Functionalism 1.ppt - kiit school of law

shrutisahu250 11 views 17 slides Jun 22, 2024
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About This Presentation

2nd sem Global political theory


Slide Content

Sanghamitra Patnaik, Ph.D.
AGP-2115

Introduction
According toDavid Mitrany , dealing with functional
matters provides the actors in the international
community the opportunity to successfully cooperate
in a non-political context, which might otherwise be
harder to achieve in a political context.

Contd..
Development would lead to a process called
“autonomous development” towards
multiplication, expansion, and deepening of
functional international organizations.
Ideally, this would ultimately result in
anInternational Government.

Contd..
Functionalists in this manner assume that
cooperation in a non-political context would
bringinternational peace.
Eradication of existent non-political, non-
military global problems, which Functionalists
consider to be the very origin of conflict within
the global community, is what they aim to pursue.

Contd..
The idea of international cooperation was elaborated
by L. T. Hobhouse, and then by L. Woolf and G. D. H.
Cole.
The main rationale behind it was that peace is more
than the absence of violence.
On the other hand, Mitrany argued that a world
community was a prerequisite for world government.

Contd..
Nationalism and international anarchy were seen as
the causes behind the division of the world
community into rival units.
He believed that the establishment of such a
community would solve the problems plaguing the
international system.

Contd..
Mitrany envisaged a world organized on the basis of
functional relations.
He advocated a combination between international
organization and national freedom, as obviously all
protagonists did not share the same interests and,
conversely, all common interests were not equal in all
countries.

Contd..
There are strong assumptions underpinning
functionalism:
1) That the process of integration takes place
within a framework of human freedom,
2) That knowledge and expertise are currently
available to meet the needs for which the
functional agencies are built.
3) That states will not sabotage the process.

Contd..
Functionalism proposed to build a form of authority
based in functions and needs, which linked authority
with needs, scientific knowledge, expertise and
technology, i.e. it provided a supraterritorial concept
of authority.

Contd..
The functionalist approach excludes and refutes the
idea of state power and political influence (realist
approach) in interpreting the cause for such
proliferation of international organizations during the
inter-war (which was characterized by nation-state
conflict) and the subsequent years.

Contd..
According to functionalism,
internationalintegration –the collective governance
and 'material interdependence' (Mitrany, 1933:101)
between states –develops its own internal dynamic as
states integrate in limited functional, technical, and/or
economic areas.
International agencies would meet human needs,
aided by knowledge and expertise.

Contd..
The benefits rendered by the functional agencies
would attract the loyalty of the populations and
stimulate their participation and expand the area of
integration. the law of the sea, the environment,
education and information, international relief
programs
Substantive functions of functional international
organizations include human rights, international
communication, health, , refugee support, and
economic development.

Neo-functionalism
Neo-functionalism reintroduced territorialism in the
functional theory and downplayed its global
dimension. Neo-functionalism is simultaneously a
theory and a strategy ofregional integration, building
on the work ofDavid Mitrany.

Contd..
Neo-functionalistsfocusedtheirattentionsolelyon
theimmediateprocessofintegrationamongstates,i.e.
regionalintegration.
Initially,statesintegrateinlimitedfunctionalor
economicareas.
Thereafter,partiallyintegratedstatesexperience
increasingmomentum forfurtherroundsof
integrationinrelatedareas.This“invisiblehand"of
integrationphenomenonwastermed"spill-over."by
theneo-functionalistschool

Contd..
Accordingtoneo-functionalists,therearetwokindsof
spillover:functionalandpolitical.
FunctionalSpilloveristheinterconnectionof
variouseconomicsectorsorissue-areas,andthe
integrationinonepolicy-areaspillingoverintoothers.
Politicalspilloveristhecreationofsupranational
governancemodels,asfar-reachingastheEuropean
Union,orasvoluntaryastheUnitedNations.Oneofits
protagonistwasErnestB.Hass,aUSpoliticalscientist.

Contd..
Jean Monnet's approach to European integration,
which aimed at integrating individual sectors in hopes
of achieving spill-over effects to further the process of
integration, is said to have followed the neo-functional
school's track.

Contd..
Neo-functionalism declared to be non-normative and
tried to describe and explain the process of regional
integration based on empirical data.
Integration was regarded as an inevitable process,
rather than a desirable state of affairs that could be
introduced by the political or technocratic elites of the
involved states' societies.
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