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Nonstate Actors

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maintain international peace and security ... Examples include Greenpeace & Amnesty International. Ethnopolitical Movements. nonstate nations ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Nonstate Actors


1
Nonstate Actors
  • IGOs (intergovernmental organizations) members
    are states have authority from state governments
    to make decisions regarding particular problems.
  • international
  • regional
  • NGOs (nongovernmental organizations) members are
    private individuals or groups who focus on
    specific aspects of the global agenda.
  • Movements
  • MNCs
  • Issue-advocacy groups

2
Figure 6.1
3
Table 6.1
4
The United Nations
  • founded in 1945 as a successor to the League of
    Nations
  • According to Article 1 of the UN Charter, its
    objectives are
  • maintain international peace and security
  • Develop friendly relations among nations based on
    respect for the principle of equal rights and
    self-determination of peoples
  • Achieve international cooperation in solving
    international problems of economic, social,
    cultural or humanitarian character and in
    promoting and encouraging respect for human
    rights and for fundamental freedoms for all
  • Function as a center for harmonizing the actions
    of nations in the attainment of these common ends

5
Figure 6.2
6
United Nations Structure
  • General Assembly
  • Security Council
  • Economic and Social Council
  • Trusteeship Council
  • International Court of Justice
  • Secretariat
  • General Assembly dominated by the Global South
  • controversy over size and nature of UN budget
  • controversy over dues amounts
  • controversy over inefficiency of UN bureaucracies

7
World Trade Organization
International Monetary Fund
World Bank
  • successor to GATT
  • promotes stable international economic order and
    smooth international trade
  • formal decision-making powers over trade disputes
  • decreases state sovereignty
  • dominated by major powers
  • created at 1944 Bretton Woods conference
  • private and governmental loans to developing
    countries
  • upholds international economic system
  • promotes economic/political development
  • Created in 1944 at the Bretton Woods Conference
  • stabilizes international monetary exchange rates
  • lender of last resort
  • dominated by wealthier states weighted voting
  • tension with Global South

8
The European Union
  • began with European Coal and Steel Community in
    1951
  • single economy with a common currency
  • most Western European states eventually most
    Eastern European states also
  • contrast with pre-EU Europe war and economic
    competition
  • Council of Ministers
  • final authority over decisions
  • European Commission
  • propose laws, execute Council decisions
  • European Parliament
  • elected in member states, increasing power
  • Court of Justice
  • interprets EU law

9
Other Regional IGOs
  • NATO North Atlantic Treaty Organization
  • APEC Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation
  • ASEAN Association of Southeast Asian Nations
  • CARICOM Caribbean Community and Common Market
  • CAEU Council of Arab Economic Unity
  • OIC Organization of the Islamic Conference
  • CARICOM Caribbean Community
  • ECOWAS Economic community of West African States
  • LAIA Latin American Integration Association
  • SAARC South Asian Association for Regional
    Cooperation
  • APEC Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation forum
  • SADC Southern African Development Community

10
Nongovernmental Organizations
  • private interest groups
  • allow individuals to participate in global
    affairs
  • 30,000 total
  • often work with IGOs such as the UN
  • challenge state sovereignty
  • Issue-advocacy groups use technical expertise,
    organizational flexibility, grassroots
    connections to create international regimes that
    establish complex networks
  • Examples include Greenpeace Amnesty
    International

11
Ethnopolitical Movements
Religious Movements
  • religion as a source of identity
  • actions can contradict a religions high ideals
  • militant religious political movements
  • irredentism
  • secession
  • incite migration
  • diaspora communities
  • potential terrorism
  • nonstate nations
  • ethnopolitical groups common nationality,
    language, cultural tradition, kinship ties
  • form cultural domains that can cross national
    borders
  • Some minorities, such as the Kurds in Turkey,
    Iraq, and Iran, spill across several countries.

12
Map 6.2
13
Multinational Corporations
  • primary agents of globalization of production
  • strategic corporate alliances
  • virtual corporations
  • foreign direct investment purchase of stock,
    property, or assets in another country
  • difficult for states to control
  • transnational banks

14
Discussion
  • In what ways do IGOs and NGOs affect the
    structure of the international system?
  • How do IGOs and NGOs reduce state sovereignty?
  • In what ways and in which issue areas could NGOs
    conceivably be more effective than IGOs?
  • How might the UN become a more powerful and more
    effective institution?
  • In what ways do the WTO, World Bank, and IMF
    affect the Global South?
  • Could the EU replace the United States as the
    worlds hegemon?
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