After the debate this past week, I still find myself
skeptical that we will see the international environment fundamentally change,
though I do not think it is impossible. Both sides brought up a lot of great
points and each side focused on different aspects, which brought about an
interesting discussion. As we talked about in this week’s live session, I think
we focused a lot of the structure of the sovereign and the role of
international organizations played in the international environment. I believe
both groups operated under the assumption that a fundamental change in the
international environment would look like a change in sovereign territory. This
idea was brought about both in Professor Jackson’s lecture and other people
have noted this is their blog posts. I think it is important to address the
underlying assumptions of each group’s arguments before discussing other points
that were relevant to the discussion.
I would like to focus on some topics that I do not think
were talked about in as much detail in the debate as they could have been –
obviously neither side had enough time to fully talk about every important
aspect involved in this debate. Specifically, how gender and technology play a
role in a changing environment. These two variables were discussed in Jackson’s
lecture about contributing to change but I do not think either group put too
much weight in them. The pro group did bring up the example of the baboons and
how a change in their environment was reflected with the role of female and
male baboons, but I do not think this example was meant to discuss how gender
roles can affect change. They also discussed human rights, which gender roles
do fall under that category, however, I think that was a topic that could have
been expanded upon. The human rights example used in the debate focused on marriage
equality in particular.
It would have been interesting to bring up how gender roles
have changed throughout the world, but also how they have stagnated. This could
both be an example of how the sociality of the international environment
changes as well as given examples to what has stayed the same. Things such as
the rate of females in leadership roles of government across nations as well as
governments that still openly discriminate against a person’s gender would point
the change and things that haven’t changed in the environment. These subtler
aspects sound to me like an Onuf constructivist argument that rules change (gender rules
and norms that evolve and ones that don’t) and how those changes affect the
sovereign states. Would those changes demonstrate that there can be a
fundamental change in the international environment?
Along those same lines, how does technology facilitate
change in sovereign states that are autonomous vs. not? What about hard v. soft boundaries? Are these even necessary to discuss based on everything else we have talked about?
Reflecting on these points may bring about other interesting
discussion points from this debate. Again, I still find myself somewhere in the middle, but thinking through other aspects may help me find a firmer stance on this debate.
Ashley, good points.
ReplyDeleteRe: technology; this has made territorial boundaries not always the "place" where power/authority is contested.
Re: gender norms; this is probably the same as other norms/ideas traversing borders to condition/inform populations of rights and responsibilities.