The Networked Diplomacy of Informal International Institutions

IF 0.8 3区 社会学 Q3 INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
Michael W. Manulak
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

The rise of informal international institutions has been one of the most significant developments in institutional design and choice since the 1990s. While states have increasingly opted for informal governance, little is known about the character of intergovernmental relations in these settings. Scholars, for instance, debate whether great powers dominate such institutions, or whether influence can be exercised by a wider array of players. Drawing from the author’s experience as a government representative within the Proliferation Security Initiative, a leading informal institution, this article provides a theory-driven analysis of intergovernmental interactions within such bodies. It demonstrates that diplomacy within informal institutions tends to assume a decentralized, networked quality that favors actors positioned at the center of intergovernmental networks. In doing so, the article highlights clear means through which central network positions confer influence. The article also sheds new light on the Proliferation Security Initiative and on counterproliferation cooperation more generally.
非正式国际机构的网络化外交
非正式国际制度的兴起是20世纪90年代以来在制度设计和制度选择方面最重要的发展之一。虽然各国越来越多地选择非正式治理,但人们对这种情况下政府间关系的特点知之甚少。例如,学者们就大国是否主宰这些机构,或者更广泛的参与者是否可以施加影响展开辩论。根据作者在主要非正式机构“防扩散安全倡议”(Proliferation Security Initiative)担任政府代表的经历,本文对此类机构内的政府间互动进行了理论驱动的分析。它表明,非正式机构内的外交往往具有分散、网络化的性质,有利于处于政府间网络中心的行动者。在这样做的过程中,文章强调了中心网络位置赋予影响力的明确手段。这篇文章还对防扩散安全倡议和更广泛的反扩散合作提供了新的认识。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Global Governance
Global Governance INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS-
CiteScore
2.50
自引率
8.30%
发文量
22
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