Examining the Non-State Role in International Governance
This dissertation focuses on the role of non-state actors in international lawmaking and institutions. People increasingly participate in international governance through a range of organizations and institutions yet their access remains contested and tentative; often described as an accommodation b...
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ndltd-columbia.edu-oai-academiccommons.columbia.edu-10.7916-D8B282HD2019-05-09T15:13:58ZExamining the Non-State Role in International GovernanceDannenmaier, Eric2013ThesesLawInternational lawInternational relationsThis dissertation focuses on the role of non-state actors in international lawmaking and institutions. People increasingly participate in international governance through a range of organizations and institutions yet their access remains contested and tentative; often described as an accommodation but not a right. Citizens may be sovereign at home, but they lack standing at international law. I examined multiple cases where participation has become part of the machinery of international lawmaking - from regional agreements in Europe and the Americas to global accords addressing climate change. Each case shows the assertion of popular will within a governance framework constructed and managed by states. My findings thus reveal a paradigm of state architects and executors that accommodates non-state actors as collaborators and animators. This paradigm challenges the idea that state sovereignty is absolute and impervious without rejecting state dominion outright. Within a broader scholarly discourse that often presents a binary choice - either states are sovereign (leaving people with no real place in international lawmaking) or people are sovereign (leaving the international system assailable for its conspicuous democracy deficit) - my findings suggest a hybrid approach that reinforces the authority of states while making meaningful space for non-state actors. International governance thus gains some of the value of democratic, participatory models in a way that enhances rather than disrupts the existing international legal system.Englishhttps://doi.org/10.7916/D8B282HD |
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English |
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Law International law International relations |
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Law International law International relations Dannenmaier, Eric Examining the Non-State Role in International Governance |
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This dissertation focuses on the role of non-state actors in international lawmaking and institutions. People increasingly participate in international governance through a range of organizations and institutions yet their access remains contested and tentative; often described as an accommodation but not a right. Citizens may be sovereign at home, but they lack standing at international law. I examined multiple cases where participation has become part of the machinery of international lawmaking - from regional agreements in Europe and the Americas to global accords addressing climate change. Each case shows the assertion of popular will within a governance framework constructed and managed by states. My findings thus reveal a paradigm of state architects and executors that accommodates non-state actors as collaborators and animators. This paradigm challenges the idea that state sovereignty is absolute and impervious without rejecting state dominion outright. Within a broader scholarly discourse that often presents a binary choice - either states are sovereign (leaving people with no real place in international lawmaking) or people are sovereign (leaving the international system assailable for its conspicuous democracy deficit) - my findings suggest a hybrid approach that reinforces the authority of states while making meaningful space for non-state actors. International governance thus gains some of the value of democratic, participatory models in a way that enhances rather than disrupts the existing international legal system. |
author |
Dannenmaier, Eric |
author_facet |
Dannenmaier, Eric |
author_sort |
Dannenmaier, Eric |
title |
Examining the Non-State Role in International Governance |
title_short |
Examining the Non-State Role in International Governance |
title_full |
Examining the Non-State Role in International Governance |
title_fullStr |
Examining the Non-State Role in International Governance |
title_full_unstemmed |
Examining the Non-State Role in International Governance |
title_sort |
examining the non-state role in international governance |
publishDate |
2013 |
url |
https://doi.org/10.7916/D8B282HD |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT dannenmaiereric examiningthenonstateroleininternationalgovernance |
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