Description

Book Synopsis
This book seeks to explain how political actors know how to change, interpret, and apply the rules that comprise rule-based global order. It argues that actors in world politics are simultaneously engaged in an ongoing social practice of rule-making, interpretation and application.

Trade Review
[A] fantastic achievement. Scholars of international security, global governance, and practice will find the book to be of value. Moreover, policymakers must consider its message: the stakes of modern great-power competition are the rules of the international system, and in this world, skill in rulemaking is as important to a state's national security interests as a bullet on the battlefield. This insight should caution U.S. policymakers who seek a retreat from global governance, as well as encourage the Biden administration as it seeks to restore U.S. leadership in the world. * Miles M. Evers, H-Diplo *
The book extends practice theory's application beyond specific aspects of world politics (like diplomacy) to the more general phenomenon of argumentation. This approach enables Raymond to make constitutive and causal explanations about the process of rule change. * Perspectives on Politics *
What goes into the making of successful global rules? In this sweeping and intellectually powerful analysis, Raymond shows that there are generic procedural rules for making rules that apply across contexts. Spanning topics from great power management and collective security to terrorism and cybersecurity, Raymond deftly reveals commonalties in the construction of governance arrangements of all types. A must-read for all students of global governance and international politics. * Martha Finnemore, University Professor of Political Science and International Affairs, George Washington University *
It's one thing to talk about rules and their properties in the abstract. It's quite another thing to talk about rules in practice-lawyers do this for a living, but only with a limited stock of formal rules; many constructivists talk about informal rules in the wooliest terms. It is altogether something else to map 'the endogenous dynamics of complex rule sets.' These are Mark Raymond's words for his ambitiously conceived, carefully executed project. Finding rules for making rules in four astutely chosen case studies, Raymond shows how two centuries of social construction have given us today's system of international governance. * Nicholas Greenwood Onuf, Professor Emeritus of Politics and International Relations, Florida International University *
If global governance is about rule-making and interpretation, these activities are themselves governed by secondary rules. In one of the most thoughtful constructivist works of recent years, Mark Raymond examines how and why social practices of secondary rule-making have structured global security orders from the Concert of Europe to the campaign against al Qaeda and ongoing efforts to regulate cyberwarfare. * Jason Sharman, Sir Patrick Sheehy Professor of International Relations, University of Cambridge *

Table of Contents
Acknowledgments Introduction Chapter 1: Social Practices of Rule-Making Chapter 2: The Social Construction of Great Power Management, 1815-1822 Chapter 3: Banning War: Social Practices of Rule-Making in the Interwar Period Chapter 4: Social Practices of Rule-Making and the Global War on Terror Chapter 5: Applying Old Rules to New Cases: International Law in the Cyber Domain Conclusion Notes References Index

Social Practices of RuleMaking in World Politics

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    A Hardback by Mark Raymond

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      View other formats and editions of Social Practices of RuleMaking in World Politics by Mark Raymond

      Publisher: Oxford University Press Inc
      Publication Date: 11/04/2019
      ISBN13: 9780190913113, 978-0190913113
      ISBN10: 190913118

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      This book seeks to explain how political actors know how to change, interpret, and apply the rules that comprise rule-based global order. It argues that actors in world politics are simultaneously engaged in an ongoing social practice of rule-making, interpretation and application.

      Trade Review
      [A] fantastic achievement. Scholars of international security, global governance, and practice will find the book to be of value. Moreover, policymakers must consider its message: the stakes of modern great-power competition are the rules of the international system, and in this world, skill in rulemaking is as important to a state's national security interests as a bullet on the battlefield. This insight should caution U.S. policymakers who seek a retreat from global governance, as well as encourage the Biden administration as it seeks to restore U.S. leadership in the world. * Miles M. Evers, H-Diplo *
      The book extends practice theory's application beyond specific aspects of world politics (like diplomacy) to the more general phenomenon of argumentation. This approach enables Raymond to make constitutive and causal explanations about the process of rule change. * Perspectives on Politics *
      What goes into the making of successful global rules? In this sweeping and intellectually powerful analysis, Raymond shows that there are generic procedural rules for making rules that apply across contexts. Spanning topics from great power management and collective security to terrorism and cybersecurity, Raymond deftly reveals commonalties in the construction of governance arrangements of all types. A must-read for all students of global governance and international politics. * Martha Finnemore, University Professor of Political Science and International Affairs, George Washington University *
      It's one thing to talk about rules and their properties in the abstract. It's quite another thing to talk about rules in practice-lawyers do this for a living, but only with a limited stock of formal rules; many constructivists talk about informal rules in the wooliest terms. It is altogether something else to map 'the endogenous dynamics of complex rule sets.' These are Mark Raymond's words for his ambitiously conceived, carefully executed project. Finding rules for making rules in four astutely chosen case studies, Raymond shows how two centuries of social construction have given us today's system of international governance. * Nicholas Greenwood Onuf, Professor Emeritus of Politics and International Relations, Florida International University *
      If global governance is about rule-making and interpretation, these activities are themselves governed by secondary rules. In one of the most thoughtful constructivist works of recent years, Mark Raymond examines how and why social practices of secondary rule-making have structured global security orders from the Concert of Europe to the campaign against al Qaeda and ongoing efforts to regulate cyberwarfare. * Jason Sharman, Sir Patrick Sheehy Professor of International Relations, University of Cambridge *

      Table of Contents
      Acknowledgments Introduction Chapter 1: Social Practices of Rule-Making Chapter 2: The Social Construction of Great Power Management, 1815-1822 Chapter 3: Banning War: Social Practices of Rule-Making in the Interwar Period Chapter 4: Social Practices of Rule-Making and the Global War on Terror Chapter 5: Applying Old Rules to New Cases: International Law in the Cyber Domain Conclusion Notes References Index

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