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Bridging the Globalization
Gap: Toward Global Parliament
Author
Richard Falk and Andrew Strauss

CHALLENGING
THE DEMOCRATIC DEFICIT
ONE CRUCIAL aspect of the rising disaffection
with globalization is the lack of
citizen participation in the global
institutions that shape people's daily
lives. This public frustration is
deeper and broader than the recent
street demonstrations in Seattle and
Prague. Social commentators and leaders
of citizens' and intergovernmental
organizations are increasingly taking
heed. Over the past 18 months, President
Clinton has joined with the secretary-general
of the United Nations, the director-general
of the World Trade Organization
(WTO), the managing director of the
International Monetary Fund (IMF),
and the president of the World Bank
to call for greater citizen participation
in the international order.
But to date, these parties have not
clearly articulated a general vision
of how best to integrate a public
role into international institutions.
So in the absence of a planned design,
attempts to democratize the international
system have been ad hoc, as citizen
organizations and economic elites
create their own mechanisms of influence.
In domestic politics, interest-group
pluralism flourishes within a parliamentary
system of representation. In global
politics, interest-group pluralism
is growing, but no unifying parliament
represents the public interest. This
state of affairs cannot last in a
world where the prevailing understanding
of democracy
does not accept the fact that unelected
interest groups can speak for the
citizenry as a whole. Any serious
attempt to challenge the democratic
deficit must therefore consider creating
some type of popularly elected global
body. Before globalization, such an
idea would have been considered utopian.
Now, the clamor of citizens to participate
internationally can no longer be ignored.
The only question is what form this
participation will take.
DECISION-MAKING GOES GLOBAL
BEHIND THIS CLAMOR lies a profound
shift in power. Thanks to trade, foreign
direct investment, and capital flows,
globalization is dispersing political
authority throughout the international
order. International governance is
no longer limited to such traditional
fare as defining international borders,
protecting diplomats, and proscribing
the use of force. Many issues of global
policy that directly affect citizens
are now being shaped by the international
system. Workers can lose their jobs
as a result of decisions made at the
WTO or within regional trade regimes.
Consumers must contend with a market
in which state-prescribed protections
such as the European ban on hormone-fed
beef can be overridden by WTO regulations.
Patients who need medicines
pay prices influenced by WTO-enforced
patent rules, which allow pharmaceutical
companies to monopolize drug pricing.
Most of the 23 million sub-Saharan
Africans who have tested positive
for the AIDS virus cannot afford the
drugs most effective in treating their
illness. They will die much sooner
as a consequence. For the half of
the world's population that lives
on less than $ 2 a day, governmental
social safety nets have been weakened
by IMF decisions. The globalized economy
has not meaningfully reduced poverty
despite a long period of sustained
growth. Economic inequality is on
the rise, as is the marginalization
of regions not
perceived as attractive trading partners
or "efficient" recipients
of investment. Furthermore, environmental
trends pose severe dangers that can
be successfully dealt with only through
global action and treaties. Against
such a background, it is little wonder
that people who believe they possess
a democratic entitlement to participate
in decisions that affect their lives
are now starting to demand their say
in the international system. And global
civil society has thus far been their
voice as they attempt to have this
say.
CIVIL SOCIETY'S GLOBAL PRESENCE
CIVIL SOCIETY, made up of nonprofit
organizations and voluntary associations
dedicated to civic, cultural, humanitarian,
and social causes, has begun to act
as an independent international force.
The largest and most prominent of
these organizations include Amnesty
International, Greenpeace, Oxfam,
and the International Committee of
the Red Cross; in addition, the U.N.
now lists more than 3,000 civil society
groups. During the 1990s, these transnational
forces effectively promoted treaties
to limit global warming, establish
an
international criminal court, and
outlaw antipersonnel land mines. These
same actors also helped persuade the
International Court of Justice to
render an advisory opinion on the
legality of nuclear weapons and defeat
a multilateral investment agreement.
More recently, civil groups mounted
a drive to cancel the foreign debts
of the world's poorest countries.
Although these efforts remain works
in progress, civil society to date
has been indispensable in furthering
them.
During the early 1990s, civil society's
organizations began visibly cooperating
at large international conferences
of states. When conservative political
pressures forced an end to these conferences,
civil society began to coalesce to
act cohesively and independently in
the international arena. For example,
8,000 individuals representing civil
society organizations met in May 1999
at the Hague Appeal for Peace to shape
strategy and agree on a common agenda.
Among those attending were such luminaries
as Nobel Peace Prize winners Desmond
Tutu, Jose Ramos-Horta, and Jody Williams.
Similar smaller meetings in South
Korea, Canada, Germany, and elsewhere
followed.
These meetings were a prelude to the
Millennium NGO Forum held at the United
Nations in May 2000, to which U.N.
Secretary-General Kofi Annan invited
1,400 individuals representing international
civil society groups to present views
on global issues and citizen participation
in decision-making. The forum agreed
to establish a permanent assembly
of civil society organizations, mandated
to meet at least every two to three
years, before the U.N. General Assembly
annual session. Although it is still
to be realized, such a forum might
earn recognition over time as an important
barometer of world public opinion
-- and a preliminary step toward
creating a global parliament. Regardless
of how this specific forum develops,
civil society will continue to institutionalize
itself into an independent and cohesive
force within the international system.
THE CORPORATE MOVERS
THROUGH expanding trade and investment,
business and banking leaders have
also exercised extraordinary influence
on global policy. Even in formerly
exclusive arenas of state action,
these private-sector actors are making
a mark. For example, Secretary-General
Annan has made "partnering"
with the business community a major
hallmark of his leadership. The United
Nations has now established a formal
business advisory council to formalize
a permanent relationship between the
corporate community and the U.N. As
with citizen groups, elite business
participation in the international
system is becoming institutionalized.
The best example is the World Economic
Forum in Davos, Switzerland. In the
1980s, the WEF transformed itself
from an organization devoted to humdrum
management issues into a dynamic political
forum. Once a
year, a thousand of the world's most
powerful business executives get together
with another thousand of the world's
senior policymakers to participate
in a week of roundtables and presentations.
The WEF also provides ongoing arenas
for discussion and recommendations
on shaping global policy. It is notable
that Annan's ideas about a U.N. partnership
with the business community have been
put forward and endorsed during his
frequent appearances at Davos. In
addition, the WEF also conducts and
disseminates its own research, which
not surprisingly shows a consistently
neoliberal outlook. For example, it
produces a well-publicized annual
index
ranking the relative economic competitiveness
of all countries in the world. The
Davos assembly and overlapping networks
of corporate elites, such as the International
Chamber of Commerce, have been successful
in shaping compatible global policies.
Their success has come in the expansion
of international trade regimes, the
modest regulation of capital markets,
the dominance of neoliberal market
philosophy, and the supportive collaboration
of most governments, especially those
of rich countries.
PONDERING A GLOBAL PARLIAMENT
GLOBAL CIVIL SOCIETY still cannot
match the resources and power linkages
of the corporate and banking communities.
But many civil society groups have
carved out niches within the international
order from which to influence decision-making
by relying on imagination and information.
The evolution of these two networks
-- civil and business -- has been
largely uncoordinated, and it remains
unclear how they could fit together
in a functionally coherent and representative
form of global governance. Neither
can claim to represent citizenry as
a whole. As global civil society acquires
a greater international presence,
its critics are already challenging
its claims to represent the public
interest. The charge of illegitimacy
has even greater resonance when leveled
at corporate and banking elites, who
do not speak for organizations.
Now that the global system is increasingly
held up to democratic standards --
and often comes up short - those people
who find their policy preferences
rejected are unlikely to accept the
system's determination as legitimate,
and the democratic deficit will remain
a problem. Only when citizen and business
interests work together within an
overarching representative body can
they achieve policy accommodations
that will be seen as legitimate. For
the first time, a widely recognized
global democratic forum could consider
environmental and labor standards
and deliberate on economic justice
from the perspectives of both North
and South. Even an initially weak
assembly could offer some democratic
oversight of international organizations
such as the IMF, the WTO, and the
World Bank.
Unlike the United Nations, this assembly
would not be constituted by states.
Because its authority would come directly
from the global citizenry, it could
refute the claim that states are bound
only by laws to which they give their
consent. Henceforth, the ability to
opt out of collective efforts to protect
the environment, control or eliminate
weapons, safeguard human rights, or
otherwise protect the global community
could be challenged. In addition,
the assembly could encourage compliance
with established international norms
and standards, especially in human
rights. The international system currently
lacks reliable mechanisms to implement
many
of its laws. Organizations such as
Amnesty International, Human Rights
Watch, and even the International
Labor Organization attempt to hold
states accountable by exposing their
failures of compliance, relying on
a process often referred to as the
"mobilization of shame."
In exercising such oversight, a popularly
elected global assembly would be more
visible and credible than are existing
watchdogs who expose corporate and
governmental wrongdoing.
The assembly's very existence would
also help promote the peaceful resolution
of international conflicts. Because
elected delegates would represent
individuals and society instead of
states, they would not have to vote
along national lines. Coalitions would
likely form on other bases, such as
world-view, political orientation,
and interests. Compromises among such
competing but nonmilitarized coalitions
might eventually undermine reliance
on the current war system, in which
international decisions are still
made by heavily armed nations that
are poised to destroy one another.
In due course, international relations
might more closely resemble policymaking
within the most democratic societies
of the world.
ALL THOSE IN FAVOR
IN SPITE of its advantages, would
the formation of such an assembly
threaten established state and business
interests so much that its creation
would become politically untenable?
The European Union's experience suggests
otherwise. Established by states --
and with little initial authority
-- the transnationally elected European
Parliament has now become powerful
enough to help close a regional democratic
deficit. As with the early European
parliament, a relatively weak assembly
initially equipped with largely advisory
powers could begin to address concerns
about the democratic deficit while
posing only a long-term threat to
the realities of state power. Systemic
transformation of world order that
would largely affect successors would
not significantly threaten those political
leaders who are inclined to embrace
democratic ideals. Indeed, it might
even appeal to them.
Despite these humble origins, the
assembly would have the potential
to become an extremely important fixture
of the global architecture. Upon the
assembly's inception, civil society
organizations would almost certainly
lobby it to issue supportive resolutions.
Groups who opposed such resolutions
could shun the process, but that is
not likely: they would concede the
support of the world's only elected
democratic body. Over time, as the
assembly became the practical place
for clashing interests to resolve
differences, formal powers would likely
follow.
Some business leaders would certainly
oppose a global parliament because
it would broaden popular decisionmaking
and likely press for transnational
regulations. But others are coming
to believe that the democratic deficit
must be closed by some sort of stakeholder
accommodation. After all, many members
of the managerial class who were initially
hostile to such reform came to realize
that the New Deal -- or its social-democratic
equivalent in Europe -- was necessary
to save capitalism. Many business
leaders today similarly agree that
democratization is necessary to make
globalization politically acceptable
throughout the world. As the recent
large street protests suggested, globalization
has yet to achieve grassroots acceptance
and legitimacy. To date, its main
claim to popular support is not political
but economic: it has either delivered
or
convincingly promised to deliver the
economic goods to enough people to
keep the antiglobalization forces
from mounting an effective challenge.
But economic legitimacy alone can
rarely stabilize a political system
for long. Market-based economic systems
have historically undergone ups and
downs, particularly when first forming.
The financial crisis that almost triggered
a world financial meltdown a few years
ago will not be the last crisis to
emerge out of globalization. Future
economic failures are certain to generate
political responses. Standing in the
wings in the United States and elsewhere
are politicians, ultranationalists,
and an array of
opportunists on both the left and
the right who, if given an opening,
would seek to dismantle the global
system. A global parliament is therefore
likely to serve as an attractive alternative
to those people who, out of enlightened
self-interest or even public-spiritedness,
wish to see the international system
become more open and democratic.
MAKING IT HAPPEN
ALTHOUGH the raw political potential
for a global assembly may exist, it
is not enough. Some viable way needs
to be found for this potential to
be realized, and it can most likely
be found in the new diplomacy. Unlike
traditional diplomacy, which has been
solely an affair among states, new
diplomacy makes room for flexible
and innovative coalitions between
civil society and receptive states.
The major success stories of global
civil society in the 1990s - the Kyoto
global warming treaty, the convention
banning land mines, and the International
Criminal Court - were produced in
this manner.
Civil society, aided by receptive
states, could create the assembly
without resorting to a formal treaty
process. Under this approach, the
assembly would not be formally sanctioned
by states, so governments would probably
contest its legitimacy at the outset.
But this opposition could be neutralized
to some extent by widespread grassroots
and media endorsement. Citizens in
favor could make their voices heard
through popular, fair, and serious
elections.
Another approach would rely on a treaty,
using what is often called the "single
negotiating text method." After
consultations with sympathetic parties
from civil society, business, and
nation-states, an organizing committee
could generate the text of a proposed
treaty establishing an assembly. This
text could serve as the basis for
negotiations. Civil society could
then organize a public relations campaign
and persuade states (through compromise
if necessary) to sign the treaty.
As in the process that ultimately
led to the land mines convention,
a small core group of supportive states
could lead the way. But unlike that
treaty, which required 40 countries
to ratify it before taking effect,
a relatively small number of countries
(say, 20) could provide the founding
basis for such an assembly. This number
is only a fraction of what would be
needed for the assembly to have some
claim to global democratic legitimacy.
But once the assembly became operational,
the task of gaining additional state
members would likely become easier.
A concrete organization would then
exist that citizens could urge their
governments to join. As more states
joined, pressure would grow on nonmember
states to participate. The assembly
would be incorporated into the evolving
international constitutional order.
If it gained members and influence
over time, as expected, its formal
powers would have to be redefined.
It would
also have to work out its relationship
with the U.N. One possibility would
be to associate with the General Assembly
to form a bicameral world legislature.
The pressures to democratize the international
system are part of an evolutionary
social process that will persist and
intensify. The two dominant themes
of the post -- Cold War years are
globalization and democratization.
It is often said that the world is
rapidly creating an integrated global
political economy, and that national
governments that are not freely elected
lack political legitimacy. It is paradoxical,
then, that a global debate has not
emerged on resolving the contradiction
between a commitment to democracy
and an undemocratic global order.
This tension may be the result of
political inertia or a residual belief
that ambitious world-governance proposals
are utopian. But whatever the explanation,
this contradiction is spurring citizen
groups and business and financial
elites to take direct actions to realize
their aspirations. Their initiatives
have created an autonomous dynamic
of ad hoc democratization. As this
process continues to move along with
globalization, pressures for a coherent
democratic system of global governance
will intensify. Political leaders
will find it more difficult to win
citizen acquiescence to unaccountable
policies that extend globalization's
reach into peoples' lives. To all
those concerned about social justice
and the creation of a humane global
order, a
democratic alternative to an ossified,
state-centered system is becoming
ever more compelling.

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