Hostname: page-component-8448b6f56d-c47g7 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-23T12:30:51.266Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Power, Control, and the Logic of Substitution in Institutional Design: The Case of International Climate Finance

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  16 June 2020

Get access

Abstract

How do powerful states control international organizations (IOs)? In contrast to the conventional wisdom that treats weighted voting rules as the primary means that powerful states use to codify their asymmetric control in institutional design, we propose that funding rules are equally important. Our framework develops a logic of substitution whereby permissive earmark rules—that allow donors to stipulate how their contributions to an IO are used—are a design substitute for weighted voting from wealthy states’ perspective. Whether asymmetric control is incorporated in design through voting or funding rules depends on whether egalitarian norms emphasizing political and legal equality, or shareholder norms emphasizing influence commensurate with financial power, govern voting and representation rights at the IO. Focusing on the domain of climate finance, we demonstrate that weighted voting rules are used at international climate finance institutions (ICFIs) associated with multilateral development banks, but that wealthy states pursued permissive earmark rules at ICFIs within the United Nations system where egalitarian norms are strong. In this way, powerful donors can exert control over resource allocation even when developing states appear to hold equal influence on governing bodies. In addition to providing a reassessment of how power translates into control at IOs, our framework offers insight into forum-shopping behavior and sheds light on substitution dynamics that involve other dimensions of design across a range of issue areas.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The IO Foundation 2020

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Adaptation Fund. 2018. Resource Mobilization Strategy. AFB/B.32/Inf.6.Google Scholar
Allee, Todd, and Peinhardt, Clint. 2014. Evaluating Three Explanations for the Design of Bilateral Investment Treaties. World Politics 66 (1):4787.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Alter, Karen, and Meunier, Sophie. 2009. The Politics of Regime Complexity. Perspectives on Politics 7 (1):1324.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Andonova, Liliana, Hale, Thomas, and Roger, Charles. 2017. National Policy and Transnational Governance of Climate Change: Substitutes or Complements? International Studies Quarterly 61 (2):253–68.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ayers, Jessica. 2009. International Funding to Support Urban Adaptation to Climate Change. Environment and Urbanization 21 (1):225–40.Google Scholar
Bayram, A. Burcu, and Graham, Erin R.. 2017. Financing the United Nations: Explaining Variation in How Donors Provide Funding to the UN. Review of International Organizations 12 (3):421–59.Google Scholar
Blake, Daniel, and Payton, Autumn 2015. Balancing Design Objectives: Analyzing New Data on Voting Rules in Intergovernmental Organizations. Review of International Organizations 10 (3):377402.Google Scholar
Collier, David, Brady, Henry, and Seawright, Jason. 2004. Sources of Leverage in Causal Inference. In Rethinking Social Inquiry, edited by Brady, Henry and Collier, David, 229–66. Rowman and Littlefield.Google Scholar
Danish International Development Agency (DANIDA). 2018. Global Environment Facility (GEF) and Least Developed Countries Fund (LDCF). Danish Organisation Strategy for Global Environment Facility and Least Development Countries Fund, 2018–2022.Google Scholar
Department for International Development (DFID) 2011. Multilateral Aid Review: Assessment for Global Environment Facility. Available at <https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/multilateral-aid-review-assessment-for-global-environment-facility-gef>..>Google Scholar
Drezner, Daniel. 2009. The Power and Peril of International Regime Complexity. Perspectives on Politics 7 (1):6570.Google Scholar
Drezner, Daniel. 2013. The Tragedy of the Global Institutional Commons. In Back to Basics: State Power in a Contemporary World, edited by Finnemore, Martha and Goldstein, Judith, 280312. Oxford University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Eichenauer, Vera, and Reinsberg, Bernhard. 2017. What Determines Earmarked Funding to International Development Organizations? Evidence from the New Multi-Bi Aid Data. Review of International Organizations 12 (2):171–97.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fridahl, Mathias, Upadhyaya, Prabhat, and Linnér, Björn-Ola. 2014. Supporting Nationally Appropriate Mitigation Actions through the Green Climate Fund. Carbon and Climate Law Review 8 (4):257–69.Google Scholar
Green Climate Fund (GCF). 2011. Governing Instrument for the Green Climate Fund.Google Scholar
GCF. 2014a. Report of the Eighth Meeting of the Board, 1417 October 2014.Google Scholar
GCF 2014b. Decisions of the Board—Seventh Meeting of the Board, 1821 May 2014.Google Scholar
GCF 2014c. Policies for Contributions to the Green Climate Fund: Recommendations by Interested Contributors.Google Scholar
GCF 2014d. Outcome of the First and Second Meeting of Interested Contributors. GCF/B.08/14.Google Scholar
GCF. 2015a. Contribution Arrangement: Commonwealth of Australia.Google Scholar
GCF. 2015b. Contribution Arrangement: Canada.Google Scholar
GCF. 2015c. Contribution Arrangement: United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland.Google Scholar
GCF. 2016. Contribution Arrangement: United States of America.Google Scholar
GCF. 2018. Arrangements for the First Formal Replenishment of the Green Climate Fund. Meeting of the Board. 1–4 July 2018. Songdo, Incheon, Republic of Korea. Provisional agenda item 10(a). GCF/B.20/06/Rev.01 25 June 2018.Google Scholar
GCF. 2019. Report on the Implementation of the Initial Strategic Plan of the GCF: 2015–2018. Oslo, Norway.Google Scholar
Global Environment Facility (GEF). 2008. Highlights of the Council's Discussion: GEF Council Meeting.Google Scholar
GEF. 2009. Innovative Financing Mechanisms for the GEF. First Meeting for the Fifth Replenishment of the GEF Trust Fund. 17–18 March 2009. Paris. GEF/R.5/8.Google Scholar
GEF Bulletin. 2018. Summary of the 54th GEF Council Meeting and Sixth GEF Assembly. Da Nang, Vietnam.Google Scholar
Gianaris, William. 1990. Weighted Voting in the International Monetary Fund and World Bank. Fordham International Law Journal 14 (4):910–45.Google Scholar
Gold, Joseph. 1981. The Origins of Weighted Voting Power in the Fund. Finance and Development 18 (1):2528.Google Scholar
Graham, Erin R. 2015. Money and Multilateralism: How Funding Rules Constitute IO Governance. International Theory 7 (1):162–94.Google Scholar
Graham, Erin R. 2017. The Institutional Design of Funding Rules at International Organizations: Explaining the Transformation in Financing the United Nations European Journal of International Relations 23 (2):365–90.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Graham, Erin R., and Thompson, Alexander. 2015. Efficient Orchestration? The Global Environment Facility in the Governance of Climate Adaptation. In International Organizations as Orchestrators, edited by Abbott, Kenneth, Genschel, Philipp, Snidal, Duncan, and Zangl, Bernhard, 114–38. Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Grasso, Marco. 2011. The Role of Justice in the North-South Conflict in Climate Change: The Case of Negotiations on the Adaptation Fund. International Environmental Agreements 11 (4):361–77.Google Scholar
Green, Jessica, and Hale, Thomas. 2017. Reversing the Marginalization of Global Environmental Politics in International Relations: An Opportunity for the Discipline. PS: Political Science and Politics 50 (2):473–79.Google Scholar
Grigorescu, Alexandru. 2015. Democratic Intergovernmental Organizations? Normative Pressures and Decision-Making Rules. Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gruber, Lloyd. 2000. Ruling the World: Power Politics and the Rise of Supranational Institutions. Princeton University Press.Google Scholar
Hall, Nina, and Persson, Åsa. 2018. Global Climate Adaptation Governance: Why Is It Not Legally Binding? European Journal of International Relations 24 (3):540–66.Google Scholar
Hall, Nina, and Woods, Ngaire. 2018. Theorizing the Role of Executive Heads in International Organizations. European Journal of International Relations 24 (4):865–86.Google Scholar
Haughey, Addie. 2009. The World Bank Clean Technology Fund: Friend or Foe to the UNFCCC? Sustainable Development Law and Policy 9 (2):5761, 76–78.Google Scholar
Hawkins, Darren, Lake, David, Nielson, Daniel, and Tierney, Michael, eds. 2006. Delegation and Agency in International Organizations. Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Helfer, Laurence. 2013. Flexibility in International Agreements. In Interdisciplinary Perspectives on International Law, edited by Pollack, Mark and Dunoff, Jeffrey, 175–96. Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Johnson, Tana. 2014. Organizational Progeny: Why Governments Are Losing Control Over the Proliferating Structures of Global Governance. Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Joshi, Devin, and O'Dell, Roni Kay 2013. Global Governance and Development Ideology: The United Nations and the World Bank on the Left-Right Spectrum. Global Governance 19 (2):249–75.Google Scholar
Kaya, Ayse. 2015. Power and Global Economic Institutions. Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kim, Soo Yeon. 2010. Power and the Governance of Global Trade: From the GATT to the WTO. Cornell University Press.Google Scholar
Koremenos, Barbara. 2005. Contracting Around International Uncertainty. American Political Science Review 99 (4):549–65.Google Scholar
Koremenos, Barbara. 2016. The Continent of International Law: Explaining Agreement Design. Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Koremenos, Barbara, Lipson, Charles, and Snidal, Duncan. 2001. The Rational Design of International Institutions. International Organization 55 (4):761–99.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Krasner, Stephen. 1991. Global Communications and National Power: Life on the Pareto Frontier. International Organization 43 (3):336–66.Google Scholar
Lake, David, and McCubbins, Mathew. 2006. The Logic of Delegation to International Organizations. In Delegation and Agency in International Organizations, edited by Hawkins, Darren, Lake, David, Nielson, Daniel, and Tierney, Michael, 341–68. Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Lipscy, Phillip. 2017. Renegotiating the World Order: Institutional Change in International Relations. Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Maggi, Giovanni, and Morelli, Massimo. 2006. Self-Enforcing Voting in International Organizations. American Economic Review 96 (4):1137–58.Google Scholar
Mahn, Timo. 2012. The Financing of Development Cooperation at the United Nations: Why More Means Less. German Development Institute.Google Scholar
Mahoney, John, and Thelen, Kathleen, eds. 2010. Explaining Institutional Change: Ambiguity, Agency and Power. Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Mitchell, Ronald, and Kelibach, Patricia. 2001. Situation Structure and Institutional Design: Reciprocity, Coercion, and Exchange. International Organization 55 (4):891917.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Multilateral Organisation Performance Assessment Network (MOPAN). 2019. MOPAN 2017–2018 Assessments: Global Environment Facility.Google Scholar
Nakhooda, Smita. 2010. Getting to Work: A Review of the Operations of the Clean Technology Fund. Washington, DC. World Resources Institute.Google Scholar
Nielson, Daniel and Tierney, Michael. 2003. Delegation to International Organizations: Agency Theory and World Bank Environmental Reform. International Organization 57 (2):241–76.Google Scholar
North American Aerospace Defense Command (NORAD). 2010. Real-Time Evaluation of Norway's International Climate and Forest Initiative: Contributions to a Global REDD+ Regime 2007–2010.Google Scholar
Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD). 2010. DAC Report on Multilateral Development Aid.Google Scholar
OECD. 2011. Multilateral Aid 2010.Google Scholar
Pelc, Krzysztof. 2011. How States Ration Flexibility: Tariffs, Remedies, and Exchange Rates as Policy Substitutes. World Politics 63 (4):618–46.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pelc, Krzysztof. 2016. Making and Bending International Rules. Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Pickering, Jonathan, Betzold, Carola, and Skovgaard, Jakob. 2017. Special Issue: Managing Fragmentation and Complexity in the Emerging System of International Climate Finance. International Environmental Agreements 17 (1):116.Google Scholar
Pickering, Jonathan, Skovgaard, Jakob, Kim, Soyeun, Timmons Roberts, J., Rossati, David, Stadelmann, Martin, and Reich, Hendrikje. 2015. Acting on Climate Finance Pledges: Inter-Agency Dynamics and Relationships with Aid in Contributor States. World Development 68 (1):149–62.Google Scholar
Pierson, Paul. 2004. Politics in Time: History, Institutions, and Social Analysis. Princeton University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Reinsberg, Bernhard. 2017. Trust Funds As a Lever of Influence at International Development Organizations. Global Policy 8 (S5):8595.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Roberts, J. Timmons. 2011. Multipolarity and the New World (Dis)order: US Hegemonic Decline and the Fragmentation of the Global Climate Regime. Global Environmental Change 21 (3):776–84.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Schneider, Christina, and Slantchev, Branislav. 2013. Abiding by the Vote: Between-Groups Conflict in International Collective Action. International Organization 67 (4):759–96.Google Scholar
Sjoberg, Helen. 1999. Restructuring the Global Environment Facility. Working Paper 13. World Bank.Google Scholar
Sohn, Louis. 1975. Voting Procedures in United Nations Conferences for the Codification of International Law. The American Journal of International Law 69 (2):310–53.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Squatrito, Theresa. 2017. Resourcing Global Justice: The Resource Management Design of International Courts. Global Policy 8 (S5):6274.Google Scholar
Stavins, Robert, and Stowe, Robert. 2010. What Hath Copenhagen Wrought? A Preliminary Assessment. Environment: Science and Policy for Sustainable Development 52 (3):814.Google Scholar
Stone, Randall. 2011. Controlling Institutions: International Organizations and the Global Economy. Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Tallberg, Jonas, Sommerer, Thomas, Squatrito, Theresa, and Jonsson, Christer. 2014. Explaining the Transnational Design of International Organizations. International Organization 68 (4):741–74.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tan, Celine. 2008. No Additionality, New Conditionality: A Critique of the World Bank's Proposed Climate Investment Funds. Third World Network. Briefing Paper 5.Google Scholar
TANGO International. 2015. Independent Evaluation of the Adaptation Fund: First Phase Evaluation Report. World Bank.Google Scholar
Tannenwald, Nina. 1999. The Nuclear Taboo: The United States and the Normative Basis of Nuclear Non-Use. International Organization 53 (3):433–68.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Thompson, Alexander 2010. Rational Design in Motion: Uncertainty and Flexibility in the Global Climate Regime. European Journal of International Relations 16 (2):269–96.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Voeten, Erik. 2001. Outside Options and the Logic of Security Council Action. The American Political Science Review 95 (4):845–58.Google Scholar
Wendt, Alexander. 2001. Driving with the Rearview Mirror: On the Rational Science of Institutional Design. International Organization 55 (4):1019–49.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
World Economic Forum 2013. The Green Investment Report: The Ways and Mean to Unlock Private Finance for Green Growth.Google Scholar
Young, Oran. 1999. Governance in World Affairs. Cornell University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Zoellick, Robert. 2012. Why We Still Need the World Bank: Looking Beyond Aid. Foreign Affairs 91 (2):6678.Google Scholar
Supplementary material: PDF

Graham and Serdaru supplementary material

Graham and Serdaru supplementary material 1

Download Graham and Serdaru supplementary material(PDF)
PDF 203.6 KB
Supplementary material: File

Graham and Serdaru supplementary material

Graham and Serdaru supplementary material 2

Download Graham and Serdaru supplementary material(File)
File 14.2 KB
Supplementary material: Link

Graham and Serdaru Dataset

Link