负面机构权力如何缓和竞争:解释不满大国对国际机构的策略

Benjamin Daßler, Tim Heinkelmann-Wild, Andreas Kruck
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引用次数: 0

摘要

国际机构越来越多地受到来自成员国的攻击,它们的竞争方式各不相同,有时甚至不断升级。与此同时,一段时间以来,国家的消极制度权力,即它们避免国际机构出现不希望出现的结果的机会,一直在下降。本文认为,不满国家的消极制度权力禀赋是理解其不同争夺模式的关键:不满国家在某一制度中的消极制度权力越有限(越广泛),它们就会选择越激进(越温和)的制度争夺模式。我们认为,在其他条件相同的情况下,国家(1) 在体制内防止不良结果的内部选择,以及(2) 通过离开体制逃避不良结果的外部选择,共同决定了它们是选择发声、颠覆、退出还是倒退的策略来与不满的体制抗争。我们通过特朗普政府对世界银行、世界贸易组织、《巴黎协定》和《伊朗核协议》提出异议的四个详细案例研究,评估了我们的消极制度权力理论(NIPT)的合理性。我们还评估了其他八个不满大国争夺不同国际机构的案例,以此证明我们的论点具有普遍性。这 12 个案例研究表明,消极力量对国家选择制度竞争模式至关重要。我们的研究结果表明,未来国际机构是否会越来越多地受到来自内部和外部的挑战,可能会受到赋予(或剥夺)国家消极制度权力的改革的影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

How negative institutional power moderates contestation: Explaining dissatisfied powers’ strategies towards international institutions

How negative institutional power moderates contestation: Explaining dissatisfied powers’ strategies towards international institutions

International institutions are increasingly under attack from their member states, who embark on varying and sometimes escalating modes of contestation. At the same time, states’ negative institutional power, i.e. their opportunities to avoid undesired outcomes in international institutions, has been declining for some time. This paper claims that dissatisfied states’ negative institutional power endowments are key to understanding their varying contestation modes: the more limited (extensive) the negative institutional power of dissatisfied states in an institution, the more radical (moderate) modes of institutional contestation they will choose. We argue that, all else equal, states’ (1) inside options to prevent undesired outcomes within the institution and (2) their outside options to evade undesired outcomes by leaving the institution jointly condition whether they choose a strategy of voice, subversion, exit, or rollback to contest the dissatisfying institution. We assess the plausibility of our Negative Institutional Power Theory (NIPT) by means of four detailed case studies of the Trump Administration’s contestation of the World Bank, the World Trade Organization, the Paris Agreement, and the Iran Nuclear Deal. We demonstrate the generalizability of our arguments by assessing our claims across eight additional instances of other dissatisfied powers’ contesting different international institutions. The twelve case studies demonstrate that negative power matters for states’ choice of institutional contestation modes. Our findings suggest that whether, in the future, international institutions will be increasingly challenged from within and outside, can be influenced by reforms that grant (or deny) states negative institutional power.

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