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DUNCAN SNIDAL
Departmentof Political Science
Universityof Chicago
Statesuseformalinternational
andmore
(IOs)tomanageboththeireverydayinteractions
organizations
international
conflicts.Yet,contemporary
international
dramatic
theorydoesnotexplain
episodes,including
thequestionof whystatesuseformalorganizations
theexistenceorformof IOs.Thisarticleaddresses
by
thatenablethemto performthosefunctions.
the functionsIOsperformandtheproperties
investigating
thatseesIOsas enablingstatesto achievetheirends,the
witha rational-institutionalist
perspective
Starting
authorsexaminepoweranddistributive
questionsandtheroleof IOsin creatingnormsandunderstanding.
of formalorganizations,
areidentifiedas the key properties
andtheir
andindependence
Centralization
witha widearrayof examples.IOsas community
furtherallow
is illustrated
representatives
importance
valuesandenforceinternational
commitments.
statesto createandimplement
community
? When the United States decided to reverse the Iraqiinvasion of Kuwait, it did not act
unilaterally (although it often does). It turned to the United Nations (UN) Security
Council.
e Whenthe SecurityCouncilsoughtto learnthe extentof chemical,biological, andnuclear
armsin Iraq,it did not rely on U.S. forces. It dispatchedinspectorsfromthe International
Atomic EnergyAgency (IAEA).
* When the internationalcommunity sought to maintainthe suspension of combat in
Bosnia, it did not rely only on nationalefforts. It sent in peacekeepingunits under the
aegis of the UN and NorthAtlanticTreatyOrganization(NATO).
? When statesliberalizedtradein servicesandstrengthenedintellectualpropertyprotection
in the UruguayRound,they were not contentto draftrules.They createdthe WorldTrade
Organization(WTO) and a highly institutionalizeddisputesettlementmechanism.
Formal international organizations (IOs) are prominent (if not always successful)
participants in many critical episodes in international politics. Examples in addition
comments
fromLeaBrilmayer,
AUTHORS'
NOTE:Wearegrateful
forvaluable
Judith
Charles
Goldstein,
andseminar
attheUniversity
Anne-Marie
JamesMorrow,
Slaughter,
participants
Lipson,AndrewMoravcsik,
LawSchool,New YorkUniversity
Law School,Princeton
at Berkeley,Harvard
of California
University
andtheProgram
on International
andSecurity(PIPES)at theUniversity
of
Politics,Economics
University,
Forfinancial
AbbottthankstheRussellBakerFund,theCharles
C.Linthicum
Fund,andthe
Chicago.
support,
Summer
Research
Grantprogram.
Northwestern
JOURNALOF CONFLICTRESOLUTION,Vol. 42 No. 1, February1998 3-32
? 1998 Sage Publications,Inc.
JOURNALOF CONFLICTRESOLUTION
to those above include the following: Security Council sanctions on Libya, IAEA
inspectorsin NorthKorea,UN peacekeepersin the MiddleEast, andso forth.The UN
secretary-general's1992 Agenda for Peace sets out an even broaderrange of current
and proposedUN functions in situationsof internationalconflict: fact finding, early
warning, and preventive deployment;mediation, adjudication,and other forms of
disputeresolution;peacekeeping;sanctionsandmilitaryforce;impartialhumanitarian
assistance;and postconflictrebuilding.But IO influence is not confined to dramatic
interventionslike these. On an ongoing basis, formalorganizationshelp managemany
significant areas of interstaterelations, from global health policy (the WHO) to
Europeansecurity(OSCE and NATO)to internationalmonetarypolicy (IMF). What
is more,participationin such organizationsappearsto reducethe likelihood of violent
conflict among memberstates (Russett,Oneal, and Davis in press).
IOs range from simple entities like the APEC secretariat,with an initial budget of
$2 million, to formidableorganizationslike the EuropeanUnion (EU)1and the World
Bank, which has thousandsof employees and multipleaffiliates and lends billions of
dollars each year. Specialized agencies like the ILO, ICAO, and FAO play key roles
in technical issue areas.New organizationslike UNEP, the EBRD, and the International Tribunalfor the formerYugoslaviaareregularlycreated.OlderIOs like NATO
and the Security Council are rethought and sometimes restructuredto meet new
circumstances.2As the examples illustrate,moreover,even the most powerful states
often act throughIOs. In short,"itis impossibleto imaginecontemporaryinternational
life" withoutformalorganizations(Schermersand Blokker 1995, 3).
Why do states so frequentlyuse IOs as vehicles of cooperation?What attributes
accountfor theiruse, and how do these characteristicsset formalorganizationsapart
from alternativearrangements,such as decentralizedcooperation,informalconsultation, and treaty rules? Surprisingly,contemporaryinternationalscholarshiphas no
clear theoreticalanswersto such questionsand thus offers limited practicaladvice to
policy makers.
We answerthese questionsby identifyingthe functionalattributesof IOs across a
range of issue areas. Although we are concerned with the concrete structureand
operationsof particularorganizations,we also see IOs as complex phenomenathat
implicate several lines of internationalrelations(IR) theory.Fromthis vantagepoint,
we identify two functional characteristicsthat lead states, in appropriatecircumstances,to preferIOs to alternateformsof institutionalization.These arecentralization
and independence.
IOs allow for the centralizationof collective activitiesthrougha concreteandstable
organizationalstructureanda supportiveadministrativeapparatus.These increasethe
1. Althoughwe discuss certainof its operations,we deliberatelyde-emphasizethe EU because some
would regardit as an exceptionalcase of institutionalization.
2. A discussion of IOs is an exercise in acronyms.The ones not identifiedin the text, in order,are the
World Health Organization(WHO), Organizationfor Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE),
InternationalMonetary Fund (IMF), Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperationforum (APEC), International
LaborOrganization(ILO), InternationalCivil AviationOrganization(ICAO),Food and AgricultureOrganization(FAO),UnitedNationsEnvironmentProgram(UNEP), andEuropeanBankfor Reconstructionand
Development(EBRD).
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3. Keohane (1984) does discuss monitoring,but Glaser (1995) argues that regime theorists do not
explain why monitoringmust be done centrally.
JOURNALOF CONFLICTRESOLUTION
Realist theory finds both legal and regime scholarshipnaive in treating IOs as
serious political entities. Realists believe states would never cede to supranational
institutions the strong enforcementcapacities necessary to overcome international
anarchy.Consequently,IOs and similarinstitutionsare of little interest;they merely
reflect nationalinterestsandpoweranddo not constrainpowerfulstates(Mearsheimer
1995; Strange1983; for a more nuancedview, see Glaser 1995). We acceptthe realist
point that states arejealous of theirpower and deeply concernedwith the distributive
consequences of theirinteractions.Yet, realistsunderestimatethe utility of IOs, even
to the powerful.The United States, at the peak of its hegemony,sponsorednumerous
IOs, includingGATT,IMF,andNATO;these organizationshave provided"continuing
utility . . . as instruments ... for regime and rule creation" (Karns and Mingst 1990,
29). Even the Soviet Union, the very model of a modernrepressivehegemony, used
the Council for MutualEconomic Assistance to organizeeconomic relationswithin
the easternbloc. We arguethatpowerfulstates structuresuch organizationsto further
their own interestsbut must do so in a way thatinduces weaker states to participate.
This interplayis embeddedin 10 structureand operations.
Finally,KratochwilandRuggie (1986) arguethatonly constructivist(interpretivist)
theory-focusing on norms,beliefs, knowledge,and understandings-can satisfactorily explain formal organizations.We accept the insight that social constructionsare
fundamentalelements of internationalpolitics (Wendt1992, 1995; Barnett1993) and
agree that IOs are-in part-both reflections of and participantsin ongoing social
processes and prevailingideas (Finnemore1996; Kennedy 1987). But the role of IOs
is best understoodthrougha synthesis of rationalist(includingrealist) and constructivist approaches.States consciously use IOs both to reduce transactioncosts in the
narrowsense and,morebroadly,to createinformation,ideas, norms,andexpectations;
to carryout and encouragespecific activities;to legitimateor delegitimateparticular
ideas and practices; and to enhance their capacities and power. These functions
constituteIOs as agents,which, in turn,influencethe interests,intersubjectiveunderstandings,andenvironmentof states(McNeely 1995). Potentially,these roles give IOs
an influence well beyond their material power, which is trivial on conventional
measures. Indeed, IO activities may lead to unintendedconsequences for member
states, a fear often expressed by U.S. politicians. Yet, IO autonomyremains highly
constrainedby state interests,especially those of the powerful-a fact often demonstratedby U.S. politicians.
Although we adopt a predominantlyrationalisttheoreticalapproach,we are concernedwith highlightingthe importanceof formalIOs as empiricalphenomenarather
than with maintaininga particulartheoreticaldogma. None of the individual approaches mentionedadequatelyexplains why states use formal IOs; each holds key
insights. In identifyingformalIOs as an importantcategory of institutionalizationto
be explained,therefore,we proceedin a more interpretivemode, drawingon different
strandsof argumentationto highlight ways in which formal IOs function to manage
interstatecooperationand conflict.4
4. On the use of rationalchoice as an interpretivedevice, see Ferejohn(1991), Johnson(1991), and
Snidal (1985b).
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CENTRALIZATION
It is no great theoreticalinsight that an established organizationalstructureand
centralizedadministrativesupportcan rendercollective activitiesmoreefficient:even
studentsof internationalgovernanceare not contentto communicateby e-mail; they
formthe InternationalStudiesAssociationandthe InternationalLaw Association.This
simple insight goes farto explainthe proliferationof IOs in this centuryin a periodof
increasing issue complexity and a growing numberof states. The (inter)subjective
effects of centralizationare less apparent,thoughequally important.We considerthe
benefits of centralizationunder two headings-support for direct state interaction
(the principalfocus of regime theory)and operationalactivities (the traditionalfocus
of IO studies). Here, we emphasizeconcreteactivities in which governmentsremain
closely involved;the following section introducesbroaderfunctionsalso requiringIO
autonomy.
SUPPORT FOR STATEINTERACTIONS
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are structuredso that the most powerful memberscan block affirmativeactions but,
even if united,cannotapproveactions withoutsupportfrom smallerpowers.
Such considerationsoften lead to elaborateorganizationalstructures.The substantive workof many IOs takesplace in specializedcommitteesstaffedby theirsecretariats.The OECDuses morethan200 committeesandworkinggroups;the IMOprepares
treatiesin substantivegroupingslike the maritimesafety and marineenvironmental
protectioncommittees.Such committeesare often formallyopen to all members,but
specializationoccurs naturallybecause of differences in interest,expertise, and resources.Delegation can also be encouragedinstitutionally:in the thirdUN law of the
sea conference (UNCLOS III), the chairs of open-ended committees sometimes
scheduledmeetings in rooms capableof holding only 30 people!6
Organizationalstructureinfluencesthe evolution of interstatecooperationas conditions change. For example, several environmentalagreementswere facilitatedby
appointing UNEP as secretariatand the World Bank as financial administrator,
obviating the need for new institutions.These institutionallinks are often contested
because of their distributionalimplications.The advancedcountriesfought to locate
new intellectual propertyrules in the WTO (ratherthan in the World Intellectual
PropertyOrganization[WIPO])so they could enforcetheirrightsmoreeffectively. In
other cases, organizationalstructurescreate vested interests that impede change or
politicize issues, as in the United Nations Education,Scientific, and CulturalOrganization (UNESCO) during the 1970s. More generally,because IOs are designed for
stability,they may not adaptsmoothlyto changingpowerconditions,as the continuing
makeupof the SecurityCouncilattests.Yet,the gradualreductionof U.S. voting power
in the IMF, mandatedby its declining share of capitalcontributions,illustrateshow
organizationalstructurecan facilitatesuch adaptation.
Most IOs include a secretariator similar administrativeapparatus.In simple
consultative organizations,the secretariatneed only assist with the mechanics of
decentralizedinteraction.The 1985 ViennaOzone Conventionassignedthe following
functionsto its secretariat:"(a)To arrangefor andservicemeetings...; (b) To prepare
and transmitreportsbased upon informationreceived ... ; (d) To preparereportson
its activities .. .; (e) To ensurethe necessarycoordinationwith otherrelevantinternational bodies . . .; (f) To perform such other functions as may be determined"
("Vienna Convention" 1985, 1532). The secretariatfor the Convention on LongRange TransboundaryAir Pollution(LRTAP)performedsimilarfunctionswith only
five professionals.Levy (1993, 84) notes thatthe staff had "littletime to do anything
else but keep the meetingsrunningsmoothly."
Even such modest activities can strengtheninternationalcooperation.Here, we
draw on the analogy to the medieval law merchantand the correspondingtheoretical
literature(Milgrom,North,andWeingast1990;Calvert1995;Morrow1994). Informal
consultationsproducedsufficientinformationon the identityof untrustworthytraders
to supporta substantialvolume of trade.Yet, modestefforts by centraladministrators
at commercialfairs to collect and relay additionalinformationcreateda new equilibrium at a higherlevel of exchange.
6. Personalcommunicationfrom BernardOxman,memberof the U.S. delegation,21 May 1997.
12
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(Trachtman1996, 51-54).
Thereis anotheralternative:to createproceduresfor theelaborationof normswithin
an 1O.Decentralizedproceduresdo not addressthe problemsof transactioncosts and
opportunism.Even with coordinationissues-in which equilibriacan sometimes be
reachedwithoutcommunication-these problemscan stymie cooperationwhen there
are many actors, complex problems,and distributiveconflicts. The stable organizational structureof IOs addressesboth issues. Establishedproceduresfor elaborating
rules, standards,and specifications enhance cooperationeven when member states
retainthe power to rejector opt out-as they do even in 1Oswith relativelyadvanced
legislative procedures,like the ILO. Nonbindingrecommendationscan become de
facto coordinationequilibria,relied on by states and other internationalactors. This
gives IOs some power to affect internationalnormsand statebehaviorandpotentially
much greaterpower with the backingof key states.
As always, powerful statesexert disproportionateinfluence over normelaboration
and structurelegislative processes to ensure their influence. Here, too, however,
protectionfor weakerstates may be the price of theirparticipation,and the effective11. The analogy is imperfect. NATO's organizationdiffers from that of a firm. Nevertheless, team
analysis suggests why a formal 10 is valuable, whereas the standardpublic goods analogy reduces the
problemsimply to one of individual(under)provision.See Olson and Zeckhauser(1966).
16
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SUPPORT FOR DIRECT STATEINTERACTION
In the above examples, IOs facilitateinterstatecollaborationby pushing negotiations forward.This role could be played by, say, a dominantstate, but suspicions of
bias might impede cooperation;an independent10 may be more acceptablebecause
it is neutral.For many substantiveIO operations,however,it is the existence of a truly
independentthirdparty,not the absence of bias per se, that enables states to achieve
theirends.
18
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Laundering
Launderinghas a negativeconnotationfromits associationwith runningill-gotten
gains throughseemingly independentfinancialinstitutionsuntil they come out clean,
having lost their original characterand taint. Without necessarily adopting that
connotation,we use the termadvisedlybecausethe process at work in IOs is similar:
activities that might be unacceptablein their original state-to-stateform become
acceptable when run through an independent,or seemingly independent,IO. The
concept should be familiarto IR scholarswho are reluctantto accept CentralIntelligence Agency funds but eagerly acceptNationalScience Foundationgrantsoverseen
by independentacademicpanels.
Appropriatelyenough,theWorldBank,IMF,andotherIFIsprovideclearexamples.
States may prefer developmentassistancefrom an independentfinancial institution
over directaid from anotherstate, especially a formercolonial power or one seeking
political influence. IFI restrictionson nationalautonomy(e.g., on project design or
broadereconomic policies) may not carrythe same domesticpolitical implicationsof
dependenceand inferiorityas would conditionsimposed directlyby, say, the United
States or France.These considerationsmay make IFI conditionsa superiormeans of
promotingdomestic reforms.
IFIs equally serve a launderingfunctionfor donorstatesseeking to avoid domestic
and internationalcontroversies.The WorldBank's charterrequires,for example, that
developmentloansbe madewithoutregardforthe "politicalcharacter"of therecipient;
disregardof this factoris difficultwithinthe United States,wherefinancialassistance
budgets require congressional approval. The United States called on the IMF to
manage the 1980s debt crisis, keeping the issue less politicized and more technical.
Similarly,the Soviet Union launderedsubsidiesto subordinatestatesin EasternEurope
throughCouncil for MutualEconomicAssistance (CMEA)tradingpractices,muting
domestic opposition to these political and economic arrangementsboth at home and
in recipient states (Marreese1986). IFIs also inhibit domestic special interestsfrom
distortingpolicy for otherpurposes,as in the case of tied aid.
Althoughthe obligationto participatein IFIs may be strong,doing so helps donor
states curtailaid recipients'expectations,thus preservingflexibility. Although international intermediariesdiminish a donor state's leverage over recipient states, this
factor is offset by decreasesin otherstates' leverage and in competitionfor leverage
among donors.Donor states as a group,of course, retaincontrolover the IFIs. But it
is the fund, not the United States or Germany,thatimposes austerityon borrowers.
The autonomy needed for successful launderinggives IOs influence over the
substanceof their activities.For example,IFI staff have significantinputinto lending
criteriaandadjustmentpolicies and,increasingly,into social, environmental,andother
related policies. Robert McNamara was able to broaden development discourse
beyond economic growthto include social factorsand to reorientWorldBank policy
(Finnemore1996; Sanford 1988). The point should not be overstated.McNamara's
reforms were hardly radical, and Western countries were largely receptive. Subsequently,the Reagan administrationpushed the WorldBank partiallyback toward
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The Security Council's experience with ChapterVII illuminates the role of the
community representativein constructinginterests,the possibility of more forcible
12. Martin(1992, 245) also finds it importantthatthe leading "sender"be willing to bear extra costs,
suggesting a possible limitationto IO enforcementcapacityin the absence of "leadership."
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