
At a Glance
280 Pages
eBook
RRP $28.99
$23.99
17%OFF
or 4 interest-free payments of $6.00 with
Instant Digital Delivery to your Kobo Reader App
The acceptance of human rights and minority rights, the increasing role of international financial institutions, and globalization have led many observers to question the continued viability of the sovereign state. Here a leading expert challenges this conclusion. Stephen Krasner contends that states have never been as sovereign as some have supposed. Throughout history, rulers have been motivated by a desire to stay in power, not by some abstract adherence to international principles. Organized hypocrisy--the presence of longstanding norms that are frequently violated--has been an enduring attribute of international relations.
Political leaders have usually but not always honored international legal sovereignty, the principle that international recognition should be accorded only to juridically independent sovereign states, while treating Westphalian sovereignty, the principle that states have the right to exclude external authority from their own territory, in a much more provisional way. In some instances violations of the principles of sovereignty have been coercive, as in the imposition of minority rights on newly created states after the First World War or the successor states of Yugoslavia after 1990; at other times cooperative, as in the European Human Rights regime or conditionality agreements with the International Monetary Fund.
The author looks at various issues areas to make his argument: minority rights, human rights, sovereign lending, and state creation in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Differences in national power and interests, he concludes, not international norms, continue to be the most powerful explanation for the behavior of states.
Industry Reviews
on
CHAPTER ONE Sovereignty and Its Discontents 3
CHAPTER TWO Theories of Institutions and International Politics 43
CHAPTER THREE Rulers and Ruled: Minority Rights 73
CHAPTER FOUR Rulers and Ruled: Human Rights 105
CHAPTER FIVE Sovereign Lending 127
CHAPTER SIX Constitutional Structures and New States in the Nineteenth Century 152
CHAPTER SEVEN Constitutional Structures and New States after 1945 184
CHAPTER EIGHT Conclusion: Not a Game of Chess 220
References 239
Index 255
ISBN: 9781400823260
ISBN-10: 1400823269
Published: 1st January 2000
Format: ePUB
Language: English
Number of Pages: 280
Audience: College, Tertiary and University
Publisher: Princeton University Press
























