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Neo-Liberal Institutionalism

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Neo-Liberal Institutionalism. Accepts the basic assumptions ... Neo-liberal have ignored the problem of relative gains that would inhibit or shape cooperation ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Neo-Liberal Institutionalism


1
Neo-Liberal Institutionalism
2
The Prisoners Dilemma
Player 1
Player 2
3
Neo-Liberal Institutionalism
  • Accepts the basic assumptions of realism
  • States main actors
  • States unitary, rational actors
  • Goals states follow their interests
  • -but have multiple interests in addition to
    security and power
  • -power not always fungible
  • System anarchical, no central authority

4
Central Question
  • What Facilitates Cooperation in an Anarchical
    System?

5
Iteration
  • Robert Axelrod The Evolution of Cooperation
    (1984)
  • If you play the PD repeatedly the
    winning/dominant strategy is TIT FOR TAT, not
    DEFECT
  • Implications
  • Cooperation can get started even in a world of
    unconditional defection
  • Iteration, long term horizons important
  • Strategy of reciprocity can thrive where many
    other strategies of cooperation fail
  • Once established cooperation based on reciprocity
    can protect itself from invasion of other
    strategies

6
Conditions for Cooperation
  • Hegemonic Interest (Realism and Institutionalism)
  • Repeated interaction
  • Repeated PD dominant strategy is Tit-for-Tat
    NOT Defect
  • No immediate threat to state survival
  • Smaller number of actors
  • Type of cooperation dilemma

7
Cooperation dilemmas
  • PD problems of cheating, credible commitment
  • Battle of the Sexes coordination problems

Cooperate Defect
Cooperate 33 41
Defect 14 22
Game Opera
Game 12 00
Opera 00 21
8
International Regimes
  • implicit or explicit principles, norms, rules,
    and decision making procedures around which
    actors expectations converge in a given area of
    international relations.
  • Stephen Krasner (1983) International Regimes,
    p.2.
  • Example GATT/WTO

9
Institutions Facilitate Cooperation
  • Institutionalize iteration
  • Provide information
  • Credible commitments
  • Issue linkage
  • Reduce transaction costs
  • make agreements and monitoring less costly to
    administer
  • Resolve distribution conflicts

10
Growth in the Number of International
RegimesEnvironmental Treaties 1968-1998
11
Realist Critique
  • Institutions reflect the distribution of power
    and interests and therefore are irrelevant
  • Neo-liberal have ignored the problem of relative
    gains that would inhibit or shape cooperation
  • Little empirical evidence that institutions
    matter

12
Impact of Ozone Regime
13
Impact of Whaling Regime?
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