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Duties beyond borders: Ethics & morals in foreign policy February 27, 2014

Duties beyond borders: Ethics & morals in foreign policy February 27, 2014

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Page 1: Duties beyond borders: Ethics & morals in foreign policy February 27, 2014

Duties beyond borders:Ethics & morals in foreign

policy

February 27, 2014

Page 2: Duties beyond borders: Ethics & morals in foreign policy February 27, 2014

Overview

Duties beyond borders Theories of foreign policy and duties beyond

borders Are foreign policies becoming kinder and

gentler? The tragedy of Rwanda Libya: case of interests or responsibilities? Other cases

Page 3: Duties beyond borders: Ethics & morals in foreign policy February 27, 2014

Duties beyond borders

Conventional view:States make and implement policies

based on own their interests, typically defined by power or wealth.

States have obligations only to their own citizens

The duties of states stop at their territorial boundaries

Page 4: Duties beyond borders: Ethics & morals in foreign policy February 27, 2014

However, in practice states do integrate ethics into their foreign policies:

Attempting to improve the welfare of distant strangers

Acting to save the lives of strangers

Page 5: Duties beyond borders: Ethics & morals in foreign policy February 27, 2014

States increasingly expressing a commitment to aiding those outside their borders (debt relief, human rights, increased access, humanitarian intervention)

Role of activitst organisations, transnational connections, information flow etc

Page 6: Duties beyond borders: Ethics & morals in foreign policy February 27, 2014

Two key question when considering ethical obligations

Who do we owe obligations to?How do we decide right action?

Page 7: Duties beyond borders: Ethics & morals in foreign policy February 27, 2014

To whom do we owe obligations?

CommunitarianismYour own group/community, in IR this

usually means your stateSocial contract & sovereignty

CosmopolitanismTerritorial borders don’t impact our

obligations to othersAll people have equal moral worth

Page 8: Duties beyond borders: Ethics & morals in foreign policy February 27, 2014

How do we decide right action?

PrinciplesDeontological - judge actions based on

pre-established principles

ConsequencesConsequentialist - judge actions based

on their results- amount of benefit/harm they create

Page 9: Duties beyond borders: Ethics & morals in foreign policy February 27, 2014

The provision emergency relief to those whose lives are in danger

Have seen significant expansion of the humanitarian system of states, non-states, IGOs, NGOs, civil society actors, etc.

All based on a growing awareness of others and a greater sense of personal obligation

Humanitarianism

Page 10: Duties beyond borders: Ethics & morals in foreign policy February 27, 2014

Theories of foreign policy and duty beyond borders

Realist theories - states do not exhibit humanitarian duty to others

In a self-help world, states must help themselves.

States are most likely to help others when it furthers their own interests.

Rarely sacrifice for others and use high-minded ideals to camouflage their true motives.

Page 11: Duties beyond borders: Ethics & morals in foreign policy February 27, 2014

Realist normative argument: States role is protect the national

interest, not deplete their own resources and manpower to help others.

States may provide aid and food but are rarely willing to sacrifice their citizens.

Page 12: Duties beyond borders: Ethics & morals in foreign policy February 27, 2014

Liberalism suggests that states do and should have duties beyond borders.

Domestic mobilization: the key influence of domestic politics

and interest groups in shaping a state’s foreign policy (anti-slavery movement)

Page 13: Duties beyond borders: Ethics & morals in foreign policy February 27, 2014

Interdependence: visual – awareness of the plight of others

(internet/media coverage). causal, our beliefs causing us to act because

we believe it is the moral thing to do

Obligation: Stemming from belief in human reason,

liberty, autonomy and freedom

Page 14: Duties beyond borders: Ethics & morals in foreign policy February 27, 2014

Colonization: Misplaced notions of humanitarianism

helped support the belief that colonialism was justified because the West could and should help “civilize” the rest of the world.

Continue to see disagreement around intervention and humanitarianism and idea that that liberal states have right to interfere.

Coalitions have formed in favour of humanitarian intervention, but still see various critics (imperial project, etc.).

Intervention & controversy

Page 15: Duties beyond borders: Ethics & morals in foreign policy February 27, 2014

Constructivist theories: State’s identity & interests influenced by

international societyStates’ interests not defined just by

security and wealth but also various principles (commitment to human rights and the spread of democracy)

Page 16: Duties beyond borders: Ethics & morals in foreign policy February 27, 2014

The populace wants to believe their foreign policy is driven by ethical principles, not just the pursuit of power (E.H. Carr).

States want their foreign policies to appear legitimate to others (be seen to be willing to defend universal principles).

So see a desire to at least appear to be following principles

Page 17: Duties beyond borders: Ethics & morals in foreign policy February 27, 2014

Are foreign policies becoming kinder and gentler?

Increasingly states are motivated to help others - why?

Realists: motivations are rooted in a state’s pursuit of security, power, and wealth.

Liberals: globalization and communications revolution enable greater awareness.

Constructivists: interconnections among states renders humanitarianism tied to each state’s security interest.

Page 18: Duties beyond borders: Ethics & morals in foreign policy February 27, 2014

The tragedy of Rwanda

Beginning in April 1994 and over 100 days, roughly 800,000 casualties of genocide:

What did the United Nations do? The UN reduced its presence. The UN Security Council decided not to

intervene. States unwilling to contribute troops.

Page 19: Duties beyond borders: Ethics & morals in foreign policy February 27, 2014

The international community’s indifference to Rwanda brought tremendous shame to the UN Security Council and the UN itself.

In 2005 the UN General Assembly adopted core features of “responsibility to protect” document at the 2005 world summit.

Proposed document stated that when states fail in their obligations to protect their citizens, the international community inherits that responsibility.

Page 20: Duties beyond borders: Ethics & morals in foreign policy February 27, 2014

Responsibility to Protect, R2P

Commitment made by world leaders at 2005 UN World Summit

Developed out of recognition of failure of international community to act

An effort to lay out conditions and responsibilities for states and the international community in cases of the most serious humanitarian crimes: genocide, ethnic cleansing, war crimes

Page 21: Duties beyond borders: Ethics & morals in foreign policy February 27, 2014

R2P

Sets out 3 key principles:1.The state has primary responsibility to protect its people2.International community has responsibility to assist and encourage states in fulfilling this responsibility3.International community should use appropriate means to protect populations if states fail to do so

Page 22: Duties beyond borders: Ethics & morals in foreign policy February 27, 2014

Libya: case of interests or responsibilities? March 2011 Security Council authorizes

intervention in Libya Suggests how a combination of interests and

values can push even lukewarm powerful states into a supporting role.

Washington initially reluctant to get involved eventually supports intervention Role of veterans of Rwanda in administration and

supporters of the responsibility to protect, who were unwilling to see genocide occur when they could do something about it.

Page 23: Duties beyond borders: Ethics & morals in foreign policy February 27, 2014

Other interventions…or not

Côte d’Ivoire March 2011, Security Council mandates sanctions and limited intervention in response to post-election violence

Central African RepublicOngoing tensions escalated in all out crisis – 400,000 displacedInternational community criticized for not doing enough

Page 24: Duties beyond borders: Ethics & morals in foreign policy February 27, 2014

Conclusion

Humanitarian concerns have become a regular part of foreign policy discussions

How we respond to these duties, and in what situations, remains a matter of debate

See examples of intervention, but also many of inaction