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July 1: What is the role of international organizations and do they really matter? Abbot, Kenneth and Duncan Snidal. 1998. Why States Act through Formal Organizations. Journal of Conflict Resolution 42:3-32.

July 1: What is the role of international organizations and do they really matter? Abbot, Kenneth and Duncan Snidal. 1998. Why States Act through Formal

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Page 1: July 1: What is the role of international organizations and do they really matter? Abbot, Kenneth and Duncan Snidal. 1998. Why States Act through Formal

July 1: What is the role of international organizations and do they really matter?

Abbot, Kenneth and Duncan Snidal. 1998. Why States Act through Formal Organizations. Journal of Conflict Resolution 42:3-32.

Page 2: July 1: What is the role of international organizations and do they really matter? Abbot, Kenneth and Duncan Snidal. 1998. Why States Act through Formal

Last class take-home point

• Analytical tool: – Time inconsistent preference problem– A.K.A. (also known as):

• Commitment problem• Present bias

Page 3: July 1: What is the role of international organizations and do they really matter? Abbot, Kenneth and Duncan Snidal. 1998. Why States Act through Formal

Do IOs matter?

Page 4: July 1: What is the role of international organizations and do they really matter? Abbot, Kenneth and Duncan Snidal. 1998. Why States Act through Formal

Dramatic action

• United Nations Security Council (UNSC) sanctions on Libya

• International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) inspectors in North Korea

• United Nations (UN) peacekeepers in the Middle East

• North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) in Bosnia

• The Uruguay Round the World Trade Organization (WTO) & the dispute settlement mechanism

Page 5: July 1: What is the role of international organizations and do they really matter? Abbot, Kenneth and Duncan Snidal. 1998. Why States Act through Formal

Ongoing action:

• Global health policy (the WHO)

• Development (the World Bank)

• Monetary policy (the International Monetary Fund)

• Participation reduces the chances of war among members

• Participation increases the chances of democracy

Page 6: July 1: What is the role of international organizations and do they really matter? Abbot, Kenneth and Duncan Snidal. 1998. Why States Act through Formal

Various sizes:

• From:

– Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation forum (APEC) - $2 million budget (pays for their annual meeting?)

• To:

– European Union (EU) - verging on a sovereign state

– World Bank - >10,000 employees from 160 countries (2/3 in Washington)

– IMF (Aug. 2008: $341 billion)

Page 7: July 1: What is the role of international organizations and do they really matter? Abbot, Kenneth and Duncan Snidal. 1998. Why States Act through Formal

Specialized agencies:

• ILO– http://www.ilo.org/global/What_we_do/lang--en/index.htm

• ICAO – http://www.icao.int/icao/en/howworks.htm

• FAO– http://www.fao.org/about/about-fao/en/

• Others:– UNEP

• http://www.unep.org/Documents.Multilingual/Default.asp?DocumentID=43

– EBRD • http://www.ebrd.com/about/index.htm

Page 8: July 1: What is the role of international organizations and do they really matter? Abbot, Kenneth and Duncan Snidal. 1998. Why States Act through Formal

Finding research on IOs:

• Google Scholar!!! http://scholar.google.com/

• ISI Web of Science http://isiknowledge.com/

Page 9: July 1: What is the role of international organizations and do they really matter? Abbot, Kenneth and Duncan Snidal. 1998. Why States Act through Formal

IOs allow for:

• CENTRALIZATION– A concrete and stable organizational structure and an

administrative apparatus managing collective activities• May allow for immediate action (UN Security Council)• Or for specialization (OECD has >200 working groups)• May have flexible design (IMF voting structure) or be rigid

(UN Security Council)

• INDEPENDENCE– The ability/authority to act with a degree of autonomy

within defined spheres

Page 10: July 1: What is the role of international organizations and do they really matter? Abbot, Kenneth and Duncan Snidal. 1998. Why States Act through Formal

Rational choice perspective:

• LEADERS found/use IOs when benefits of cooperation outweigh (sovereignty) costs

• IOs produce collective goods in PD settings & solve coordination problems

• Coordination problems?– E.g., Battle of the sexes game

Page 11: July 1: What is the role of international organizations and do they really matter? Abbot, Kenneth and Duncan Snidal. 1998. Why States Act through Formal

PD settings?

• Prisoner's dilemma

• http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ED9gaAb2BEw&feature=related

• http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p3Uos2fzIJ0

Page 12: July 1: What is the role of international organizations and do they really matter? Abbot, Kenneth and Duncan Snidal. 1998. Why States Act through Formal

Prisoner's Dilemma:

• A non-cooperative, non-zero-sum game. (Mixed game of cooperation and conflict.)

• Individual rationality brings about collective irrationality.

Page 13: July 1: What is the role of international organizations and do they really matter? Abbot, Kenneth and Duncan Snidal. 1998. Why States Act through Formal

Example…

– You're reading Tchaikovsky's music on a train back in the USSR.

– KGB agents suspect it's secret code.

– They arrest you & a "friend" they claim is Tchaikovsky.

– "You better tell us everything. We caught Tchaikovsky, and he's already talking…"

Page 14: July 1: What is the role of international organizations and do they really matter? Abbot, Kenneth and Duncan Snidal. 1998. Why States Act through Formal

• You know that this is ridiculous – they have no case.

• But they may be able to build a case using your testimony and "Tchaikovsky's."

• If you "rat" out your "friend" – they will reduce your sentence.

• If not, they will throw the book at you.

Page 15: July 1: What is the role of international organizations and do they really matter? Abbot, Kenneth and Duncan Snidal. 1998. Why States Act through Formal

Player 2

Player 1Cooperate

w/friend Defect (rat)

Cooperate w/friend -3, -3 -25, -1

Defect (rat) -1, -25 -10, -10

Page 16: July 1: What is the role of international organizations and do they really matter? Abbot, Kenneth and Duncan Snidal. 1998. Why States Act through Formal

• The same situation can occur whenever "collective action" is required.

• The collective action problem is also called the "n-person prisoner's dilemma."

• Also called the "free rider problem."

• "Tragedy of the commons."

• All have similar logics and a similar result:

– Individually rational action leads to collectively suboptimal results.

Page 17: July 1: What is the role of international organizations and do they really matter? Abbot, Kenneth and Duncan Snidal. 1998. Why States Act through Formal

Is cooperation ever possible in Prisoner's Dilemma?

• Yes

• In repeated settings

• Axelrod, Robert M. 1984. The Evolution of Cooperation. New York: Basic Books.

Page 18: July 1: What is the role of international organizations and do they really matter? Abbot, Kenneth and Duncan Snidal. 1998. Why States Act through Formal

• So, IOs facilitate cooperation by coordinating states on superior equilibria/outcomes

• And lower the transaction costs of doing so

Page 19: July 1: What is the role of international organizations and do they really matter? Abbot, Kenneth and Duncan Snidal. 1998. Why States Act through Formal

Alternatives to the rational-institutionalist perspective

Page 20: July 1: What is the role of international organizations and do they really matter? Abbot, Kenneth and Duncan Snidal. 1998. Why States Act through Formal

Realist theory

• States do not cede to supranational institutions the strong enforcement capacities necessary to overcome international anarchy

• Thus, IOs and similar institutions are of little interest

• They merely reflect national interests and power and do not constrain powerful states

• Does realism = rational choice?

• Realism focuses on state interests - ignores microfoundations (leader incentives, domestic politics)

Page 21: July 1: What is the role of international organizations and do they really matter? Abbot, Kenneth and Duncan Snidal. 1998. Why States Act through Formal

Constructivist theory

• Where to ideas and preferences come from?

• Focus on norms, beliefs, knowledge, and (shared) understandings

• IOs are the result of international ideas, and in turn contribute towards shaping the evolution of international ideas

• Vital for the understanding of major concepts such as legitimacy and norms

Page 22: July 1: What is the role of international organizations and do they really matter? Abbot, Kenneth and Duncan Snidal. 1998. Why States Act through Formal

Abbot & Snidal:

States use IOs to…

• Reduce transaction costs;

• Create information, ideas, norms, and expectations;

• Carry out and encourage specific activities;

• Legitimate or delegitimate particular ideas and practices;

• Enhance their capacities and power

Page 23: July 1: What is the role of international organizations and do they really matter? Abbot, Kenneth and Duncan Snidal. 1998. Why States Act through Formal

Principal-Agent framework

• IOs are thus "agents"

• Their (biggest) members are the "principals"

• Agency slack?

– "bureaucratic" perspective

Page 24: July 1: What is the role of international organizations and do they really matter? Abbot, Kenneth and Duncan Snidal. 1998. Why States Act through Formal

The principal-agent problem

• The agent works for the principal

• The agent has private information

• The principal only observes an outcome

• Must decide to reelect/pay/rehire/keep the agent

• If standards are too low, the agent “shirks”

• If standards are too high, the agent gives up

• We need a Goldilocks solution – set standards “just right.”

• We may have to accept some an “information rent”

– Either pay extra or accept agency slack (corruption?)

Page 25: July 1: What is the role of international organizations and do they really matter? Abbot, Kenneth and Duncan Snidal. 1998. Why States Act through Formal

Nature chooses the state of the world (“luck”)

GovernmentGood

Bad

High Effort/skill

Low Effort/skill

High Effort/skill

Low Effort/skill

Government

VoterReelect

Not

Page 26: July 1: What is the role of international organizations and do they really matter? Abbot, Kenneth and Duncan Snidal. 1998. Why States Act through Formal

• If reelection criteria are too high, the government will not supply effort when exogenous conditions are bad.

• If reelection criteria are too low, the government will not supply effort when conditions are good.

• What should you do?

• Intuition: It depends on the probability of good/bad conditions & on the difference in outcomes when conditions are good/bad…

Page 27: July 1: What is the role of international organizations and do they really matter? Abbot, Kenneth and Duncan Snidal. 1998. Why States Act through Formal

Solution?

• TRANSPARENCY?

Page 28: July 1: What is the role of international organizations and do they really matter? Abbot, Kenneth and Duncan Snidal. 1998. Why States Act through Formal

Public choice/Bureaucratic theory

• IOs are like any bureaucracy

• Allow governments to reward people with cushy jobs

• The bureaucracy is essentially unaccountable

• Seek to maximize their budgets

• Look for things to do

Page 29: July 1: What is the role of international organizations and do they really matter? Abbot, Kenneth and Duncan Snidal. 1998. Why States Act through Formal

Back to rational-institutionalist view…

Page 30: July 1: What is the role of international organizations and do they really matter? Abbot, Kenneth and Duncan Snidal. 1998. Why States Act through Formal

What do IOs do for their members?

• Pooling resources (IMF/World Bank, World Health Organization) - share costs, economies of scale

• Direct joint action - e.g., military (NATO), financial (IMF), dispute resolution (WTO)

Page 31: July 1: What is the role of international organizations and do they really matter? Abbot, Kenneth and Duncan Snidal. 1998. Why States Act through Formal

LAUNDERING

• Allow states to take (collective) action without taking direct responsibility (or take responsibility with IO support)

• Examples:– The IMF does the dirty work

– UN Security Council resolutions - a form of laundering?

• When an IO legitimates retaliation, states are not vigilantes but upholders of community norms, values, and institutions

• Korean War - The United States cast essentially unilateral action as more legitimate *collective* action by getting UN Security Council approval

Page 32: July 1: What is the role of international organizations and do they really matter? Abbot, Kenneth and Duncan Snidal. 1998. Why States Act through Formal

Neutrality• Providing information

– Really? http://www9.georgetown.edu/faculty/jrv24/IMFforecasts.html

• Collecting information– Really! http://www9.georgetown.edu/faculty/jrv24/transparency.html

• Example– Blue helmets: – http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O0n2-

YpwPWY&feature=PlayList&p=BBF5269792FC9ED6&playnext=1&playnext_from=PL&index=15

Page 33: July 1: What is the role of international organizations and do they really matter? Abbot, Kenneth and Duncan Snidal. 1998. Why States Act through Formal

Community representative

Legitimacy

• Articulate norms? http://goodliffe.byu.edu/papers/catcascade2.pdf

• Universal Jurisdiction (more than a norm - a legal standard) – The CAT

• Honduras and the OAS??

Page 34: July 1: What is the role of international organizations and do they really matter? Abbot, Kenneth and Duncan Snidal. 1998. Why States Act through Formal

Enforcement?

• The problem of endogeneity– 100% Compliance may mean the IO is doing

*nothing*– Be careful what conclusions we draw from

observations

• Compliance is meaningful only if the state takes action it would not take in the absence of the IO

• IMF/World Bank CONDITIONALITY

Page 35: July 1: What is the role of international organizations and do they really matter? Abbot, Kenneth and Duncan Snidal. 1998. Why States Act through Formal

Answers to today's question:• IO's reduce transaction costs - costs of doing

business & coordinate on superior equilibria

• Enabling members to have:– LAUNDERING– Neutrality– Community representative– Enforcement– Legitimacy - shared beliefs that coordinate actors

regarding what actions should be accepted, tolerated, resisted, or stopped

• To these ends IOs are created centralized & independent

Page 36: July 1: What is the role of international organizations and do they really matter? Abbot, Kenneth and Duncan Snidal. 1998. Why States Act through Formal

Analytical tools

• Time inconsistent preference problem / Commitment problem / Present bias

• Research networking

• Prisoner’s dilemma

• Principal-Agent framework

• Realist theory

• Constructivist theory

• Public choice/Bureaucratic theory

Page 37: July 1: What is the role of international organizations and do they really matter? Abbot, Kenneth and Duncan Snidal. 1998. Why States Act through Formal

Thank you