Emergency Powers of International Organizations e-bog
802,25 DKK
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Emergency Powers of International Organizations explores emergency politics of international organizations (IOs). It studies cases in which, based on justifications of exceptional necessity, IOs expand their authority, increase executive discretion, and interfere with the rights of their rule-addressees. This 'IO exceptionalism' is observable in crisis responses of a diverse set of institutions...
E-bog
802,25 DKK
Forlag
OUP Oxford
Udgivet
21 november 2019
Længde
272 sider
Genrer
Political science and theory
Sprog
English
Format
pdf
Beskyttelse
LCP
ISBN
9780192569349
Emergency Powers of International Organizations explores emergency politics of international organizations (IOs). It studies cases in which, based on justifications of exceptional necessity, IOs expand their authority, increase executive discretion, and interfere with the rights of their rule-addressees. This 'IO exceptionalism' is observable in crisis responses of a diverse set of institutions including the United Nations Security Council, the EuropeanUnion, and the World Health Organization. Through six in-depth case studies, the book analyzes the institutional dynamics unfolding in the wake of the assumption of emergency powers by IOs. Sometimes, the exceptional competencies become normalized in the IOs' authority structures (the 'ratchet effect"e;). In other cases, IO emergency powers provoke a backlash that eventually reverses or contains the expansions of authority (the "e;rollback effect"e;). To explain these variable outcomes, this book draws on sociological institutionalism todevelop a proportionality theory of IO emergency powers. It contends that ratchets and rollbacks are a function of actors' ability to justify or contest emergency powers as (dis)proportionate. The claim that the distribution of rhetorical power is decisive for the institutional outcome is testedagainst alternative rational institutionalist explanations that focus on institutional design and the distribution of institutional power among states. The proportionality theory holds across the cases studied in this book and clearly outcompetes the alternative accounts. Against the background of the empirical analysis, the book moreover provides a critical normative reflection on the (anti) constitutional effects of IO exceptionalism and highlights a potential connection between authoritariantraits in global governance and the system's current legitimacy crisis.