Welcome! This site is intended for exchanging ideas on the topic of information technologies and their role in global politics. It is part of an online module in the M.A. International Relations Online Program at the Free University of Berlin.

The central theme of the module concerns the nature of global governance in a networked information environment.
We will begin by discussing neorealists and neoliberals' perspectives on the role of the media and information technologies in international relations. We will then define collective action and identify global efforts of such action in the form of transnational advocacy networks and the role of epistemic networks. We will conclude our module exploring the idea that the rise of global information flows has created a new system of governance, one that is parallel to the state system.

July 10, 2012

Network Realism


Our inquiry into the ways ICTs change the nature of collective action in its various appearances has led us to the conclusion that conventional hierarchical governance is competing with new ways to distribute public goods and achieve collective outcomes. In this last unit of the module, Livingston integrates what we have learned about the underlying factors, forces, and mechanisms into a comprehensive image. It depicts how ICTs  establish Castells’ “new communication space“ (2007, p.238) and reconfigurate power structures in favor of an institutionally less constrained society. Based on this, I would like to close the circle and develop a theoretical perspective that builds on the insights we have gained into electronically enabled global politics and relates to the neo-realist considerations in the beginning of the module.

New Actors

Transforming time and space and casting networks across the globe (Castells, 2011), ICTs raise issues and problems on a global scale that cannot be dealt with by national governments (Castells, 2007, p.258). As a result, the nation-state as the principle form of social organization is superseded (Robinson, 1998, p.564) and alternative modes of governance emerge. Dependent on the public good the provide, they operate outside (e.g. knowledge through Wikipedia) or inside a “shadow of hierarchy“ (infrastructure or security provided by contractors to the state). While Börzel and Risse use their observations in areas of limited statehood to argue for governance without government (2010, p.120), Livingston implies that the nation-state will not vanish referring to Sen (1982), who limits that possibility by pointing out that it is only the state that has the capacity to provide public goods such as infrastructure or other resource-related services. New actors qualify for governance as the nation-state does not have the respective monopoly anymore.

New Public Space

The emergence of ICTs can be considered to be “a historical shift of the public sphere from the institutional realm to the new communication space“, an electronically enabled network space where private and collective interests are negotiated a society is grounded in (Castells, 2007, pp.238/258). That new communication space is of conflictive nature, as societies have diverse and contradictory values and interests that merge and clash there and thus define its power relations (ibid. p.239). Hence, states and non-state actors are in competition to shape the power structures in the new public sphere according to their very own interests. Rising mass self-communication (ibid., 248) of society’s “long tail“ (as discussed last week) enables everyone to pursue his own interests and aim at changing values and interests, thus altering the prevailing power relations (ibid., p.249), regardless of contradictory preferences of others. So, as hierarchy dwindles and the nation state gets absorbed by a plenticity of stakeholders, each one in pursuit to alter the the public space’s power relations, i.e. distribution of power, in his favor, we arrive at “the condition of meer Nature, that is to say of absolute Liberty [...] and the condition of Warre“ (Hobbes, 1651, Ch.XXXI): a digital anarchy.
Any collective outcome pursued, regardless if it is motivated by political or economical calculation or by moral values, can only be achieved through a change in the prevailing power relations, in opposition to those who are interested in maintaining them. The precondition of such a successful placement of own interests is a familiar one: in a condition of anarchy, “relative gain is more important than absolute gain“ (Waltz, 1959, p.198). As Waltz put it for states, “the closer the competition, the more strongly states seek relative gains rather than absolute ones“ (ibid. p.xi).

A New Notion of Power

Recalling our first discussion, Na’ama raised the question if we should consider technological capabilites as a new form of hard power. As we have seen above, in a new public sphere characterized by mass self-communication of the “long tail“, every one has a certain minimum of access to ICTs. Castells statement that “power relations, in our social and technological context, are largely dependent on the process of socialized communication“ (ibid., 240), thus points out a shift of the meaning of power from technological capabilities to contents and the way they are shared, as power depends on “socialized  communication“.

Descriptive empirical evidence can be found inter alia in Pedro’s examples of last week (Zapatista Revoluion and Chilean education protests) as well as– of course – in the Arab Spring. Both illustrations examplify the change of prevailing power relations after social movements have gained relatively more than their counter-part.

New Approach

At the end of these considerations I come to conclude that 

- Castells’ new public space in the communication sphere can be perceived as a system of digital  
  anarchy,
- this public space is contested and thus determined by the power relations, i.e. distributions of 
  power among its constituents, and that
- the dynamics of these power relations change as actors gain relatively as compared to their 
  competitors.

While these processes parallel basic realist notions, ICTs clearly contrast the new public space from a realist/neo-realist assessment of the traditional international system as they

- have qualified a variety of stakeholders in the public space as key actors in global politics and  
  enqueued the state, which used to be the sole key actor in IR, and
- rely on a broader notion of “power“.

It is time to adjust inherited realist/neo-realist principles to the social world as we have become acquainted with it in our module and think about realism/neo-realism in electronically enabled networks.

Benni

References:
Börzel, Tanja A., and Thomas Risse; 2010; Governance without a State: Can it Work?;  in Regulation & Governance 4; pp. 113–134

Castells, Manuel; 2007; Communication, Power and Counter-power in the Network Society, in: International Journal of Communication 1; pp. 238-266

Castells, Manuel; 2011; The Rise of the Network Society: The Information Age: Economy; Society and Culture; Cambridge; Blackwell; accessed on 9 July 2012 via http://books.google.de/books?id=FihjywtjTdUC&printsec=frontcover&hl=de&source=gbs_ge_summary_r&cad=0#v=onepage&q&f=false


Hobbes, Thomas; 1651; Leviathan or the Matter, Forme, and Power of a Common-Wealth Ecclesiastical and Civill; Printed for Andrew Crooke, at the Green Dragon in St. Paul's Churchyard; accessed on 9 July 2012 via  http://www.gutenberg.org/files/3207/3207-h/3207-h.htm

Robinson, William I.; 1998; Beyond Nation-State Paradigms: Globalization, Sociology, and the Challenge of Transnational Studies; in Sociological Forum; Vol. 13; No. 4; pp. 561-594; accessed on 09 July 2012 via http://www.springerlink.com.proxy.queensu.ca/content/jhu5q40851312h03/fulltext.pdf

Sen, Armatya; 1982; Poverty and Famines: An Essay on Entitlements and Deprivation; Alderley; Clarendon Press

Waltz, Kenneth N.; 1959/2001; Man, the State, and War; New York; Columbia University Press; accessed on 9 July 2012 via
http://books.google.de/books?id=qUsb210ml48C&printsec=frontcover&hl=de&source=gbs_ge_summary_r&cad=0#v=onepage&q&f=false