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I’m going to talk to you for a few minutes
today about sovereignty, a concept that is
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both extremely important in the modern world
and a concept that’s also pretty abstract,
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which I think often people don’t fully understand.
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I think if you’re thinking about sovereignty,
the basic notion of sovereignty which people
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have in their heads is that politics takes
place within countries, specific states.
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These countries are independent from each
other, and within each country, the people
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in that country are able to establish their
own laws, their own institutions.
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This is something, actually, that’s very
familiar to Americans, since we know what
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the United States is.
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We know that the United States fought a revolution
with Britain, that the United States became,
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at the end of the 18th century, an independent
sovereign state.
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The critical first step in understanding how
sovereignty has actually worked, how this
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way of organizing political life has actually
worked, is to recognize that there are at
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least three different ways of thinking about
sovereignty.
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And these three different ways of thinking
about sovereignty do not necessarily go together
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either logically or historically.
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The first way of thinking about sovereignty
is international legal sovereignty.
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And international legal sovereignty has a
fundamental rule.
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And the rule is: Recognize juridically independent
territorial entities.
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By that, what I mean is that international
legal sovereignty occurs when one state or
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many states recognize another state as being
an independent state.
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The United States recognizes Great Britain,
or it recognizes France or Mexico or Brazil
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or South Africa or Nigeria.
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And once recognition has taken place, countries
would exchange ambassadors.
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Internationally recognized states would become
members of international organizations like
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the United Nations or the World Bank or the
International Monetary Fund.
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And once states recognize each other, they
agree that they can sign treaties or contracts
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with each other in the same way that private
individuals might sign business contracts
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in the United States.
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So international legal sovereignty is one
way of thinking about sovereignty.
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The second way of thinking about sovereignty
is what people have generally called Westphalian
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sovereignty.
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Westphalian sovereignty refers actually to
a peace agreement that was signed in 1648
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and ended the Thirty Years’ War, which was
a very, very costly war fought mostly in Germany.
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The ideal of Westphalian sovereignty is that
each state is autonomous and independent.
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Each state has the right to decide on its
own national laws, national institutions,
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national voting arrangements.
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And the corollary of that, the rule that goes
along with Westphalian sovereignty, is: Do
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not intervene in the internal affairs of other
states.
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So non-intervention in the internal affairs
of other countries is a basic rule of Westphalian
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sovereignty.
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I do have to say, although this is more history
than you need to know, actually Westphalian
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sovereignty had very little to do with the
Peace of Westphalia.
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And the idea of non-intervention was really
developed only 100 or 150 years later, actually
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by a Swiss international lawyer named Emmerich
de Vattel.
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But that’s an historical detail which you
don’t have to worry about.
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So international legal sovereignty is one
way of thinking about sovereignty.
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Westphalian sovereignty is a second way of
thinking about sovereignty.
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The third way of thinking about sovereignty
is domestic sovereignty.
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And basically domestic sovereignty means the
nature of the institutions, the rules, the
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laws within a country, and the extent to which
those institutions and rules and laws are
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actually effective.
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So if you looked at the domestic sovereignty
of the United States, you would say it’s
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a democracy, it has a presidential system
of government and the government works more
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or less pretty well.
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If you looked at Great Britain, you would
say that it’s a democracy, it has a parliamentary
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form of government, and the government also
governs pretty effectively.
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If you looked at China, you would probably
say that it’s an autocratic form of government
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run by the Communist Party, very different
than the United States or Britain, although
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there the government is also quite effective.
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If we looked at Haiti at the moment, actually,
as we’re thinking about Haiti right now,
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in March of 2004, Haiti actually has no government.
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The president has just left the country, the
country is in chaos.
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So we would say that it’s hard to identify,
uh, what Haitian institutional structures
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are, although there is a constitution.
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And it’s certainly the case that the government
in Haiti, what there is of it, is not very
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effective.
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So we have then, three kinds of sovereignty:
international legal sovereignty, Westphalian
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sovereignty, and domestic sovereignty.
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The single most important thing to understand
about sovereignty is that these three kinds
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of sovereignty do not necessarily go together.
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If you look, for instance, at the contemporary
international environment, there are countries
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in the present world which have every possible
mix that you could imagine of international
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legal sovereignty, Westphalian sovereignty,
and domestic sovereignty.
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I would say that the United States, Japan,
China actually have all three kinds of sovereignty,
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but most other states do not.
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If you looked, for instance, at Haiti, Haiti
is a recognized country today.
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It has international legal sovereignty, but
it is now being occupied by foreign troops.
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So it doesn’t have Westphalian sovereignty,
nor does Haiti have effective domestic sovereignty.
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If you look at many countries in Africa, these
countries all have international legal sovereignty.
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Some of them have Westphalian sovereignty,
that is, people are not trying to alter their
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internal affairs, but very few of them have
effective domestic sovereignty.
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If you look at the countries that are members
of the European Union, this is now 15 countries,
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which will be expanded to 25 in May of 2004,
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all of these countries
have international legal sovereignty.
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Britain, France, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands
all sit in the United Nations.
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They all have effective domestic governance,
effective domestic sovereignty.
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But in many ways, these countries have voluntarily
signed away their Westphalian sovereignty.
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They’ve agreed to be members of the European
Union.
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Within the European Union, there are some
decisions that are taken by a majority of
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states, so that if you’re a member of the
European Union, you have to honor these agreements
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even if you disagree with them.
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And they’ve created supranational institutions,
especially the European Court of Justice.
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The European Court of Justice, which is a
kind of international court for the European
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Union, makes decisions which are directly
applicable in national courts of the member
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states.
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So, for instance, there was a complaint about
how Britain was running its prison system.
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The European Court of Justice decided that
Britain was in violation of European rules,
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and Britain was compelled to alter the way
in which it was dealing with its prison system
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because these findings, these decisions by
the European Court of Justice, were enforceable
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in British courts.
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It’s as if, and this is an idea that’s
very alien to the United States, it would
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be as if a court, for instance, that was sitting
in Canada could make decisions that would
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be directly applicable in a court in California
or Kansas or New Jersey.
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So if you look at the member states of the
European Union, they have international legal
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sovereignty, they have effective domestic
governance, they do not have Westphalian sovereignty.
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So the first thing to recognize about sovereignty
is that it really has these three different
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components.
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These components are different.
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They do not necessarily go together.
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And if you look around the world, you can
find virtually any mix of Westphalian, international
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legal, and domestic sovereignty.
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It may be easier to understand the idea of
sovereignty if we contrast sovereignty with
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other ways in which political life has been
organized.
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And I’m going to give you three examples
of different ways in which historically politics
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has been organized by human beings.
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One is tribes.
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If you think about tribes, tribes are a form
of political organization.
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People become members of a tribe basically
through birth.
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Tribes often did not have specific territories.
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If you look at Native Americans, many Native
American tribes, not all, were nomadic.
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They moved from one place to another.
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They moved their laws with them.
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They did not identify themselves with a specific
territory.
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If you look historically at nomadic peoples
in Africa or the steppes of Eurasia, they
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had rules, they had regulations, they had
rulers.
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They had mechanisms for making decisions within
their societies, but they were not limited
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to specific territory.
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So if you think about tribes as a way of organizing
political life, tribes are characterized by
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structures of governance, laws, rules, leaders,
but tribes did not have specific territories.
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Very different from the idea of sovereignty.
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Sovereignty has lines on a map.
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States have territories.
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States recognize the boundaries of other states
and it’s clear where a state exists.
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A second example of a different way of organizing
political life: Medieval Europe.
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Medieval Europe was a political system in
which there were often many different claims
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to authority and authority structures within
a specific territory.
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The most obvious disputes, and the ones historically
that were most consequential, were disagreements
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between the Church, this was the Catholic
Church, on the one hand, and various secular
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rulers, kings, on the other.
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The Church made claims to govern certain kinds
of activities, certainly the activities of
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the Church itself and its members, priests.
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The Church often made claims to govern other
kinds of activities: Inheritance, marriage,
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a number of different activities.
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The Church, the popes in the 11th and 12th
and 13th century, often intervened in affairs
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that we think of as being the affairs of state,
like wars and excommunicated, in some instances,
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rulers for not honoring the decisions of the
Church.
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So if you look at medieval Europe, medieval
Europe was a political system in which competing
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authorities existed within the same territory.
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There was not a claim to one exclusive authority
structure within a specific territory.
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So within France, you had the King of France.
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You also had at times historically the King
of England, who owned certain territories
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in France.
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You had the Catholic Church also making claims
within France to certain kinds of activities.
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So medieval Europe had territory, but it didn’t
have any idea of exclusive authority within
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that territory.
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A third example: What’s called now the Sinocentric
world, the world of East Asia, the world of
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China before the kind of massive arrival of
the European powers in the 19th century.
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In the Sinocentric world, and this is something
that had existed for millennia before the
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19th century, there was no notion of sovereign
equality.
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There was no idea of international legal sovereignty.
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There was no notion of mutual recognition.
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China essentially claimed to be the center
of the universe.
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There were other political entities like Korea
or Vietnam.
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They were always regarded as tributary states
of China, inferior to China.
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Tributary states episodically, sometimes once
a year, sometimes once every three years,
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would send tribute missions to Beijing, the
capital of China.
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The tribute missions included gifts to the
Chinese empire and also opportunities for
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trade.
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The Chinese emperor invested kings or rulers,
would send delegates to Vietnam or Korea or
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other tributary states to legitimate the rule
of certain individuals.
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But there was no idea that, for instance,
Korea and China were in some ways equal.
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There was no such thing as an ambassador or
permanent representatives between Korea and
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China because that would imply that these
two countries were equal.
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China would have been ... a son.
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I’m sorry, China would have been the father,
Korea would have been the son.
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So there was always a sense in this traditional
Sinocentric world not of some idea of international
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legal sovereignty and formal equality, but
rather of a world in which China was the center
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of the universe and other political entities
were subordinate.
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So we’ve lived in a world historically in
which there have been different ways of organizing
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political life.
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The notion of sovereignty as the key way of
organizing political life is something that’s
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been widespread in the world for the last
200 years, and most forcefully since decolonization
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after the Second World War and especially
since 1960.
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If you look at how sovereignty has actually
worked, returning to these three ideas of
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sovereignty, domestic sovereignty, international
legal sovereignty, and Westphalian sovereignty,
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what’s striking, I think historically, is
the extent to which the basic rules of sovereignty
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recognized juridically independent states,
and especially the rule of Westphalian sovereignty
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non-intervention, have frequently been violated.
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So even within the world of sovereign states,
the rules of sovereignty have not always been
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honored.
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In fact, they’ve frequently been ignored
or transgressed.
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And let me give you a few examples of this
in the contemporary world and also some historical
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examples.
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If we think about international legal sovereignty,
the basic rule is recognize juridically independent
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territorial entities.
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If we look at the member states of the European
Union, none of these states are any longer
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juridically independent.
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In fact, in terms of their law, the laws of
each member state of the European Union are
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subject to interpretations and decisions taken
by the European Court of Justice.
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Despite that fact, all of the member states
of the European Union are still recognized,
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and nobody’s proposed, for instance, taking
away France’s seat or Britain’s seat in
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the Security Council of the United Nations
on the grounds that these states are no longer
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juridically independent.
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Yet, in fact, they’re not fully juridically
independent.
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A second example, and one that I think is
in some ways odder and more interesting, is
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the example of Hong Kong.
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Hong Kong was for a long time essentially
a British colony.
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In the 1990s, Hong Kong was returned to China.
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Hong Kong, as many of you I’m sure know,
is a very prosperous place.
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It’s basically kind of a large city with
the island of Hong Kong and then some territory
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that’s on the mainland of China, has been
extremely successful.
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When the country was returned to China, the
Chinese government in Beijing did not just
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want to incorporate Hong Kong into China itself.
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They demanded, in a formal sense, that Hong
Kong become part of China and be accepted
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as part of China.
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But they did not want to subject Hong Kong
to Chinese law.
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They didn’t want the Beijing, the People’s
Republic Army, to simply march into Hong Kong.
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And they didn’t want to do that because
they didn’t want to destroy the economic
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prosperity of Hong Kong, which rested on this
very active, very wealthy, and very skilled
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business community in Hong Kong.
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So what they did was they created Hong Kong
as a special entity within China.
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They allowed, that is the Beijing government,
allowed Hong Kong to continue to be a member
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of the World Trade Organization.
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The World Trade Organization is an organization
that sets rules for international trade.
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China at this time was not itself even a member
of the WTO, the World Trade Organization,
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but a piece of China actually was.
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The Chinese government allowed Hong Kong to
conclude visa agreements with other countries.
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So, for instance, if you’re an American,
you can fly into Hong Kong without getting
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any visa in advance.
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If you fly into the PRC, the People’s Republic
of China, mainland China, you have to get
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a visa in advance.
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If you’re a citizen of China and you’re
going to Hong Kong, you have to get special
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papers that allow you to go to Hong Kong.
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So it’s as if an American needed some kind
of certificate, almost a kind of visa, to
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go, say, from New Jersey to Pennsylvania or
Florida to Georgia.
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So internally, what happened in Hong Kong
is that Hong Kong actually does have international
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legal sovereignty.
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It is a recognized entity.
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It is a member state of international organizations.
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It has signed separate visa agreements with
many, many countries.
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But at the same time, it’s not a juridically
independent state.
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It’s part of China.
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So again, the rule of international legal
sovereignty has been violated.
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So international legal sovereignty is a rule
very widely understood, but not universally
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honored.
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Some of the entities that are recognized as
international legal sovereigns are actually
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not juridically independent.
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They are not fully independent states, or
in the case of Hong Kong, they’re certainly
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not a fully independent political entity.
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If you look at Westphalian sovereignty, Westphalian
sovereignty has been even more frequently
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violated, very frequently violated.
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There have been very, very frequent attempts
by especially powerful states, to influence
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domestic authority structures in weaker states.
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This is something that has happened historically
in virtually every major peace treaty that’s
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been signed since the 17th century through
the end of the 20th century.
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And it’s certainly something that you see
occurring in the contemporary international
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environment and in many different places.
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The basic reason that Westphalian sovereignty
has frequently been violated is this: Often
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international peace and security depend on
what the nature of a domestic political regime
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is in another state.
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Is the state peaceful or not?
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Is it ruled by someone who is interested in
peaceful international organizations or interactions
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or ruled by someone who’s interested in
international conquest?
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If you can change the nature of the ruler
or change the nature of the regime, you can
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change the way in which that country affects
the international system.
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Let me give you a few historical examples
and then turn to the contemporary era.
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Historically, one of the places that has been
very troubled internationally and is still
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troubled today in terms of the way in which
it’s been governed domestically is the Balkans.
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The major states in the Balkans today are
Albania, Yugoslavia, Croatia, and Slovenia.
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In the 19th century.
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at the beginning of the 19th century, the
Balkan countries, the Balkans themselves,
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were controlled by the Ottoman Empire.
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The Ottoman Empire had its capital in Istanbul.
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It had been a very large, powerful empire
really going back to the 14th century.
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In the course of the 19th century, all of
the Balkan possessions of the Ottoman Empire
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became independent, beginning with Greece
in 1832, then Romania, Serbia and Montenegro
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in 1878 and ending with Albania in 1913.
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In every single case, the major powers of
Europe said that we will recognize you as
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an independent state, but only if you guarantee
the rights of religious minorities within
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your own country.
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And if you don’t guarantee minority rights,
we will not recognize you.
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So your international legal sovereignty, the
international legal sovereignty of these new
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states, was contingent on their accepting
minority rights, something which they would
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not have done otherwise.
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This is an example of a clear violation of
Westphalian sovereignty.
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External actors, the major powers of Europe,
were intervening in the internal affairs of
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Greece, of Romania, Bulgaria, of Albania,
to insist that these countries institute constitutional
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rules that would protect religious minorities
and ethnic minorities within each of these
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countries.
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After the First World War, which ended in
1918, there were very extensive negotiations
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in Versailles in France to try and create
a more peaceful international world.
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The major powers, now including the United
States, looked at the First World War, saw
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that in part at least, the First World War
had arisen as a result of ethnic nationalist
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conflicts within the Balkans, decided that
it was critical to deal with issues of minority
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rights.
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Felt that if you were going to have democratic
regimes which Woodrow Wilson, the American
00:24:39
President, especially thought would be essential
for international peace, you had to find a
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way to deal with issues of minority rights.
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And again, what the major powers did, this
is the United States, Britain, France, the
00:24:53
major powers insisted that smaller states,
especially new states, states that were being
00:24:59
newly created as a condition of being recognized
and as a condition of becoming members of
00:25:05
the League of Nations.
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(The League of Nations was a predecessor organization
to the United Nations.)
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The major powers insisted that all of these
new states, there were something like 33 of
00:25:16
them that were either new or states that had
their boundaries changed, that all of these
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states accept minority rights.
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Often the provisions that they asked for were
very specific and very detailed.
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For instance, Poland agreed that they would
have bilingual education in areas which had
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large minority populations.
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Poland agreed not to hold elections on Saturday
because it would violate the Jewish Sabbath.
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There were large numbers of Jews in Poland
before the Holocaust took place.
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So you’re in a situation in which often
these new states accepted very substantial
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violations of their Westphalian sovereignty
because they saw this as the only way they
00:26:01
could get international recognition.
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So Westphalian sovereignty is a set of rules
that actually has been frequently violated
00:26:09
throughout history.
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And these violations, if you look at developments
in Yugoslavia, when Yugoslavia fell apart
00:26:16
in the 1990s, you had a very similar situation.
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Again, the European countries insisted in
1991 that their recognition of the new states
00:26:26
that emerged from Yugoslavia, especially Slovenia
and Croatia and then later Bosnia, would accept
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minority rights as a condition of recognition.
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So Westphalian sovereignty has frequently
been violated historically and continues to
00:26:42
be violated to the present day.
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I want to end by saying a few words about
what I think is really the most important
00:26:51
issue, security issue, in the contemporary
international environment and the way in which
00:26:57
sovereignty affects that issue.
00:27:00
The issue is this: There are many states in
the world now which are very badly governed,
00:27:06
in which domestic sovereignty is working very
ineffectively.
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These states have declining national incomes.
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Health is deteriorating.
00:27:18
The levels of violence are very large.
00:27:21
In some cases, the recognized government,
the entity that has international legal sovereignty,
00:27:27
does not control the entire territory of the
state.
00:27:31
And in some cases, where states are very badly
governed or governed by autocratic regimes
00:27:37
like Afghanistan or Iraq, these countries
may present real security threats to the United
00:27:45
States and other democratic industrialized
countries.
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One of the great challenges, if not the great
challenge, of our era, of the next ten or
00:27:55
20 or 30 or 40 years, will be how can we improve
governance in these badly governed places?
00:28:02
When the issue is put that way, it’s clear
that getting better governance in places like
00:28:08
Afghanistan, Iraq, Haiti, many countries in
sub-Saharan Africa like the Congo, getting
00:28:15
better governance in these places will require
violations of Westphalian sovereignty.
00:28:23
It will require the international community,
external actors, the United States, international
00:28:29
organizations, the major democracies in Europe,
to engage for an extended period of time in
00:28:36
these countries to try and develop for them
better governance structures.
00:28:40
We can’t historically have much confidence
that these countries operating on their own
00:28:46
will develop decently governed domestic authority
structures, much less fully democratic ones.
00:28:53
So I think the great [thing] challenge, and
something that we have to think about with
00:28:58
in the deepest possible way right now is how
can we think about providing Haiti with a
00:29:06
government?
00:29:07
And by we, I mean the United States, Canada,
France, the Organization of American States,
00:29:12
the United Nations.
00:29:13
How can we provide Haiti, for instance, or
the Congo with a governance structure that
00:29:19
will be more effective for its own population,
that will increase levels of economic prosperity,
00:29:26
that will provide some levels of democracy?
00:29:29
And I think doing that will require imagination
and skill.
00:29:34
It will not just mean some kind of recreation
of colonialism where external actors will
00:29:41
step into a country and try to directly run
the country for some extended period of time.
00:29:48
But it may mean that international actors,
for instance, international judges or individuals
00:29:56
providing health care, or even police or even
security forces might in some badly governed
00:30:04
country, have to be provided by some kind
of external actors.
00:30:08
It might be that in elections in Haiti, perhaps
there should be one or two or three Haitian
00:30:15
candidates, but perhaps there should be a
candidate from another country supported by
00:30:21
the international community.
00:30:22
And Haitians would have the right to select
either from nationals from their own country
00:30:27
or from nationals that might come from elsewhere.
00:30:31
So the Haitians, for instance, could essentially
rent a government for some period of time,
00:30:36
the period of time of the election, and could
see if these external actors might be able
00:30:41
to govern Haiti more effectively than has
been the case for Haiti’s own national authorities.
00:30:47
We’re thinking about what will happen in
Iraq or Afghanistan, also issues that are
00:30:52
very critical for the United States, but the
international community writ large.
00:30:56
The key thing that has to happen in these
countries, the ideal thing that could happen,
00:31:04
would be the creation of better governed,
more prosperous, ideally democratic states.
00:31:11
Doing that is likely to require us, United
States, the rest of the international community,
00:31:18
international organizations, to think beyond
the confines of traditional sovereignty and
00:31:24
to try and create a new set of institutions
different than any that we’ve seen in the
00:31:29
past, which can bring effective governance,
peace, and security around the world.
00:31:35
Thanks.