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If you’ve been to a Model United Nations conference
before, you have no doubt heard delegates complaining “This resolution
infringes on my sovereignty!” Other
delegates then scurry around the floor, engage in caucus, desperately
searching for an amendment that won’t be so offensive to the put-upon
nation.
A better place for the delegates to start would be
with the definition of sovereignty and an examination of how this concept
comes into play in international relations and in a Model United Nations.
The principle of state sovereignty emerged over 350
years ago as a result of the Treaty of Westphalia. This treaty established that the ruler of a territory
would determine the religion of that territory.
It was essentially a stand against the popes who were trying to
establish a united and Roman Catholic Europe.
Princes and kings now assumed complete authority over their
territory. “The myth of
separate secular and spiritual entities disappeared, and the authority
that had been vested in both (king and pope) was assumed exclusively by
the state.” (Russett and Starr)
The “state” is a legal abstraction.
Like a corporation is has no concrete existence beyond what others
assign to it. Sovereignty,
then, is a special theoretical relationship between each state and all
other international actors. There
are two kinds of sovereignty that come into play, both on the
international scene and in a Model United Nations. There is internal sovereignty which means “supremacy
over all other authorities within that territory and population” and external
sovereignty by which is meant not “supremacy but independence of
outside authorities.” (Bull)
Sovereignty, then establishes complete internal
control and complete external autonomy.
“In principle, this means that there is a monopoly over the
control of the means of force within the state.
Similarly, through international law, the state has been given a
legal monopoly on the use of force in the global arena. Piracy and non-state terrorism are considered illegal because
they entail the use of force and violence by actors other than a state.”
(Russett and Starr)
Without an external authority, states are free to act
any way they see fit. “Sovereignty
means that states exist in a formal anarchic environment.
That is, no legitimate or legal authority is empowered to control,
direct or watch over the behavior of the states.” (Russett and Starr)
Legally each state is responsible for its own actions and
its own security. Since in an
anarchy, there is no formal authority, there is no one a state can turn to
when other actors in the system misbehave.
The state must look out for itself, and this leads to what John
Herz has termed the “security dilemma.”
If states are responsible for protecting themselves
from outside attack or domination, they must accumulate sufficient armies
to discourage such an attack. This
military build-up, however, looks very ominous to other countries, who
themselves fear attack. These outside counties must increase their
military capacity. Each
country escalates its military growth with the result being they are less
secure!
Solving this security dilemma is at the foundation of
why states seek international cooperation and the formation of
international organizations like the United Nations.
Left to fend for themselves, states would be locked in a
never-ending, and certainly fatal race of “self-defense.”
Concepts like “mutually assured destruction” which emerged from
the Cold War arms race, were indeed “mad”, but could only exist in an
environment devoid of an external authority powerful enough to assure the
security of USSR and United States.
Nations seek protection from each other through
international organizations. Effective
international organizations provide the only practical escape from the
security dilemma, but there are costs.
And these costs are closely associated with the hallowed principle
of state sovereignty.
The United Nations was formed on the principle of
“sovereign equality.” (See
Article 2, section 1 of the UN Charter.)
Goodrich, et al, point out that “the term ‘sovereign
equality’ is far from being self-explanatory.
In fact, there are few precedents for its use…It combines in one
expression two distinct but closely related ideas, that of state
sovereignty, and that of the equality of states.” But we know that some
states are, in fact, more equal than others.
Not only in the obvious physical characteristics of size,
population, resources, etc, but also in the legal rights bestowed upon
nations in the UN Charter itself. One
needs only look as far as the veto power in Security Council to know that
“sovereign equality” is a principle not consistently applied in the
United Nations.
But could the organization function if nations were
truly sovereign equals? Of
course not. If the United
Nations could not limit the actions of states, it would have no reason to
exist in the first place. “The
Charter is based on the assumption that states in the exercise of their
sovereignty may accept legal limitations on their freedom of action, and
they are not free to disregard these restrictions as long as they remain
members.” (Goodrich, et al)
This takes us back to the scene that opened this
article. When the delegate
stands up crying about infringements on his/her sovereignty, other
delegates just might point out the obligations of all states to uphold all
the principles of the UN Charter. States
voluntarily waive some of their sovereign rights simply by agreeing to be
in the UN. It is up to
states, individually and collectively, to negotiate to what extent they
will surrender their sovereign rights in pursuit of the common good.
In short, not every resolution which calls upon states to alter
their behavior is, in fact, an illegal attack on sovereignty.
Delegates are urged to read and understand all of the
purposes and principles of the UN Charter as they are outlined in Articles
1 and 2. The give and take
within a Model UN debate should be guided by these two organizing sections
of the Charter.
Bibliography
Bruce
Russett and Harvey Starr, World
Politics: The Menu for Choice, (WH Freeman and Company, 1989)
Leland
Goodrich, Edvard Hambro and Anne Simons, Charter of the United Nations,
(Columbia University Press, 1969)
Hedley
Bull, The Anarchical Society, (Macmillan, 1977)
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