Power, International Relations, and the Prospect of World Government Steven Slaughter Deakin University.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Chapter 1 Principles of Government
Advertisements

IR2501 Theories of International Relations
PRESENTATION Youth and Health-an overview from the European Youth Forum Laura Cottey Member of European Youth Forum Working Group on employment and social.
GV-506 (weeks 16-17) Mediation. Types of peaceful management of conflict per UN charter Direct negotiation-bargaining Mediation (3 rd party involvement)
The EU as a global actor by 2030 Context –Multipolar world with China, India and U.S. as the most important players. –Globalization –More regionally organized.
Introduction to Theories of Public Policy
Developmental Local Government and Participatory Governance Commonwealth Foundation 16 May 2013.
Chapter 19 The United Nations I34033 Liu yaozong.
The Peace of Westphalia
Forms of Governments SS.7.C.3.1- Compare different forms of government (direct democracy, representative democracy, socialism, communism, monarchy, oligarchy,
Realism.
Introducing Governance.  Much used term especially ‘good governance’ and ‘democratic governance’  From Greek word kubernân = to pilot or steer  Originally.
The European Integration process as a source of inspiration for East - Asia Overcoming nationalisms for gaining more (popular)sovereignty Andreas Gross,
The Treaties, Institutions and Policies of the EU
“Global Governance and Democratic Accountability” Robert O. Keohane Robert O. Keohane.
Today’s Topics Globalization & Democratization 1.Positive impact of international factors on democratization. 2.Negative impact of international factors.
NEW DEVELOPMENTS in HUMAN RIGHTS EDUCATION IN EUROPE Audrey Osler University of Leeds International Conference on Human.
An overview of United Europe. One Europe? The European Union and the Council of Europe Origins of integration EU powers and achievements The issue of.
Jean-Marc Coicaud Professor of Law and Global Affairs Director of the Division of Global Affairs.
Ann Singleton Centre for the Study of Poverty and Social Justice Policy needs for migration research European Migration Network Helsinki 26th November.
People and Government. Principles of Government  Population, the most obvious essential feature of a state. ◦ State: a political community that occupies.
LA Comprehensive Curriculum U.S. History Guiding Questions.
TO BE OR NOT TO BE EUROPEAN.
Conceptual definition of the European Union as a security actor
OUTLINE: INTRODUCTION ORIGINS OF INTERNATIONAL LAW Unit 4: International Law.
Ch. 26, "The Declining Authority of States"
Section 3 Introduction-1 International Organizations Key Terms nongovernmental organizations, intergovernmental organizations, supranational organizations.
United Kingdom.
Principles of Government
1 Croatia: Project Partnership for social inclusion September 16, Progress P rogram m of Europ ean U ni on
Liberalism Michael Doyle Lecture 3 Kaisa Ellandi.
What is Government? Government is the institution through which a society makes and enforces it’s public policies.
Edward Luck: How not to Reform the United Nations UN Reform.
GLOBAL GOVERNANCE Amandio De Araujo Sarmento Dewinta Haryanti Hartanto Yudha Kurniawan.
The EU-ASEAN Commemorative summit. Journalist`s Seminar. 12 November Topic: Regional integration for ASEAN & EU By:Jørgen Ørstrøm Møller  Visiting.
Regionalism LO1 – To explain the concept of regionalism
DEMOCRACY AND AMERICAN POLITICS
On the definition of international relation As to the first sub-item, there is no general agreement among scholars regarding what is meant by international.
Chapter One The Foundations of American Government.
Liberalism. Introduction Liberalism – Historical alternative to realism Promotes peace in the international system through set norms, procedures and institutions,
Enforcing Civil and Political Rights: Lessons from Europe Basak Cali and Anne Koch, The European Court of Human Rights Project, Department of Political.
POSC 1000 Introduction to Politics Russell Alan Williams.
WORLD BANK SEMINAR LINKAGES BETWEEN PARLIAMENTS, THE AU AND NEPAD IN SADC 28 th TO 29 th JANUARY 2004.
Definitions, Principle, and Evolution DEMOCRACY AND DEMOCRATIZATION.
American Government Politics in Action. Government- The institution through which a society makes and enforces its public policies. Government is the.
The Common Foreign and Security Policy. The developments leading up to the formulation of a CFSP The European Political Cooperation (EPC)- 1970; institutional.
The Changing Role of Political Parties Answer Review.
The International Business Environment
PR 1450 Introduction to Globalization Lecture 9 Globalization and democracy Chris Rumford.
Introducing the IR Paradigms 1: Liberalism(s) in IR Prepared for Junior International Politics Class at NENU, Fall 2015.
The West and the Rest. 3 main themes: The world’s cultural diversity in the age of globalization – does it breed conflict and impede cooperation? The.
FEDERALISM. Key Characteristics of federalism Rule of Law Democracy Subsidiarity Freedom Equality.
Government Unit 1 Basic Terminology Government is institution with the power to make and enforce rules for a group of people State is a political unit.
What is Government? Government is the institution through which a society makes and enforces it’s public policies.
Global Civil Society. Terms I.  Civil Society:  intermediate realm between family and state, where an individual becomes a public person through the.
Introduction to the UN human rights system UN TRAINING FOR TRANS ACTIVISTS SEPTEMBER 2015.
A Modern Economy Requires a Modern State
A Democratic Audit Framework
The European Union (EU)
With William Kim and Friends
Political Power and Globalization.
Global Governance, Democracy, and Justice
Principles of Government
World Politics Under a system of Anarchy
Moving beyond the Millennium Development Goals.
Definitions, Principle, and Evolution
The 1648 Treaty of Westphalia?
European Union By: Dr. Soha EL Magawry.
Presentation transcript:

Power, International Relations, and the Prospect of World Government Steven Slaughter Deakin University

What are the prospects of World Government? 1)What is a world government? 2)Why is the idea of world government proposed? 3)How could a world government be realised?

I) What is a world government? The primary element of world government is the centralization of authority. This is a situation where legitimate power rests with a global political body which has a global monopoly on the means of legitimate violence (and taxation). If the monopoly is not legitimate = world empire. If the centralization of authority is not a complete monopoly = various forms of global governance.

We live in a world without a world government We live in a decentralised world where sovereign states are the ultimate sources authority in world politics as they do not accept the authority of other actors over their domestic affairs. Sovereignty first developed in Europe around the time of the Peace of Westphalia (1648). After Westphalia monarchs agreed in principle to not interfere in other states. Sovereignty spread around the world in recent centuries to become the organizing principle of world politics. In this decentralized system, international law and international organizations have been created to enable coexistence and cooperation but they are dependent upon state action to work.

We do live in a world with global governance Global Governance suggests all forms of authority, cooperation or management – be they public or private and formal or informal – that lead to the achievement of common goals. This means that global governance encompasses various institutions and practices set up by states (especially International Organisations) and those set up by individuals (Non-Governmental Organisations). The rules and mechanisms of global governance are uncoordinated, uneven and fundamentally incomplete and sometimes they are effective and succeed in addressing global problems and sometimes they fail - with disastrous consequences. But they do not amount to a world government.

International Political Spectrum

The Development of the Idea of World Government The Enlightenment: Immanuel Kant "Perpetual Peace: A Philosophical Sketch" (1795). Post World War Two: Increased public support after world war II -World Federalist Movement (1947-), Albert Einstein, Gary Davis etc. Post Cold War Cosmopolitanism: Cosmopolitan democracy Scholars such as David Held and Richard Falk who argued that people ought to be “citizens of the world”. Various forms of transnational activism, especially the protests and activism of the global Anti-capitalism Movement from the 1990s.

II) Why is the idea of world government proposed? 1) Inability of states to avoid War “In the long term, deterrence is bound to fail: to predict that it will succeed forever, never once collapsing into a nuclear war, is to engage in a utopian and ahistorical kind of thinking.… When it fails, the ensuing war is likely to kill hundreds of millions of people, and possibly exterminate the human race”. (Campbell Craig, 2003: 172)

2) The inability of states to address global problems. States do not always create effective forms of cooperation and “pass the buck” to other states.

3) The inability of states to effectively address and prevent problems that require long term thinking for all humanity, eg climate change.

4) The interconnected nature of contemporary security threats require holistic thinking that states struggle to develop and sustain.

5) The inability of states to promote global justice or social stability in the face of accelerating economic globalisation where no one state can control this global economic system. National democracy practically undermined by globalisation: important decision making is occurring global governance or global markets.

6) The morally arbitrary nature of nation-states limits compassion for people outside the state: refugees and global poverty. These factors lead to desire for a common and universal political system to represent and safeguard our common humanity.

III) How could a world government be realized? 1) Recognition and action by world leaders. Top down action is possible to create political integration that transcends states, for example the role that leaders played in the formation of the European Union. As a response to a global catastrophe or crisis where the states system was seen to be one of the key causes and cosmopolitan action is seen as a key part of a resolution of that crisis.

2) Action by citizens/NGOs The activity of citizens involved in transnational activism and civil society could lead to various forms of increased political integration. Many NGOs wary of authority Not all NGOs cosmopolitan or even progressive Not all NGOs internally democratic Many NGOs are from the West

3) Proposed United Nations Parliamentary Assembly Some form of experiment of creating a third democratic chamber of the United Nations alongside the Security Council and General Assembly. Either by nations delegating their elected legislators or through some direct global vote (normally with some form of weighted voting to give smaller states more representation) First proposed in 1920 in response to the formation of the League of Nations and in 1945 with the formation of the UN. More recently the Campaign for the Establishment of a United Nations Parliamentary Assembly was formed in 2007.

4) Incremental activity by policy makers to improve existing forms of global governance by making them more accountable and responsive to public inputs. In the long term some form of world government could result.

Concluding thoughts Should we have a world government? Is centralisation of global authority an unproblematic thing? Are there good aspects of sovereign nation-states? Should we just focus on improving and enhancing global governance?