PS410: International Regimes
Ronald B. Mitchell
Website as of: Spring 2002

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Syllabus

Lecture Notes

Assignments

LECTURE #1
3 April 2002
Copyright: Ronald B. Mitchell, 2002

I. Introduction

A. Go over syllabus – requirements

1. Class participation (10%)

2. Abstracts (10%): 2 articles (5% each)

3. Takehome midterm examination (25%): 1500 words OR LESS.

4. 3 Paper-related Homework Assignments (15%): HW1: 5%; HW2: 10%; HW3: Optional

5. 20 page research paper (40%): Due by 5:00 PM – Friday, June 7, 2002

B. PS205 is a pre-requisite – really won’t make it in course without that as background

C. Urge any sophomores and first years to take this course in two years when I will offer it again.

D. Rules on plagiarism and cheating

E. Go over syllabus in more depth

F. Correct email addresses on attached sheet

II. Theory of regimes

A. Regimes as a means by which states attempt to overcome collective action problems. States see suboptimal outcomes from independent decision-making and seek to develop collective decision-making and collective behavior to achieve better outcomes.

1. Conflict – independent decision-making by different states leads to suboptimal outcomes

2. Harmony – independent decision-making by different states leads to acceptable outcomes

3. Cooperation – interdependent decision-making by different states leads to better outcomes than available under conflict. Cooperation as attempt to resolve situations that would otherwise become conflict.

B. Definition

1. Principles (beliefs), norms (general standards), rules (specific prescriptions/proscriptions) and decision-making processes (collective choice rules) around which actors’ expectations converge.

2. System of governance for a particular issue area.

C. Example of domestic "regime": drunk driving

1. Norms: social as well as legal

2. Rules: legal

3. Organizations and actors: networks of friends, MADD, general social pressure, explicit legal authorities

4. Monitoring and enforcement: authorized and non-authorized

D. Example of international "regime": human rights

1. Norms: what can and can’t do to citizens of your country

2. Rules: treaties and conventions

3. Organizations and actors: treaty secretariats, human rights organizations, individuals

4. Monitoring and enforcement: through public perceptions, some diplomatic pressure, some economic pressure

E. Realist view

1. Regimes have no influence. Behaviors only reflect short-run self-interest. Power and interests cause behaviors and cause structure of regimes:

a) E.g., membership in UN Security Council and decisions reflect power and interests.

b) UN Security Council resolutions on Israel have no influence

      /------------------> Outcomes
     /                       
P & I 
     \                       
      \ ------------------> Regimes

F. Regime theory view

1. Regimes/institutions matter. Outcomes can reflect long-run self-interest.

a) First, what are the causes of regime formation? Second, what are the effects of regimes?

      /------------------> Outcomes
     /                        ^
P & I             but ALSO    |
     \                        |
      \ ------------------> Regimes

b) Regimes as intervening variables: regimes lead to outcomes that are different than power and interests would otherwise dictate.

c) Regimes do not lead actors to do things against their interests!!

(1) Evidence of regime influence is not in violating their interests generally

(2) Rather evidence of regime influence lies in engaging in behaviors that are contrary to their SHORT-RUN interests

(3) Over long term, regimes lead states to view their interests differently, including long-term and interdependent concerns in their rational calculus, not just short-term and independent concerns.

G. Constructivist view

1. General norms, ideas, and mental constructs influence how states behave and even what constitutes a state and state behavior

              /------------------------------------v
             /            /------------------> Outcomes
 Norms, Ideas \          /                        ^
      &        ---->P & I             but ALSO    |
   Knowledge  /          \                        |
             \            \ ------------------> Regimes
              \------------------------------------^

2. What is considered to be "power," how states define their interests, what regimes states create and what outcomes occur are all influenced by what norms and ideas and understandings the people who make up states have

III. Two key questions posed by regimes

A. Why, how, and under what conditions do states decide to form, and succeed in forming, regimes? I.e., what factors determine when states create regimes?

B. Why, how, and under what conditions do the regimes states form lead to state (and nonstate) behaviors different than we would have observed otherwise?

C. These will be the two main questions we will address in the course and you will address one or the other in light of a particular case in your final paper

IV. Questions (to be answered during class in groups of 4-5 students per treaty): For the treaty you are looking at, answer the following questions

A. Why did countries want to negotiate a treaty on this topic? What interests drove them to sign it?

B. Would you expect powerful or weak states to have been the major countries supporting this treaty?

C. What are the major requirements of the treaty?

D. What evidence would you collect to evaluate if this treaty was effective at accomplishing its goals?

E. Would you expect it to have been effective and, if so, would you expect its effectiveness to vary over time or across different countries?

V. How do regimes form? Necessity is not the mother of invention, so how can they arise?

A. Problems regimes arise to resolve

1. General source of regime: one or more states see status quo as suboptimal and believe that contingent behavior coordinated with other states will lead them better off

2. At least three basic types of problems regimes arise to respond to:

a) Coordination

b) Collaboration:

c) Asymmetric externalities

B. Hegemonic provision: powerful states can help states overcome the collective action problem, since they receive enough benefits to make it worthwhile to provide the regime

1. Benevolent variant

2. Malevolent variant

C. Collective action – despite difficulty can work sometime

D. Political and normative entrepreneurs

1. Suggest a regime that no one expects to work at first

2. Gains power over time

E. Organic development from tacit or informal regimes

1. Law of the sea and 6 then 12 mile territorial seas based on length of canon shots

VI. What do regimes do? Functions of regimes: because regimes provide means of doing these things better than could accomplish independently, states willing to invest in them.

A. Generally, attempt to make it more likely that others behave as you desire and less likely that they don’t.

1. Increase costs of noncompliance

2. Increase benefits of compliance

3. Clarify what is expected.

B. Manage complexity: reduce decisions to be made, e.g., tariff levels, environmental legislation

C. Increase reciprocity: specific (arms control, tariff levels) and diffuse (human rights)

1. Increase iteration: single behavior seen as part of larger game, e.g., political dissidents

2. Formalize linkages: financial mechanisms in ozone treaty

3. Reciprocity through operation of norms

D. Reduce transaction costs: easier to negotiate single multilateral trade or environment treaty, rather than multitude of bilateral ones. One long agreement within single forum (e.g., oil pollution regulation) rather than string of separate agreements.. GATT/WTO is perfect example

E. Changes legitimacy of actions: need to justify certain actions in different ways

F. Improve information: joint information has more credibility, can’t collect information individually. Reduces misperception and miscommunication

G. Establish normative expectations and increase costs of certain rhetorical strategies relative to others

VII. Why do regimes succeed? Sources of regime success

A. How do we define success? Different types of regimes to accomplish different goals

1. Regulatory: establish set rules and induce compliance. Oil pollution

2. Programmatic: establish ongoing programs for things that don’t exist otherwise. International Monetary Fund and World Bank.

3. Procedural: ongoing process for making complex and interdependent decisions. Scientific research regimes. International whaling commission or fisheries treaty

B. Defining effectiveness: different definitions

1. Variety of definitions for any regime – what would it mean in a given regime?

a) What’s the proper definition of success of NAFTA?

2. Behavior-changing: compliance with rules, but can be broader.

3. Problem-solving: have you resolved problem that motivated creation of regime?

a) Behavior change not always sufficient. Too late, too little, too hard problem.

b) Can’t solve some problems. Can only manage them.

4. Goal achievement vs. Counterfactual definition of effectiveness

a) Did regime lead to achievement of goals?

b) Did regime lead to outcomes that were different than would have been otherwise?

c) Glass is half empty, Glass is half full: often regimes fail at goal achievement effectiveness but succeed at counterfactual effectiveness. E.g., whaling, endangered species, tariffs (not yet zero)

VIII. Summary

A. What are regimes?

B. Why do they form?

C. What they do?

D. When do they succeed?

 

This page created by:
Ronald Mitchell - rmitchel@uoregon.edu
Department of Political Science - http://www.uoregon.edu/~rmitchel
University of Oregon, Eugene, OR 97403-1284
Tel: 541-346-4880 - Fax: 541-346-4860
©Ronald Mitchell, 2002