Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- List of figures
- List of tables
- Acknowledgments
- 1 (Re)discovering the continent
- Part I COIL's building blocks: theory and data
- Part II Flexibility provisions in the design of international law
- Part III Centralization, scope, and control provisions in the design of international law
- 7 Dispute resolution provisions
- 8 Punishment provisions
- 9 Monitoring provisions
- 10 Asymmetric design rules, voting, and power
- 11 Conclusion
- Appendix 1 List of agreements in COIL sample
- Appendix 2 Coding rules
- Appendix 3 Selection issues in international cooperation data sets
- References
- Index
8 - Punishment provisions
from Part III - Centralization, scope, and control provisions in the design of international law
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 June 2016
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- List of figures
- List of tables
- Acknowledgments
- 1 (Re)discovering the continent
- Part I COIL's building blocks: theory and data
- Part II Flexibility provisions in the design of international law
- Part III Centralization, scope, and control provisions in the design of international law
- 7 Dispute resolution provisions
- 8 Punishment provisions
- 9 Monitoring provisions
- 10 Asymmetric design rules, voting, and power
- 11 Conclusion
- Appendix 1 List of agreements in COIL sample
- Appendix 2 Coding rules
- Appendix 3 Selection issues in international cooperation data sets
- References
- Index
Summary
[I]f the agreement is well-designed – sensible, comprehensible, and with a practical eye to probable patterns of conduct and interaction – compliance problems and enforcement issues are likely to be manageable, [and therefore strong enforcement mechanisms are unnecessary].
(Chayes and Chayes 1993: 183)[Because] one player, by defecting, can reap rewards by placing the other player at an immediate and overwhelming disadvantage, … there is little hope for stable, extensive cooperation [in security affairs]. [However], [t]he dangers of swift, decisive defection do not apply in most international economic issues.
(Lipson 1984: 14, 17)These two quotes, the first by a pair of international law scholars, the second by a political scientist, are classic and important statements, representing two well-respected schools of thought. These quotes are also not quite consistent with one another. Additionally, we have the following descriptive statistics:
• Almost half of economics agreements contain a formal punishment provision.
• About one-sixth of security agreements contain such a provision.
How then do we reconcile these two statements not only with each other but also with the empirical reality? Specifically, first, why do so many economics agreements contain punishment provisions, a fairly strong form of enforcement provision, if “well-designed” agreements are unlikely to need them? Second, if security cooperation is so risky, why do so few security agreements contain formal punishment provisions?
In this chapter, I provide a theory of punishment provisions that includes an articulation of when such provisions are themselves part of a well-designed, “practical” agreement. I also use this design feature as a point of departure for an analysis of potentially informal provisions within formal international law, thereby addressing the unexpected absence of formal punishment provisions in particular cooperative endeavors. Of course, a key challenge in the study of informalism is identifying and quantifying what is indeed informal across more than a few, well-known cases. In this chapter, I offer a theory and method to analyze the role of informalism across the COIL random sample.
I first present a theory of punishment provisions and test the theory against the COIL data. I then turn to a consideration of informal punishment provisions. I briefly review a few important scholarly contributions on informalism as well as some important literature on compliance and the need for punishment provisions.
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- Chapter
- Information
- The Continent of International LawExplaining Agreement Design, pp. 226 - 260Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2016