An institute of the State University of New York  
-
Join the Globalization101.org Facebook Group
- Archive
   International Law and Organizations
Email This
Print This Page Download the Issue Brief
Introduction

A vast network of international law and dozens of international organizations make globalization possible. Treaties and other types of agreements among countries set rules for international trade and finance, such as the GATT; foster cooperation on protecting the environment, such as the Kyoto Protocol; and establish basic human rights, such as the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights. Meanwhile, among many international organizations, the United Nations facilitates international diplomacy, the World Health Organization coordinates international public health and protection, and the International Labor Organization monitors and fosters workers’ rights around the world.

The scope and authority of international law have thus expanded dramatically during the era of globalization. Historically, international law addressed only relations between states in certain limited areas (such as war and diplomacy) and was dependent on the sovereignty and territorial boundaries of distinct countries (generally referred to as “states”).

But globalization has changed international law in numerous ways. For example, as globalization has accelerated, international law has become a vehicle for states to cooperate regarding new areas of international relations (such as the environment and human rights), many of them requiring states to rethink the previous notions of the inviolable sovereign state. The continued growth of international law is even more remarkable in this sense, since states, having undoubtedly weighed the costs and benefits of the loss of this valuable sovereignty, have still chosen to continue the growth of international law.

Because of the need for enhanced international (or as some call it, “transnational”) cooperation, globalization has therefore given new meanings to classic issues. Questions of the authority of a country within its own bordersthat is, its state sovereigntythe role of the individual in the international community of nation-states, and the authority of international organizations, have all evolved in light of the forces of globalization.

The following Issue Brief describes the sources of international law and the subjects it covers; the international organizations that implement international law; and some of the controversial aspects related to international law and organizations as well as their relationships to state sovereignty.

Next : What Is International Law?
Related News
What Nordic Countries Think About Globalization
Medical Waste: Challenges Faced Around the World
Gaza Flotilla: Globalization at Work
Did Goldman Sachs’s Alleged Fraud Cause Greece’s Debt?
Upholding Niger's Constitution
Iraqi Elections
Haiti’s Struggles Continue: A Case of Child Trafficking?
What Greece Thinks About Globalization
International Corporate Social Responsibility
Financial Crisis Commission Inquiry: Looking Backward and Moving Forward
The International Diamond Trade: Human Rights Implications and Economic Consequences
Copenhagen Climate Change Conference: Negative Reviews for a Weak Post-2012 Agreement
Failed States: Insight into Two of the World’s Most Broken States
Maritime Piracy: The Phenomenon, its Implications and Responses
Cocoa: A Hot Commodity with a Cold History
For Teachers
Unit on International Law and Organizations
Unit on Darfur
   Authorship, Copyright, and Citation Notice