in
support of national security and national and global stability.
CHAPTER 21: POVERTY, HUNGER, AND DEVELOPMENT

• The orthodox view of development assumes that economic growth can be


unlimited through the free market and will trickle down to the poor.

• Development is a contested concept; an orthodox perspective refers to it as a "top


down" process in a free-market system that will ultimately benefit everyone.
CHAPTER 21: POVERTY, HUNGER, AND DEVELOPMENT

• The New International Economic Order is an unsuccessful campaign for reforms


made by developing countries in the 1970s.

• In the 1970s, mainly developing countries proposed (without success) the NIEO
that should reform the existing order to be more user friendly for the producers of
primary commodities through such mechanisms as index-linking the prices of
primary products to the prices of manufactured goods.
CHAPTER 21: POVERTY, HUNGER, AND DEVELOPMENT

• “Trickle down effect“ means that economic growth will eventually (and
automatically) bring benefits to the poor.

• The "trickle-down effect" describes the idea that overall economic growth would
automatically bring benefits for the poorer classes. However, despite impressive
rates of growth enjoyed by developing countries this success was not reflected in
their societies at large.
CHAPTER 21: POVERTY, HUNGER, AND DEVELOPMENT

• The Brundtland Commission refers to the world commission on environment and


development.

• The Brundtland Commission was officially called the World Commission on


Environment and Development. It mainly influenced the discussion about the
concept of sustainable development.
CHAPTER 21: POVERTY, HUNGER, AND DEVELOPMENT

• Dependency theorists believes that free-market development primarily helps the


rich.

• Dependency theorists see the current predicament of the Third World as


predictable, arguing that export-oriented, free-market development promoted in
the Third World has increased the wealth of the West and of Southern elites. This
argument is embedded in notions of a global divide.
CHAPTER 22: HUMAN SECURITY

• According to the 'freedom from fear' understanding, the core of human security is
embodied in:
• The UN Charter.
• The Universal Declaration of Human Rights.
• The Geneva Conventions.

• As articulated by former Canadian External Affairs Minister Lloyd Axworthy, the


UN Charter, the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and the Geneva
Conventions, are the "core elements" of the doctrine of human security.
CHAPTER 22: HUMAN SECURITY

• Measures to prevent the use of child soldiers is an example of 'freedom from


fear‘.

• Human security, if defined as 'freedom from fear', could include measures such as
a ban on land-mines, formation of an International Criminal Court, human rights,
international humanitarian law, women and children in armed conflict, small arms
proliferation, child soldiers, and child labor.
CHAPTER 22: HUMAN SECURITY

• ‘Freedom from want‘:


• It stresses individual escape from poverty, disease, and environmental threats.
• It focuses heavily on security.

• As advocated by the Director-General of the Foreign Ministry of Japan, freedom


from want is closer to the original UNDP conception, and stresses the ability of
individuals and societies to be free from a broad range of non-military threats,
such as poverty, disease, and environmental degradation.
CHAPTER 22: HUMAN SECURITY

• Human development is termed as a 'capability-oriented approach to


development', which seeks to expand the range of things that people can do.

• Human development, according to Mahabub ul Haque, seeks to expand "the


range of things that people can do, and what they can be....The most basic
capabilities for human development are leading a long and healthy life, being
educated and having adequate resources for a decent standard of living...[and]
social and political participation in society."
CHAPTER 22: HUMAN SECURITY

• Key arguments made by critics of human security:


• The concept is too broad to be analytically useful.
• That it creates false expectations of assistance which cannot be met.
• That it marginalizes or weakens the state's role in security.

• The critics of human security argue that by making the individual rather than the
state the referent object, the concept becomes so broad that it cannot be used
either for analysis or policy; that it creates expectations by victims of disaster and
violence that more aid will ensue than is actually forthcoming, and that we would
be better off to focus on analyzing the state and strengthening its role in service
provision.
CHAPTER 22: HUMAN SECURITY

• Humanitarian intervention justifies the use of force and breach of sovereignty


based on human security grounds.

• Humanitarian intervention bases its justification for intervention on human


security grounds, though still acknowledges the importance of sovereignty and its
potential tension with human rights claims.
CHAPTER 22: HUMAN SECURITY

• The UN Human Development Report included the following aspects:


• Food and economic security.
• Economic and environmental security.
• Community and personal security.

• The Human Development Report referred to food, environment, health,


economic, community, personal, and political security.
CHAPTER 22: HUMAN SECURITY

• "The arms race and development are in a competitive relationship":


• The quotation illustrates the guns-versus-butter trade-off.
• The quotation is the conclusion of a Swedish study.

• The quote above comes from the Swedish study by Inga Thorsson et al.
examining concerns over the so-called "guns versus butter" debate, or the
negative impact of defense spending on development aid.
CHAPTER 22: HUMAN SECURITY

• The contemporary apparent decline in battle deaths come from:


• Rising economic interdependence.
• The end of colonialism and cold war.
• The growing role of international institutions and community (peace
operations).

• Scholars have variously argued that increased trade links decrease interstate
violence, that the end of colonialism and the cold war has created a zone of peace
(or the "end of history") and that peace operations and international institutions
have helped to foster stability.
CHAPTER 22: HUMAN SECURITY

• Politicide refers to the term that describes destroying groups because of their
political beliefs rather than their religion or identity?

• As opposed to genocide, politicide seeks the destruction of a specific group based


on political ideals rather than ethnic or religious grounds.
CHAPTER 23: HUMAN RIGHTS

• The immediate purpose of the Commission on Human Rights is to draft the


Universal Declaration of Human Rights.

• The Charter of the United Nations, signed in San Francisco on 26 June 1945,
identified promoting respect for human rights as one of the principal objectives of
the new organization. It also created a Commission on Human Rights, which
became the focal point of what we today call the global human rights regime.
CHAPTER 23: HUMAN RIGHTS

• The International Bill of Human Rights provides an authoritative list of universal


human rights covering civil, political, economic, social and cultural rights.

• The International Bill of Human Rights provides an authoritative list of


interdependent, indivisible, and universal human rights, covering a wide range of
civil, political, economic, social and cultural rights.
CHAPTER 23: HUMAN RIGHTS

• In the mid-1970s human rights began to emerge from its Cold War slumber as an
active concern of national foreign policies.
CHAPTER 23: HUMAN RIGHTS

• When can we date transnational NGOs back to?


• The nineteenth century and anti-slavery campaigners

• At the very least transnational NGOs date back to the nineteenth century and anti-
slavery campaigners.
CHAPTER 23: HUMAN RIGHTS

• Liberal position on rights:


• The liberal position on rights privileges freedoms over rights.
• *The liberal position on rights says that the primary function of government is
to protect the rights to life, liberty and property.

• The liberal position on rights is made up of two basic components. First, that
human beings possess the rights to life, liberty, the secure possession of property
and the freedom of speech, which are inalienable and unconditional. Second, that
the primary function of government is to protect these rights.
CHAPTER 23: HUMAN RIGHTS

• Greek, Christian and medieval Catholic theology are the origins of natural law
thinking.

• The idea of natural law implies that universal moral standards exist upon which
the rights that individuals have are based. Rights thus are not limited in
application to any particular legal system. Its origins can be traced to the classical
Greek and early Christians, but in its modern form it is based on medieval
Catholic theology.
CHAPTER 23: HUMAN RIGHTS

• What does the UN Charter say about human rights?


• It reaffirms faith in fundamental human rights, in the dignity and worth of the
human person, in the equal rights of men and women and of nations large and
small.

• The Universal Declaration of Human Rights by the UN General Assembly in


1948 defined a comprehensive code for the internal government of its members.
It asserted a universal position in that all human beings are equal and have equal
rights.
CHAPTER 23: HUMAN RIGHTS

• Members of the Council of Europe are subject to which legally binding


judgements?
• Those of the effective European Court of Human Rights.

• Member countries of the Council of Europe, which is wider than the European
Union, are subject to the legal judgements of the very effective European Court of
Human Rights.
CHAPTER 23: HUMAN RIGHTS

• Most countries celebrate Human Rights Day on 10th of December.

• On 10 December 1948 the General Assembly of the United Nations adopted the
Universal Declaration of Human Rights and most countries, therefore, celebrate
this day as Human Rights Day.
CHAPTER 23: HUMAN RIGHTS

• Governments cannot legitimately deny obligations that they have voluntarily


incurred by becoming parties to international human rights treaties. Authoritative
international human rights norms thus allow local human rights advocates to
focus on how to protect and implement human rights, rather than debate whether
the rights in question really are rights. .
CHAPTER 24: HUMAN INTERVENTION IN WORLD POLITICS

• “Forcible humanitarian intervention“ refers to a forcible breach of sovereignty


that interferes in a state's internal affairs for humanitarian purposes.

• The term "forcible humanitarian intervention" attempts to describe the tension


between an illegitimate use of force and breach of sovereignty of a state and a
possible legal right of intervention for humanitarian purposes. Its legality is a
matter of dispute between restrictionists (contra) and counter-restrictionists (pro).
CHAPTER 24: HUMAN INTERVENTION IN WORLD POLITICS

• Objections to legitimizing humanitarian intervention:


• Legitimizing it would open intervention to abuse.
• States do not intervene for primarily humanitarian reasons.
• States apply principles of humanitarian intervention selectively.

• Realism tells us that states only pursue their national interest and legitimate
humanitarian intervention is thus ruled out, since states only judge according to
their interests. Another key realist argument is that such an exception to the ban
on the use of force in Art 2(4) UN Charter will lead to abuse.
CHAPTER 24: HUMAN INTERVENTION IN WORLD POLITICS

• “Pluralist international society“ refers to an international society in which states


are aware of sharing common values, but these are limited to disagreement as to
what constitutes extreme human rights violations.

• Bull defined the pluralist conception of international society as one in which


states are capable of agreement only for certain minimum purposes such as
recognition of each state's sovereignty and respect for the rule of non-
intervention.
CHAPTER 24: HUMAN INTERVENTION IN WORLD POLITICS

• “Solidarist international society“ is an international society in which states agree


on universal standards of justice and morality.

• In contrast to pluralism, solidarism argues that states have a legal right and moral
duty to intervene in situations that offend minimum standards of humanity. States
can do so as they agree on universal standards of justice and morality that
legitimize practices of humanitarian intervention.
CHAPTER 24: HUMAN INTERVENTION IN WORLD POLITICS

• Fernando Teson puts forward a liberal case for Iraq being a humanitarian
intervention?

• Among others, Fernando Teson takes a liberal stance in arguing that the Iraq war
was a humanitarian intervention.
CHAPTER 24: HUMAN INTERVENTION IN WORLD POLITICS

• The Responsibility to Protect has three pillars: responsibility of the state to


protect its population; responsibility of the international community to assist the
state in protecting its population; responsibility of international community to act
if the state does not fulfil its obligations towards its citizens.
CHAPTER 24: HUMAN INTERVENTION IN WORLD POLITICS

• Non-forcible humanitarian intervention is characterized by the series of peaceful


actions of states, INGOs and international organizations in the international scene
which prove to have an impact on internal matters of the target state.

• Non-forcible intervention emphasizes the activities of a diverse set of


international actors, not only states, in delivering humanitarian aid and facilitating
third party conflict resolution and reconstruction. An example is activities by
Medicins Sans Frontieres (MSF).
CHAPTER 24: HUMAN INTERVENTION IN WORLD POLITICS

• Loud emergencies are the humanitarian crises that receive media attentions, like
genocide, ethnic cleansing and famine.
• Silent emergencies do not get media attention, like slow death from malnutrition
and poverty.

• This refers to the unresolved normative questions of what counts as human


suffering at the start of the 21st century. 'Loud emergencies' receive media
attention and normally command the resources of the international donor
community, whereas silent emergencies remain largely unrecognized.
CHAPTER 24: HUMAN INTERVENTION IN WORLD POLITICS

• What would warrant a "just cause" military intervention for human protection
purposes?
• There must be serious and irreparable harm occurring to human beings, or imminently likely
to occur.
• There must be a large scale loss of life, which is the product of deliberate state action, or state
neglect, or inability to act, or a failed state situation.
• There must be a large scale ethnic cleansing.

• The "just cause" threshold is one of the specific criteria set out by the report "The
Responsibility to Protect" by the International Commission on Intervention and
State Sovereignty. Military intervention is treated as an exceptional measure and
must be justified by serious or irreparable harm, defined as large-scale loss of life
or large scale "ethnic cleansing."
CHAPTER 24: HUMAN INTERVENTION IN WORLD POLITICS

• Military humanitarian intervention secure its greatest legitimation when it is done


through the Chapter VII enforcement provisions of the Security Council.

• The enforcement provisions in Chapter VII allow the Security Council to


authorize military action in cases where it finds a threat to international peace and
security. Those rules can be reasonably stretched to legitimate armed intervention
in cases of genocide or mass killings.
REFERENCE

Owens, P., Baylis, J., & Smith S. (2017). The Globalization of World Politics: An
Introduction to International Relations (7th ed). England: Oxford University Press.
“A great deal of world politics is a
fundamental struggle, but it is also a
struggle that has to be waged
intelligently.”
 ― Zbigniew Brzezinski
GOD BLESS!!!

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