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Changing Norms through Actions

The Evolution of Sovereignty

Jennifer M Ramos author

Format:Paperback

Publisher:Oxford University Press Inc

Published:21st Mar '13

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Changing Norms through Actions cover

How do international norms evolve? This book examines the manner in which sovereignty, a bedrock norm of international relations since the seventeenth century, has evolved in response to changing conceptions of the responsibilities of government. Whereas most previous studies of international norms have examined how norms influence policy decisions, this book asks, instead, how state policies actively shape international norms. Changing Norms through Actions contends that the concept of sovereignty is moving towards one in which states that are unable or unwilling to fulfill their domestic and international obligations are forced to relinquish certain sovereign responsibilities to the international community. As issues such as genocide, weapons of mass destruction, and terrorism have forced states to reassess their understandings of sovereignty, Ramos is interested in how understandings of norms - particularly long-held norms such as absolute sovereignty - change. If action taken by states reinforces an existing norm or alters current understandings of the norm, states must consider how their actions may change the "rules of the game" for the future. Even when a major power acts primarily out of its own self-interest, without any concern to international norms, the action may have the unintended consequence of modifying the normative environment within which other minor powers act. Shifting understandings of sovereignty (and how states relate to one another) can also have profound implications for the workings of the international system. Ramos looks specifically at what happens to sovereignty when states choose to bypass traditional norms of non-intervention on behalf of other competing norms, such as those regarding counterterrorism, human rights, or weapons of mass destruction.

Few norms have been as influential in shaping international behavior as that of sovereignty, a norm whose content is now undergoing subtle change. This book illuminates the conditions that determine a major power's commitment to the developing conception of sovereignty, showing that the more arduous and costly the intervention, the greater the resulting commitment to the norm. This original and empirically grounded book represents a valuable contribution to our understanding of how important international norms develop. * Miroslav Nincic, Professor of Political Science, University of California, Davis *
In this fascinating and original study, Jennifer Ramos develops and tests the theory that actions have significantly shaped the norms associated with sovereignty, rather than vice versa. Students of international relations, foreign policy, and psychological approaches to political behavior should add this important study to their 'must read' lists. * Ole R. Holsti, George V. Allen Professor of International Affairs emeritus, Duke University *

ISBN: 9780199924868

Dimensions: 156mm x 234mm x 12mm

Weight: 337g

214 pages