PR 1450 Introduction to Globalization - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 21
About This Presentation
Title:

PR 1450 Introduction to Globalization

Description:

Held et al argue for trans-national governance to ensure that the democratic ... which begins to resemble the cosmopolitan model is the European Union' ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:111
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 22
Provided by: crum
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: PR 1450 Introduction to Globalization


1
PR 1450Introduction to Globalization
  • Lecture 9
  • Globalization and democracy
  • Chris Rumford

2
  • Which country is the most democratic in the
    world?
  • Answer Sweden

3
  • Which country is the least democratic?
  • Answer North Korea
  • Source EIUs index of democracy
  • www.economist.com/media/pdf/DEMOCRACY_INDEX_2007_
    v3.pdf

4
  • This is according to the Economist Intelligence
    Unit
  • Other highly democratic counties include
  • Iceland
  • Netherlands
  • Norway
  • Denmark
  • Countries are measured according to the
    following criteria
  • electoral process
  • functioning of government
  • political participation
  • political culture
  • civil liberties

5
  • Britain and the USA did not score as highly
  • Britain was ranked 23rd and the USA 17th
  • In both countries there was a marked decline in
    civil liberties, and a lack of political
    participation
  • The war on terror has been responsible for the
    curtailment of some freedoms

6
Democracy and globalization
  • Is globalization a threat to democracy?
  • On the one hand, globalization may mean that
    democratically elected governments no longer have
    total control over their own affairs
  • On the other, globalization has seen the
    world-wide spread of the democratic nation-state
  • Since the end of the communism democracy has
    become the universally acceptable form of
    government

7
Big questions
  • The relationship between globalization and
    democracy provokes some important questions
  • Under conditions of globalization is democracy
    tied to the nation-state?
  • Or can democracy be trans-national or global?

8
Big issues
  • Democracy now enjoys universal support
    politicians, leaders and citizens in all parts of
    the world profess respect for democracy
  • But globalization makes democracy difficult to
    realize
  • calling into question its natural grounding in
    the nation-state
  • can we imagine non-national sources of democracy?

9
Globalization as a threat
  • Benjamin Barber (2001) says that we have
    globalized the marketplace but not democracy
  • As a result we have a highly organized system
    of global capital but an anarchic global
    political climate (p.301)
  • We are destroying the national institutions,
    including the nation-state itself, which have
    been the seedbed for democratic institutions (P.
    301-2)

10
Internationalization of democracy
  • The League of Nations (1919) wanted to protect
    minority rights within nation-states and saw
    sovereignty as less important than new
    international norms as the basis for legitimate
    government (Hirst, 2001 256)
  • In the post-WWII period the United Nations has
    promoted the idea of human rights that people
    have rights independently of those granted to
    them (or not) by their nation-state
  • The UNs Universal Declaration of Human Rights
    dates from 1948 www.un.org/Overview/rights.html

11
David Held and cosmopolitan democracy
  • Democracy is not always threatened by
    globalization
  • Held et al argue for trans-national governance
    to ensure that the democratic state will be the
    global norm
  • It is a conception of democracy which recognises
    the continuing significance of the nation-state
    while arguing for a layer of governance to limit
    national sovereignty (Held, 1998)

12
  • The affairs of nation-states are interrelated
    and many contemporary issues require cooperative
    responses (pollution, diminishing resources,
    terrorist threats, migration)
  • Cosmopolitan democracy looks to the creation
    of a democratic community which both involves and
    cuts across democratic states (Archibugi and
    Held, 1995)

13
Daniele Archibugi on cosmopolitan democracy
  • cosmopolitan democracy aims at a parallel
    development of democracy both within and among
    states (Archibugi and Held, 1995)
  • Read Daniele Archibugis article on
    Cosmopolitan democracy at
  • http//newleftreview.org/?pagearticleview2261

14
Read an interview with David Held
  • Globalization, cosmopolitanism and democracy
  • www.polity.co.uk/global/globalization-cosmopolita
    nism-and-democracy.asp

15
Global democracy
  • Cosmopolitan democracy looks towards a global
    institutional framework which works with existing
    system of nation-states
  • But reserves the right for cosmopolitan
    institutions to intervene in cases where
  • peoples are being oppressed
  • actions of states have transnational consequences
    (migration)
  • global initiatives are required (transnational
    crime, epidemics)

16
The role of citizens
  • Cosmopolitan democracy is possible because
    citizens have been empowered (by UN) and through
    INGOs
  • Human rights give citizens rights independent of
    membership of nation-state
  • human rights have posited and sustained the
    duties of individuals to a legal order beyond
    that of nation-states (Goldblatt, 1997)

17
Is the world ready for cosmopolitan democracy?
  • Archibugi (1998) says that two important things
    are lacking
  • existing forms of global governance lack
    sufficient legal competence
  • agencies of existing global governance are not
    necessarily guided by principles of democracy
  • However, there is one very good example of
    actually existing cosmopolitan democracy

18
Real cosmopolitan democracy?
  • the first international organization which
    begins to resemble the cosmopolitan model is the
    European Union
  • (Archibugi, 1998)

19
Iraq and cosmopolitan democracy
  • The USA and Britain have tried to bring about
    democracy in post-Saddam Iraq, and the rudiments
    of parliamentary democracy now exist
  • Archibugi (1998) is sceptical about the
    possibility of genuine democracy developing
    under these conditions
  • Democracy will only take hold when society is
    willing and able to embrace democratic principles
  • The development of democracy is endogenous not
    exogenous

20
Concluding comments
  • It is not necessarily the case that
    globalization is a threat to democracy
  • Globalization has also helped spread democracy
    round the world
  • It is possible that in the future globalization
    will also provide the means and the incentive to
    create a truly democratic world order

21
References
  • Archibugi, D. and Held, D. 1995 Editors
    introduction in D. Archibugi and D. Held (eds)
    Cosmopolitan Democracy An Agenda for a New World
    Order (Polity Press)
  • Barber, B. 2001 Challenges to democracy in an
    age of globalization in R. Axtmann (ed)
    Balancing Democracy (Continuum)
  • Goldblatt, D. 1997 At the limits of political
    possibility the cosmopolitan democractic
    project New Left Review 225
  • Held, D. 1998 Democracy and globalization in
    D. Archibugi, D. Held, and M. Kohler (eds)
    Re-Imagining Political Community (Polity Press)
  • Hirst, P. 2001 Between the local and the
    global democracy in C21st in R. Axtmann (ed)
    Balancing Democracy (Continuum)
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com