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Journal of Conflict Resolution
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The Independence of International Organizations

Concept and Applications

Yoram Z. Haftel

Department of Political Science, University of Illinois at Chicago

Alexander Thompson

Department of Political Science, Ohio State University

Despite its widespread use in studies of domestic political institutions, the concept of "independence" has not been systematically applied to the study of international institutions. Most arguments regarding the ability of international organizations (IOs) to promote cooperation and mitigate conflict rely on the implicit assumption that such institutions possess some independence from states, and yet the field has failed to conceptualize—let alone measure—this institutional characteristic. Extracting insights from the theoretical literatures on both international and domestic institutions, the authors distill several design features that lend independence to political institutions and then generate coding rules for measuring the independence of IOs. Based on an original data set of regional integration arrangements, the authors then use regression analysis to test several propositions for explaining variation in IO independence, shedding light on some important theoretical and empirical puzzles in international relations.

Key Words: international organizations • regional integration • institutional design • independence

Journal of Conflict Resolution, Vol. 50, No. 2, 253-275 (2006)
DOI: 10.1177/0022002705285288


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[Abstract] [PDF]