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Samenvatting

Summary International Governance notes

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Summary of 18 pages for the course 6450IG at UL (Lecture notes)











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Geüpload op
7 april 2025
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Geschreven in
2024/2025
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Voorbeeld van de inhoud

‭Lecture 1: Introduction‬
I‭nternational Gov: Definitions, Origins, Themes → International organisation(s) v GG‬
‭“At its most basic, international organizatioN refers to an instance — or, in an historical sense, a‬
‭moment – of institutionalisation in relations among states.” (Weiss and Wilkinson)‬

“‭ ...international organizatioNS = formal intergovernmental bureaucracies. They have a legal standing,‬
‭physical headquarters, executive head, staff + substantive focus for operations.‬

‭“... ‘global governance’ is totality of the ways, formal and informal, the world is governed’.”‬

‭Early Days of international governance:‬
‭●‬ ‭Managing relations among colonial powers‬
‭●‬ ‭Production efficiency‬
‭●‬ ‭Different economic and social agendas added over time‬
‭●‬ ‭Ex: League of Nations → First true attempt at‬‭international‬‭governance‬‭with a strong peace‬
‭orientation‬

‭Major Shifts after WW2‬
‭●‬ ‭Birth of the UN system → Global governance expand beyond economic matters‬
‭○‬ ‭Environmental agenda‬
‭○‬ ‭Human rights agenda‬
‭○‬ ‭NGOs key here‬

‭2nd half of 20th CE: Convergence around 4 “long term crises” → Production efficiency‬
‭●‬ ‭Peacemaking and humanitarian causes‬
‭●‬ ‭Environmental pollution‬
‭●‬ ‭Economic catchup of lower income countries‬
‭●‬ ‭Inequality‬

‭Where does this leave us today?‬
‭●‬ ‭We have major international crises at our hands → Climate change‬
‭●‬ ‭Some things have also (arguably) gotten better → poverty thresholds, global famine‬
‭●‬ ‭Other issues severity waxes and wanes → Deaths in state based conflicts‬
‭●‬ ‭Our task → Understand the role of international governance efforts in these failures and‬
‭successes // What are the key challenges we face in building more effective global institutions?‬
‭●‬ ‭International governance = puzzle‬
‭○‬ ‭Big progress on some issues, stagnation or back tracking on others‬
‭●‬ ‭What do our international institutions have to do with this? What obstacles do we face in building‬
‭a more effective global governance regime?‬

‭ hat IS “international governance”? How did our international governing institutions‬
W
‭originate?‬
‭●‬ ‭Turbulence → call for the need to see the world politics not as state-role models but in a new way‬
‭→ Shifting away from a century ago‬
‭●‬ ‭Common themes‬
‭○‬ ‭Economic nationalism‬
‭○‬ ‭Rise in price assets and depression‬
‭○‬ ‭Pressure over the intergovernmental institutions, but unlikely to have new‬
‭institutions-building anytime soon‬
‭●‬ ‭Climate change, failing global humanitarianism, shortcomings of global finance/trade and‬
‭development → pressures the institutions’ ineffectiveness, emission + over-stretch‬



‭1‬

,‭●‬ ‭Pluralistic nature of global politics and changing actors:‬
‭○‬ ‭G-7, G-20, regionalism + non governmental sector (micro-credit and micro-finance programs‬
‭for poverty alleviation)‬
‭○‬ ‭private military and security companies (PMSCs) + terrorism and criminal gangs‬
‭○‬ ‭credit-ranking agencies and MNCs: key to functioning of the world‬
‭○‬ ‭transnational religious movements: peace initiative and influential in policy making‬
‭●‬ ‭Role of information → faster and widespread‬
‭●‬ ‭Actors, mechanisms, the power that underpins them and the ideas and ideologies driving their‬
‭assemblage ought to become essential in IR‬
‭○‬ ‭International organisation + global governance = mainly associated with study of UN,‬
‭subsets of IR, low politics of technical econ, social and environmental issues‬

‭HOWEVER, Global governance focuses on…‬
‭●‬ ‭Order of things on a broader scale (formal and informal ways) of world governance‬
‭○‬ ‭Transnational issues highlight the emergence of non-state actors, which mainly supply the‬
‭void of states’ capacity.‬
‭●‬ ‭Global governance:‬‭relationship between global policy-making‬‭processes + implementation,‬
‭effects of local actions on the global, roles and effects of those involved, and interrelationships‬
‭between actors, institutions, and mechanisms.‬
‭○‬ ‭Far more encompassing + other mechanisms (e.g. financial markets, lobbying activities and‬
‭social media) to explain today’s global issues.‬
‭■‬ ‭Rating groups + investor services = prime regulatory initiatives of supply chains‬
‭●‬ ‭International governance:‬‭Interstate structures guaranteed‬‭by states to operate under the‬
‭auspices of an organisation (ICC, ICJ, WTO), but global governance also‬

‭IOs + GGs = core of IR + their issues are shared by the traditional IR perspectives‬
‭●‬ ‭Realism → how the world is organised. It varies between classical and neorealism‬
‭○‬ ‭Morgenthau is concerned with the international order and balance of power‬
‭○‬ ‭Waltz posits the international order as a set of interacting units‬
‭○‬ ‭Realism knows how the world is governed + aims at dealing with the negative effects‬
‭●‬ ‭Liberal internationalism and neoliberal institutionalists, constructivists and neofunctionalism,‬
‭emphasise moments of common interest in cooperation. It focuses on the‬‭possibility‬‭, how the‬
‭world is governed and‬‭ought‬‭to be governed‬
‭●‬ ‭Marxist → transnational institutions is due to the capitalist expansive exigence.‬
‭●‬ ‭Feminist IR → global order as masculine and sexist, perpetuating unequal relations‬
‭●‬ ‭Post-structuralism → discourse and practices on which the world is governed‬
‭●‬ ‭Post- and de-colonial scholars → historical processes that have ensured the Western EU‬
‭supremacy, perpetuating Othering‬




‭2‬

, ‭Lecture 2: Actors Overview and Climate Change‬
‭Climate change as an issue:‬
‭●‬ ‭Extremely politically fraught for which governance approaches have evolved‬
‭●‬ ‭Involving many actors and attempts to influence‬

‭Who governs the globe?‬
‭●‬ ‭Susan sell challenges us to think far beyond public organisations‬
‭○‬ ‭Meta has served for political activity and misinformation around the world‬
‭○‬ ‭FSC → Consumer behaviour based on certified products‬
‭●‬ ‭Governing (with)out government?‬
‭○‬ ‭NGOs‬ ‭○‬ ‭Judges‬
‭○‬ ‭Civil society campaigns‬ ‭○‬ ‭Lobbyists‬
‭○‬ ‭Experts‬ ‭○‬ ‭Business firms‬
‭○‬ ‭Intergovernmental organisations‬ ‭○‬ ‭Hybrid networks (multiple types of‬
‭○‬ ‭States‬ ‭actors)‬
‭○‬ ‭Regulators‬

‭How do international governors govern?‬
‭●‬ ‭Agenda-setting‬ ‭●‬ ‭⁠Implementation‬
‭●‬ ‭Negotiation‬ ‭●‬ ‭⁠Monitoring‬
‭●‬ ‭⁠Decision-making‬ ‭●‬ ‭⁠Enforcement‬
‭●‬ ‭“Global governors‬‭are authorities who exercise power‬‭across borders for purposes of affecting‬
‭policy. Governors thus create issues, set agendas, establish and implement rules or programs,‬
‭and evaluate and/ or adjudicate outcomes.”‬
‭●‬ ‭Power involves partnerships, cooperation, and coalitions. Institutional change is targeted to the‬
‭reaction of others.‬
‭●‬ ‭Global governance raises challenges for accountability, representation, and legitimacy.‬

‭Issue 1: Designing accountability structures‬
‭●‬ ‭Accountability‬‭, the obligation to be called "to account,"‬‭is‬‭a method of keeping the public‬
‭informed and powerful in check‬‭.‬‭It implies a world‬‭which is at once complex, where experts are‬
‭needed to perform specialised tasks, but still fundamentally democratic in aspiration, in that‬
‭members of the public assert their right to question the experts and exercise ultimate control over‬
‭them.‬
‭○‬ ‭a‬‭fuzzy concept‬‭: to whom should our global governors‬‭be accountable? How can we‬
‭establish it? How can we measure it? Through increasing participation in global‬
‭institutions… then who should be able to participate‬
‭●‬ ‭Tension between independence of action and accountability‬
‭○‬ ‭Participation favours accountability‬
‭○‬ ‭NGOs + civil society engaging more in int org processes → broader stakeholder‬
‭participation‬

‭Issue 2: Legitimacy‬
‭●‬ ‭“a social relationship; to be legitimate is to be' socially recognized as rightful' by those‬
‭over whom global governors claim authority." (Snell)‬
‭●‬ ‭Participation opportunities for all people + all political views‬
‭●‬ ‭Neutrality → Willingness to act on consensus‬
‭●‬ ‭The consequences matter: "Distributional‬‭consequences‬‭lie at the heart of contestation over‬
‭global governance and cannot be ignored." (Sell)‬
‭●‬ ‭Input legitimacy refers to participation and representation in the process of defining policy goals,‬
‭and output legitimacy refers to the translation of these goals into policy.‬
‭●‬ ‭Involves negotiation → Not static‬


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