Scholarship@WashULaw

Document Type

Book Section

Publication Date

2024

Publication Title

Democratic Representation in and by International Organizations (Forthcoming)

Abstract

The United Nations and its bodies have 'opened up' to a broad range of non-state actors over the last three decades, including for-profit actors and their representatives. The shift is reflected in the UN's sustainable development goals and the Global Compact, emphasizing public-private partnerships; in greater participation of corporations at treaty conferences; in trade group roles as observers at organizations; and in multi-stakeholder projects. Yet international organizations have generally not developed robust responses to legitimacy concerns about businesses becoming closely involved in lawmaking and governance projects. These concerns focus on interest group capture, entrenchment of western economic elites, creeping privatization, and erasure of public deliberation. Indeed, the participation of for-profit actors and their representatives has largely been a 'silent revolution': under-heralded and under-examined. This chapter argues that responses to for-profit roles in the work of international organizations tend to express one of two logics, not yet reconciled. The logic of 'representation' values public authority, interest representation, transparency, and accountability. The logic of 'expedience' values pragmatic problem-solving, efficiency, knowledge, and progress. Each has different priorities and blind spots, encompasses an array of theoretical approaches, and would push the international system in a different direction.

Keywords

International organizations, Nonstate Actors, Nongovernmental Organizations, Trade Associations, For-Profit Actors, Corporations, Democratic Representation, Participation, Public-Private Partnerships, Lawmaking, Legitimacy

Publication Citation

Melissa J. Durkee, The Ambivalent Logics of Business Representation in International Organizations | Collège de France, in Democratic Representation in and by International Organizations (Samantha Besson ed., forthcoming 2024)

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