Power in Practice: Negotiating the International Intervention in Libya

Rebecca Adler-Nissen, Vincent Pouliot

177 Citationer (Scopus)
959 Downloads (Pure)

Abstract

How does power work in practice? Much of the “stuff” that state agents and other international actors do, on an everyday basis, remains impenetrable to existing IR theory. This is unfortunate, as the everyday performance of international practices actually helps shape world policy outcomes. In this article we develop a framework to grasp the concrete workings of power in international politics. The notion of “emergent power” bridges two different understandings of power: as capability or relation. Emergent power refers to the generation and deployment of endogenous resources – social skills and competences – generated in particular practices. The framework is illustrated with an in-­‐depth analysis of the multilateral diplomatic process that led to 2011 international intervention in Libya. Through a detailed account of the negotiations at the UN, NATO and the EU, the article demonstrates how, in practice, state representatives translate their skills into actual influence and generate a power politics that eschews structural analysis. We argue that seemingly trivial struggles over diplomatic competence within these three multilateral organizations played a crucial role in the intervention in Libya. A focus on practice resituates existing approaches to power and influence in IR, demonstrating that in practice, power also emerges locally from social contexts.
OriginalsprogEngelsk
Artikelnummer2
TidsskriftEuropean Journal of International Relations
Vol/bind20
Udgave nummer4
Sider (fra-til)889-911
Antal sider22
ISSN1354-0661
DOI
StatusUdgivet - 24 dec. 2014

Emneord

  • Det Samfundsvidenskabelige Fakultet
  • Libyen
  • Diplomati
  • Intervention
  • krig
  • NATO
  • FN
  • EU
  • forhandlinger
  • Practice
  • Magt
  • magtteori
  • R2P
  • International relations theory
  • International politik

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