Toward an Institutional Theory of Sovereignty

IF 4.9 1区 社会学 Q1 Social Sciences
Derek P. Jinks, Ryan Goodman
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引用次数: 34

Abstract

Scholarship in international law is preoccupied with the structural tension between state sovereignty and international obligation. This preoccupation presupposes that states incur sovereignty costs when entering binding international commitments. In our view, this presupposition requires substantial qualification. In this Article, we propose a sociological model of sovereignty that views states as organizational entities embedded in and reflecting a wider social environment. Such an approach, we maintain, illuminates the ways in which constraints empower actors (including states). Our claim is not simply that international law helps overcome collective action problems by facilitating cooperation and coordination. Rather, we maintain that the constitutive features of the contemporary nation-state - including its status as a legitimate, sovereign actor - derive from worldwide models constructed and propagated through global cultural and associational processes. In issue areas ranging from public education to environmental protection to the laws of war, these models: define and legitimate purposes of state action; and shape the organizational structure and policy choices of states. These processes (1) define the organizational form of the modern state; (2) delimit the legitimate purposes of the state; and (3) constitute states as the principal legitimate actors in the world polity. The institutionalization of world models also helps explain many characteristics of the contemporary state system, such as striking similarity in purposes and organizational structure despite diversity in local resources and cultural traditions, and structural decoupling between functional task demands and persistent state initiatives. We suggest that the insights generated by this approach recast debates about the utility and prospects of reconciling state sovereignty and international law.
论主权的制度理论
国际法学者关注的是国家主权和国际义务之间的结构性紧张关系。这种关注的前提是,各国在作出具有约束力的国际承诺时要付出主权代价。我们认为,这一假设需要大量的限制条件。在本文中,我们提出了一个主权的社会学模型,将国家视为嵌入并反映更广泛社会环境的组织实体。我们认为,这种方法阐明了约束赋予参与者(包括国家)权力的方式。我们的主张不仅仅是国际法通过促进合作与协调帮助克服集体行动问题。相反,我们认为,当代民族国家的构成特征——包括其作为一个合法的、主权行动者的地位——源于通过全球文化和联合过程构建和传播的世界模式。在从公共教育到环境保护再到战争法等问题领域,这些模式:定义和合法化国家行动的目的;塑造国家的组织结构和政策选择。这些过程(1)定义了现代国家的组织形式;(二)划定国家的合法目的;(3)使国家成为世界政治中主要的合法行为者。世界模式的制度化也有助于解释当代国家体系的许多特征,例如,尽管地方资源和文化传统存在差异,但目的和组织结构却惊人地相似,功能性任务需求与持续的国家倡议之间存在结构性脱钩。我们认为,这种方法产生的见解重新引发了关于协调国家主权和国际法的效用和前景的辩论。
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
CiteScore
4.80
自引率
2.00%
发文量
0
期刊介绍: Information not localized
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