1 / 10

Global Futures

Global Futures. Multilateralism v. Unilateralism: Moving beyond Westphalia?. Terms in supranational and global governance and decision making. Governance: processes and systems by which an organization or society operate.

beata
Download Presentation

Global Futures

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Global Futures Multilateralism v. Unilateralism: Moving beyond Westphalia?

  2. Terms in supranational and global governance and decision making • Governance: processes and systems by which an organization or society operate. • Governments, other institutions such as regional or international: NATO, EU, WTO, ICC • Treaties and agreements • Multilateralism: multiple parties working in concert to address a problem or concern • UN • WTO • European Union • Unilateralism: one party works alone or without broad consensus

  3. Trends in supranational and global governance and decision making • Regionalism • European Union moves to regionalism • NATO, NAFTA, CAFTA, ASEAN, etc. • Emerging sub-state regional entities: US Mexico border planning institutions • Many international institutions and initiatives • ILO International Labor Organization • Trade: WTO, IMF • UN: Security, Health, Welfare • International Criminal Court, etc. etc. • Environmental, Human Rights, Economic, Political Treaties and Agreements

  4. What is the current counter- trend?“Our Law, Your Law”--The Economist on US Unilateralism • US has historically wanted to export rule of law around the world • War Crimes Tribunals • Antitrust laws • Trade: WTO, IMF • Seen as strength, but sometimes also criticized as too much strength • Anti-globalization movement

  5. This is changing: US backing off of and emerging disregard for multilateralism: • Biological Weapons Convention • Anti Ballistic Missile (ABM) Treaty and Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty CTBT(nukes) • WTO: Double standard in trade: steel tariffs/China textiles • Kyoto Protocol • International Criminal Court • Geneva Convention on prisoners of war • Gonzalez appointment to Attorney General (some torture rules are “quaint” • UN Nomination of John Bolton to Ambassadorship • Wants to dismantle the UN

  6. Why is US unilateralist? According to The Economist: • Practical reasons re: terrorism • ICC: vulnerability to retaliation for its policing of the world • Ideological: “it will restrain our autonomy” • US “Exceptionalism”: US is separate and different from all the other countries • Ultimately: Because it is a superpower and so it can

  7. Why is US unilateralist? Robert Kagan: Because it is powerful • typical scenario of power • Europe: Multilateral, peaceful, and progressive • US: needs to be unilateralist to protect world, Europe, and itself as the world superpower • Kagan thesis: The weak countries are always multilateralist, the strong ones are always unilateralist • Europe can “afford” to be multilateralist because US takes care of security/military concerns

  8. Why is US unilateralist?Wallerstein: Because it is becoming relatively weaker • Relative to Post WWII • Politically, economically, culturally dominant • Needs to keep Europe in check economically • Other Key Future concerns: • China • China in conjunction with Russia and/or Japan and/or reunited Korea • Global Social Movements that support people who want more say in democratic decision making

  9. US Imperialism? • “the deliberate exercise of military power and economic influence by powerful states in order to advance and secure their national interests” • Formal governmental control: colonialism • Indirect rule (Rwanda) • Indirect but authoritative pressure • Military threat • Economic sanctions • Cultural domination • Institutions of governance

  10. Is this the most efficient path to democracy, peace, and development? • US: you bet • The Economist, Europe, and other critics: • Costly • Divisive • Arrogant • Potentially less secure • Imperialistic?

More Related