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Your Place or Mine? Institutional Capture and the Creation of Overlapping International Institutions
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 27 March 2014
Abstract
Why do states create overlapping international institutions? This practice presents a puzzle: conventional wisdom suggests that states should use existing institutions to minimize the transaction costs of co-operation. This article proposes a bargaining approach to explain the de novo creation of overlapping international institutions. In this model, a dissatisfied ‘challenger’ state threatens to create a new institution, and a ‘defender’ state can propose to reform the currently focal institution. Overlapping institutions are created when the currently focal institution is (1) captured by interests opposed to the challenger and (2) domestic political pressure to abandon the status quo is intense. Similar to models of deterrence, the expectation that the new institution garners support among third parties is irrelevant for the equilibrium likelihood of de novo creation. A comparative analysis of international bargaining over energy, whaling and intellectual property rights provides empirical evidence.
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- Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2014
Footnotes
Department of Political Science, Columbia University (email: [email protected]); Institute for International Studies, Ghent University (email:, [email protected]). We thank Tana Johnson, Robert Keohane, Jean-Frédéric Morin, Alexander Ovodenko, Susan Sell, the three anonymous reviewers and the editor for commenting on a previous version of this article. Online appendices are available at http://dx.doi.org/doi: 10.1017/S0007123413000537
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