РефератыИностранный языкAnAnarchy Essay Research Paper Anarchy is seen

Anarchy Essay Research Paper Anarchy is seen

Anarchy Essay, Research Paper


Anarchy is seen as one end of the spectrum whose other end is marked by the


presence of a legitimate and competent government. International politics is


described as being spotted with pieces of government and bound with elements of


community. Traditionally, international-political systems are thought of as


being more or less anarchic. Anarchy is taken to mean not just the absence of


government but also the presence of disorder and chaos. Although far from


peaceful, international politics falls short of unrelieved chaos, and while not


formally organized, it is not entirely without institutions and orderly


procedures. Although it is misleading to label modern international politics as


anarchic, the absence of a universal international law prohibits well-regulated


behavior. But, international regulation is not completely absent from world


politics. With the end of the Cold War, the ground seems ready for an


acceleration of this century?s trend in increasing international regulation of


more issues once typically seen as part of state domestic jurisdiction. But as


international law embraces new actors and a growing range of forms, topics, and


technologies, and as it moves further away from strictly "foreign"


concerns to traditionally domestic areas, its proponents must increasingly


confront new obstacles head-on. Traditionally, most rules of international law


could be found in one of two places: treaties or customary law (uncodified, but


equally binding rules based on long-standing behavior). But as new domains from


the environment to the Internet come to be seen as appropriate for international


regulation, states are sometimes reluctant to embrace any sort of binding rule.


Today all but the most doctrinaire of scholars see a role for so-called soft


law-precepts emanating from international bodies that conform in some sense to


expectations of required behavior but that are not binding on states (the World


Bank?s Guidelines on the Treatment of Foreign Direct Investment, for example).


Soft law principles also represent a starting point for new hard law, which


attaches a penalty to noncompliance. Whether in the case of hard or soft law,


new participants are making increased demands for representation in


international bodies, conferences, and other legal groupings and processes. They


include both recognized and unrecognized substate entities (Hong Kong and Tibet,


for example); nongovernmental organizations; and corporations. Scholars accept


that these other actors have independent views that do not fit neatly into


traditional theories of how law is made and enforced. Most states comply with


much, even most, international law. But without a mechanism to bring


transgressors into line, international law is "law" in name only. The


traditional toolbox to secure compliance with the law of nations consist of


negotiations, mediation, countermeasures, or, in rare cases, recourse to


supranational judicial bodies such as the International Court of Justice. For


many years, these tools have been supplemented by the work of international


institutions, whose reports and resolutions often help "mobilize


shame" against violators. But today, states, NGO?s, and private entities


have striven for sanctions. And the UN?s ad hoc criminal tribunals for the


former Yugoslavia and Rwanda show that it is at least possible to devise


institutions to punish individuals for human rights atrocities. Nonetheless, the


success of these enforcement mechanisms depends on the willingness of states to


support them. When global institutions do not work, regional bodies may offer


more influence over member conduct in economics, human rights, and other areas.


In addition, domestic courts increasingly provide an additional venue to enforce


international law. Even with a defined international law and a ?world


government? to enforce it, cooperation in general, in internat

ional politics,


is troubled. Research on international regimes moved from attempts to describe


the phenomena of interdependence and international regimes to closer analysis of


the conditions under which countries cooperate. How does cooperation occur among


sovereign states and how do international institutions affect it? Indeed, why


should international institutions exist at all in a world dominated by sovereign


states? This question seemed unanswerable if institutions were seen as opposed


to or above, the state but not if they were viewed as devices to help states


accomplish their objectives. The new school of thought argued that, rather than


imposing themselves on states, international institutions should respond to the


demand by states for cooperative ways to fulfill their own purposes. By reducing


uncertainty and the costs of making and enforcing agreements, international


institutions help states achieve collective gains. This new institutionalism was


not without its critics, who focused their attacks on two perceived


shortcomings. The counterargument focused on the absence of a world government


or effective international legal system to which victims of injustice can


appeal. Second, theorists of cooperation had recognized that cooperation is not


harmonious: it emerges out of discord and takes place through tough bargaining.


Nevertheless, they claimed that the potential joint gains from such cooperation


explained the dramatic increases in the number and scope of cooperative


multilateral institutions. Critics pointed out, however, that bargaining


problems themselves could produce obstacles to achieving joint gains.


Cooperation requires recognition of opportunities for the advancement of mutual


interest, as well as policy coordination once these opportunities have been


identified. Transaction and information costs are high. The complexity of


international politics militates against identification and realization of


common interest. Avoiding nuclear war during the Cuban missile crisis called for


cooperation by the Soviet Union and the United States. The transaction and


information costs in the crisis, though substantial, did not preclude


cooperation. By contrast, the problem of identifying significant actors,


defining interests, and negotiating agreements that embodied mutual interests in


the case of 1914 was far more difficult. There was no common procedure to handle


the situation or resolve it in an efficient manner. In international politics,


the likelihood of autonomous defection and of recognition and control problems


increases. Cooperative behavior rests on calculations of expected utility -


merging discount rates, payoff structures, and anticipated behavior of other


players. Nations dwell in perpetual lawlessness, for no central authority with a


defined law limits on the pursuit of sovereign interests. This common condition


gives rise to diverse outcomes. War and concert, arms races and arms control,


trade wars and tariff truces, financial panics and rescues, competitive


devaluation and monetary stabilization mark relations among states. At times,


the absences of centralized international authority preclude attainment of


common goals. Because, as states, they cannot cede ultimate control over their


conduct to a world government, they cannot guarantee that they will adhere to


their commitments. The possibility of a breach of promise can impede cooperation


even when cooperation would leave all well off. Yet, at other times, states do


realize common goals though cooperation under lawlessness. Despite the absence


of any ultimate international law, governments often bind themselves to mutually


advantageous courses of action. And, though no international sovereign stands


ready to enforce the terms of agreement, modern states can and do realize common


interests through tacit cooperation, formal bilateral and multilateral


negotiation, and the creation if international regimes.

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