POL101 Essay

International Organizations – Lecture 

  • Categories of Empires 

  • Geographic – empires defined by the expanse of their territory  

  • Inland – Roman Empire 

  • Built on military conquests 

  • Overseas – British Empire 

  • Built on naval power, rules over territories separated by ocean 

  • Frontier – Ottoman Empire 

  • Built on economic dependence; the empire cannot survive without the territory it occupies 

  • Economic 

  • Slave-Owning 

  • Rentier 

  • Mercantile 

  • Capitalist 

  • Political 

  • Formal 

  • Informal 

  • Military 

  • Bureaucratic  

  • While globalization, technological changes and transnationalism brought an end to the traditional age of empires, they also created a new kind – global governance 

  • Global Governance as an Empire 

  • Uses a decentered and deterritorializing apparatus of rule that progressively incorporates the global realm within its open, expanding relationships 

  • Decentralization serves as both a blessing and a curse 

  • Decentralizing power means, in theory, that everyone has access to power (not the case under the traditional empiric framework) 

  • However, decentralizing power also makes it hard to control, organize and exercise power 

  • Theoretical Frameworks 

  • Realism 

  • International organizations are perceived as nothing more than the continuation of a system of sovereign states  

  • Global governance does not inherently have power; any power/authority it has comes from states  

  • If we believe this to be true, then it must also be true that international organizations are not capable of managing state behaviour (Theory of Offensive Realism) 

  • The world as an anarchy – in the absence of government, states will engage in behaviour to ensure their own survival (obsessed with how much power they have AND how much power other states have) 

  • Classical Liberal Internationalism 

  • Liberals – united in their concern with individual freedom  

  • Power is legitimate only when based on popular consensus + respects basic freedoms  

  • Key Idea – Free trade generates peace and prosperity because it fosters state interdependency  

  • “What works in one context works in all contexts” 

  • Neoliberal Institutionalism 

  • Mutually assured destruction – making war irrational through increased interdependence  

  • The more we move towards cooperation, the more we get a trans-national identity that prevents conflict  

  • Key Idea – International organizations mean enough to states that even the worst offenders of international law will join to improve their image 

  • Constructivism 

  • Power as a social relationship; can be seen in the ways a state engages/does not engage with other states within the global border  

  • Delegated authority, moral authority, legal-rational authority  

  • Key Idea – Cooperation is possible through rules that work to constrain how states engage with one another within the global system  

  • Feminism 

  • Key Idea – By not looking at gender, our contemporary analyses of international organizations have major blind spots 

  • Significant underrepresentation of women within the institutions of war and peace 

  • Examine conflict from the ground up rather than starting at the international level 

International Organizations – Corrupting International Organizations 

  • States can and do make retreats from global cooperation  

  • Trump’s “America first” foreign policy 

  • Roosevelt’s stance on international trade relations (views them as secondary to a sound national economy)  

  • In accordance with this, we see that state governments are also capable of abusing their power over international organizations & therefore misuse them  

  • 1 – Powerful democracies manipulate institutions manipulate institutions to favour strategically important developing countries 

  • 2 – Repressive autocracies exploit UN human rights treaties for nefarious purposes 

  • International Monetary Fund 

  • The IMF works to resolve the balance of payments + debt issues that developing countries face; its programs of economic reform are funded by other countries in exchange for power 

  • The more money a country provides to the IMF, the larger the vote they can exercise on the board  

  • The top 5 members of the IMF (until 2016) were the United States, Japan, Germany, France & the United Kingdom 

  • Thacker’s 1999 study provides direct evidence as to the United States manipulating their political power with the IMF to pursue political goals outside of the latter’s mandate  

  • It was found that a country’s alignment with the United States increased the probability of an IMF loan; in other words, voting with the U.S gave developing countries a better chance of receiving a loan 

  • Governments exploit international organizations for their own political interests  

(Vreeland 2019, 205 - 222) 

The World at War – Lecture 

  • It is the state that shapes our understanding of war; we cannot talk about war without talking about the state 

  • Peace of Westphalia 

  • Birthed the idea that states should have exclusive sovereignty over its territory; no one state gets to tell another what to do  

  • Enshrined within the UN Charter 

  • Ensures that the UN, and any other international organization, needs explicit authority to intervene with state conflict  

  • Monopoly of Violence 

  • The understanding that the state is always attempting to monopolize violence to obtain complete dominance over the territory that it governs  

  • Defining War  

  • Sustained, coordinated violence between political organizations 

  • Sustained – the extended use of force to kill/injure people and destroy military/economic resources; conflict does not become war unless it is sustained 

  • Coordinated – violence must be reciprocated 

  • Political Organizations – the actors in wars are organizations not individuals 

  • If we believe violence is purposeful, then we must also believe that war is fundamentally coercive  

  • The Individual, The State & International 

  • Levels of analysis 

  • Theories of War  

  • Realist Theory 

  • The Security Dilemma – a conflict spiral that leads to war; because political leaders tend to focus on short-term security needs, they are often locked into worst-case scenario thinking  

  • In adopting this thinking, they engage in a struggle for power/security and use coercive means to advance/maintain their reputations 

  • Offensive Strategy – Pursuance of regional hegemony + alliances 

  • Defensive Strategy – Focus on avoiding hegemony from another state and maintaining the equilibrium of power 

  • Rivalry Theory 

  • States become rivals if they have territorial disputes, make outside alliances against each other and/or engage in arms races  

  • Onset of war is a process that comes out of the interaction of states over time 

  • Bargaining Model of War 

  • Two assumptions  

  • War is expensive 

  • Individuals have access to private information and have incentives to misrepresent that information due to other commitments/indivisible issues  

  • Psychological Theory 

  • Different leaders produce different outcomes; these outcomes are significant enough to have a probable causal impact on the probability of war  

  • Liberal Theories of War (Peace) 

  • Democratic Peace Theory – democracies rarely fight each other 

  • Model of Institutional Constrains – electoral institutions, decentralization of power, free press etc. prevent/inhibit political leaders from taking unilateral military action 

  • Selectorate Model – political survival is the primary goal; as such, autocracies will issue war against weak democracies but rarely strong ones 

  • Economic Interdependence – anticipation of war prevents gains from trade which is a deterrent to political leaders  

  • Theories of Peace 

  • John Galtung – founder of peace studies 

  • Personal Violence 

  • Structural Violence – harm caused by social structures that perpetuate inequality 

  • Negative Peace – the absence of personal violence  

  • Positive Peace – presence of social justice  

  • Liberal Peace – the belief that liberal political and economic principles are at the root of peacebuilding; promoting liberal values in post-conflict societies will lead to prolonged peace  

  • Five Pillars  

  • Democratic Governance  

  • Market Economy 

  • Human Rights & the Rule of Law 

  • International Institutions 

  • Development 

The World at War – The Territorial Roots of Interstate Conflict  

  • Many recent conflicts can be attributed to disputes over border & territory (ex – Russian invasion of Ukraine) 

  • Territorial conflicts can be traced to the historical context & circumstance that the border was drawn/states were established  

  • Historical precedents + competing ideas of territory  

  • To combat the rising trend of interstate territorial conflict, it is imperative to first address their underlying territorial questions  

(Charaniya, 2024). 

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