The promises and perils of subsidiarity in global governance: evidence from Africa

In the messy world of global governance, the principle of subsidiarity has the potential to order relations between different layers of governance as well as compensate for the legitimacy deficit of global governance institutions. However, subsidiarity has received surprisingly little scholarly atte...

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Veröffentlicht in:Third world quarterly 2019-11, Vol.40 (11), p.2092-2107
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description In the messy world of global governance, the principle of subsidiarity has the potential to order relations between different layers of governance as well as compensate for the legitimacy deficit of global governance institutions. However, subsidiarity has received surprisingly little scholarly attention in the discipline of International Relations. This article therefore seeks to examine the promises and perils of subsidiarity in global governance by adducing empirical evidence from Africa, a region which has authored norms and policies that often contest global norms and institutions. Based on two case studies of pro-democratic intervention in The Gambia and court proliferation at the (sub-)regional levels, the article concludes that while subsidiarity may strengthen democracy and the rule of law at the national level, it may also undermine the rule of law at the global level, as well as dilute fundamental global norms that serve to protect basic human rights. At the same time, subsidiarity provides opportunities for normative innovation, which suggests that more attention needs to be paid to the law-generating effects of subsidiarity and to the Global South as an agent of change in international law and global governance.
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source EBSCOhost Political Science Complete; Worldwide Political Science Abstracts; Sociological Abstracts; EBSCOhost Business Source Complete
subjects Academic disciplines
African Union
Attention
Case studies
Change agents
Courts
Democracy
ECOWAS
global governance
Governance
Human rights
Innovations
International Criminal Court
International law
International relations
Intervention
Legitimacy
Litigation
NGOs
Nongovernmental organizations
Rule of law
Subsidiarity
unconstitutional changes of government
title The promises and perils of subsidiarity in global governance: evidence from Africa
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