Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-mlc7c Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-10T10:19:03.915Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Ordinary Patterns in an Extraordinary Crisis: How International Relations Makes Sense of the COVID-19 Pandemic

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  16 November 2020

Abstract

The customary prescription for handling “problems without passports” is to work through international intergovernmental organizations (IGOs), act collectively for humanity's future, and build up specialized knowledge. But around the world, patterns from the initial months of the COVID-19 pandemic defied the prescription. IGOs were blamed, narrow or short-term interests were prioritized, and divided reactions to experts were on display. International Relations (IR) scholarship helps explain why: (1) research on bureaucracy and institutional design examines the challenge of making IGOs accountable to member-states but also insulated from them; (2) research on delegation and socialization explores commonplace problems involving time-inconsistency and credible commitments; and (3) research on epistemic communities and anti-elitism describes the rationale and fears of permitting public policy to be guided by unelected experts. The initial months of the COVID-19 pandemic reflect how the world can look when it lacks resolute leadership to overcome commonplace aversions to IGOs, to broader or longer-term interests, and to experts. Yet while IR scholarship makes sense of these patterns, it does not say enough about why resolute leadership wanes, or what to do about IGO performance when it does. Answers to such questions are crucial not only for recovering from the COVID-19 crisis, but for dealing with whatever global crises lie ahead.

Type
Research Note
Copyright
Copyright © The IO Foundation 2020

“Problems without passports” are challenges that disregard national borders, threatening people in many different nation-states. The phrase was popularized in 2009 by former United Nations (UN) Secretary-General Kofi Annan, who saw issues such as pollution, weapons proliferation, and organized crime as humanity's shared enemies. To deal with these issues, Annan urged governments and the public to work through international intergovernmental organizations (IGOs), collaborate on collective long-term solutions, and defer to experts with specialized knowledge.Footnote 1 In other words, the response to problems without passports should be multilateral, far-sighted, and apolitical.

The novel coronavirus that spread throughout the world in 2020 certainly seemed to fit the definition of problems without passports,Footnote 2 yet as the outbreak turned into the full-fledged COVID-19 pandemic, countries defied each of Annan's prescriptions, producing three patterns.

One was a tendency to blame IGOs. More than 100 countries demanded an independent investigation into the World Health Organization (WHO) response to the disease.Footnote 3 Even researchers and non-governmental organizations that tried to defend the organization sounded apologetic, noting that the WHO's “monolithic” bureaucracy makes it slowFootnote 4 and its competing member-states make it timid.Footnote 5 But the United States government went furthest in its blame. Declaring that the organization had bungled repeatedlyFootnote 6 and “cost many lives,”Footnote 7 the US announced it would end its role as the WHO's largest financial contributor.

This relates to a second pattern: a temptation to prioritize narrow or short-term interests, rather than broad or long-term ones. Many public health experts decried the US government's de-funding move as selfish and myopic. For instance, a former WHO official warned it would jeopardize poor countries’ “main lifeline,”Footnote 8 and the president of the American Medical Association declared it made finding a solution “dramatically more challenging.”Footnote 9 But the US was hardly unique in indulging narrow or short-term interests. Against the advice of the World Health Organization, approximately eighty countries restricted exports of essential medical suppliesFootnote 10 and approximately 160 countries banned foreign travelers.Footnote 11

This points to a third pattern: a divided reaction to experts. Variation arose within and across countries as some government leaders and members of the public deferred to public health experts but others contested them.Footnote 12 For instance, many national health advisors were like-minded in recommending intense and far-reaching countermeasures such as lockdowns or contact-tracingFootnote 13—but although countries such as New Zealand and South Korea readily heeded the advice, countries such as Brazil and Russia resisted.Footnote 14 And in a sign of governments’ diverging views on experts in the WHO, a UN Security Council resolution on COVID-19 stalled for months as China insisted that the resolution endorse the World Health Organization, but the United States demanded that it not be mentioned at all.Footnote 15

These three patterns—a tendency to blame IGOs, a temptation to prioritize narrow or short-term interests, and a divided reaction to experts—mean that intergovernmental organizations are highly vulnerable. Besides being disparaged directly, IGOs embody the wider interests and specialized knowledge that are also being snubbed. At first glance, this situation seems puzzling. Why, while struggling with a pandemic, would states opt to question or punish the very IGO that is supposed to guide the world's response? Since this disease is a shared threat and cannot be defeated instantaneously, why aren't states concentrating on what would be helpful for the larger community, well into the future? And why in a crisis of public health are any politicians or members of the public refusing to follow guidance from public health experts?

The three patterns defy what Kofi Annan recommended for handling problems without passports, and international relations (IR) scholarship helps to explain why. Research on bureaucracy and institutional design examines the challenge of making IGOs accountable to member-states but also insulated from them. Research on delegation and socialization exposes governments’ hardships overcoming time-inconsistency and non-credible commitments. Research on epistemic communities and anti-elitism reveals upsides and downsides for permitting public policy to be formulated by technocratic experts. Together, these veins show how the world can look without resolute leadership that overcomes commonplace resistance to IGOs, to broader or longer-term interests, and to experts.Footnote 16 Thus, although the pandemic may be extraordinary, its political patterns are quite ordinary.Footnote 17

Yet while existing IR scholarship helps to explain these patterns from the initial months of the COVID-19 crisis, it says less about why resolute leadership wanes. It also offers little guidance about where IGOs—with their embodiment of wider interests and specialized knowledge—go from here. This points to two sets of open questions. The first set is retrospective: in what ways have current conditions resulted from ordinary IR patterns interacting with specific domestic developments, such as party polarization in the US or populism in various places around the world? A second set of questions is forward-looking: given the vulnerable position of intergovernmental organizations, how should IGO performance be gauged and (if necessary) remedied?

Concrete answers are crucial not only for recovering from the COVID-19 crisis, but also for dealing with whatever other global challenges lie ahead. The next crisis might involve nuclear proliferation, economic inequality, climate change, another pandemic, or something else entirely. But no matter what it is, absent resolute leadership, the three patterns will tend to appear again.

Pattern 1: The Tendency to Blame International Intergovernmental Organizations

During the initial months of the COVID-19 crisis, one prominent pattern was the tendency to blame the World Health Organization, the UN system's leading IGO for health policy. The US Secretary of Health and Human Services declared that the WHO had failed to “obtain the information that the world needed.”Footnote 18 US president Donald Trump announced a drastic decision to cut off WHO funding, on the grounds that the organization's Ethiopian Director-General had accepted Chinese defiance of WHO reporting obligations, hesitated to declare a global emergency, and capitulated to Chinese pressure to sideline Taiwanese warnings.Footnote 19 The US government was unusual in its harshness, but it was not alone in blaming the WHO.Footnote 20 Indeed, more than 100 countries endorsed the European Union's call for an independent investigation into the organization's handling of the disease.Footnote 21

Like other IGOs, the World Health Organization is a body that has been established by agreement among governments or their representatives, and is sufficiently institutionalized to include some sort of centralized administrative apparatus with a permanent staff.Footnote 22 In other words, IGOs are composed of member-states and also bureaucracies. Key features of bureaucracies include formal rules, a division of labor, and a hierarchical structure.Footnote 23 These features have laudable aims, such as making the staff's responses consistent and impartial, facilitating efficient accumulation and use of expertise, and ensuring a chain of command.Footnote 24

Yet formal rules, a division of labor, and a hierarchical structure—even if functioning flawlessly—also make bureaucracies seem impersonal, narrow, and regimented.Footnote 25 Bureaucracy carries negative connotations of “faceless bureaucrats” who are mired in “red tape” and are aloof from those they serve.Footnote 26 Such perceptions are particularly relevant at the international level: the majority of IGOs are headquartered in just a handful of mostly Western and wealthy countries such as Switzerland, and their performance is hard for most of the world's population to really scrutinize and understand.Footnote 27

In addition to carrying negative connotations, the bureaucracies within IGOs are easy to scapegoat because they face the near-impossible task of satisfying heterogeneous stakeholders.Footnote 28 Staff are expected to serve the interests of their member-states as well as the interests of the wider global public, but the two are not identical. Instead, the interests of national governments regularly conflict with each other and with the greater good.Footnote 29 Consequently, no matter what IGO staff do, they are likely to irritate some subset of stakeholders and be accused of performing poorly.Footnote 30

Such irritation with bureaucracy links to a conundrum highlighted in research on institutional design. When an institution is created, one key choice is setting the amount of insulation.Footnote 31 Insulation refers to a dampening of the mechanisms by which stakeholders can try to monitor, steer, or reverse organizational activities; in IGOs, for example, insulation may mean that member-states lack common levers of control such as financial domination or veto power.Footnote 32 Ideally, insulation would be set “just right”: enough that IGO bureaucracies are protected from the parochialism and vacillations of their member-states, but low enough that they are still accountable to those member-states. Unfortunately, insulation is difficult to calibrate, and even if perfect initially, it can change over time.Footnote 33 Moreover, both relatively high insulation and relatively low insulation attract blame.

Consider IGOs with relatively high insulation. If member-states cannot easily monitor, steer, or reverse what bureaucracies do, it is tough for bureaucracies to claim to be accountable. Without accountability, IGO staff can fall into pathologies such as fixating on means instead of ends, promoting one-size-fits-all policy responses, or squandering resources in battles over turf.Footnote 34 Relatedly, they could disregard their duty to national governments and instead pursue their own preferences, either by doing less than asked (shirking) or more than asked (zealotry).Footnote 35 Since relatively high insulation makes it difficult for member-states to claw back control, disgruntled governments are likely to look for ways to substitute for that IGO.

But IGOs with relatively low insulation also attract blame, though for different reasons. If member-states readily interfere with bureaucratic activities, bureaucracies cannot carve out the space needed to achieve their laudable performance aims. Instead, they can be prevented from pursuing the public good.Footnote 36 They also can be compelled to privilege a handful of member-states over others.Footnote 37 The situation becomes especially hazardous if IGO staff are caught between powerful member-states who have taken different stances on an issue: relatively low insulation makes it easy for these competing member-states to exploit existing control mechanisms in their tug-of-war to pressure or punish the IGO.

Therefore intergovernmental organizations make easy targets, since they are bureaucratic entities that seem distant from those they serve, and they can almost always be denounced for too little or too much insulation from their most powerful member-states. This helps to explain the WHO's struggles in the initial months of the COVID-19 pandemic. The World Health Organization found itself caught between two powerful and competing member-states—it was able to raise the alarm, but it could not single-handedly answer the call.Footnote 38 When the United States government suspected that the WHO bureaucracy was being manipulated by China, President Trump took advantage of an important control mechanism by moving to cut the organization's single largest source of funding.Footnote 39 Such a drastic move underscores what research on bureaucracy and institutional design teaches: it is very important but incredibly difficult to ensure that IGO bureaucracies are accountable to member-states and also insulated from them.Footnote 40

Pattern 2: The Temptation to Prioritize Narrow or Short-Term Interests

IGO-blaming is tied to a second pattern: states’ temptation to put narrow or short-term interests ahead of broader or longer-term ones. In past crises, the United States often endured special costs to lead and sustain multilateralism.Footnote 41 Yet this time, with its swift move to defund the WHO in the middle of the pandemic, the US not only refused to lead but also resisted burden-sharing. By unilaterally punishing the organization for what it perceived to be poor performance, the US jeopardized the WHO's ability to act in the future and for the broader community. Moreover, as a high-level WHO employee lamented, the American government's signal that “multilateralism isn't the answer” could ripple “across other countries and other areas of multilateralism.”Footnote 42 And indeed, selfish or myopic interests won out around the world as various governments implemented export restrictions, travel bans, and unilateral vaccine development—all despite the World Health Organization's objections.Footnote 43

Such concern about states prioritizing short-term or narrow interests is a central topic in international relations research. A particular action may be rational from the perspective of the present, or of an individual state, yet tragically irrational from the perspective of the future, or of a collective of states.Footnote 44 This is famously illustrated in a simple one-shot Prisoners’ Dilemma game, where the risk of a “sucker's payoff” means that each state has an immediate incentive to reject cooperation with others, even though cooperation could make all states better off.Footnote 45 The risk can be attenuated by changing the one-shot game into a repeated interaction with no definite end. But, since governments still may struggle to commit to collective goals and endure immediate pain in order to achieve future gains,Footnote 46 IR scholars have examined further solutions for overcoming the allure of the self and the present.

One solution is delegation, in which a “principal” (a set of nation-states) makes a revocable grant of authority to an “agent” (IGO staff), empowering the agent to act on the principal's behalf.Footnote 47 When delegation works well, it ties states’ hands, helping them stay the course toward accomplishments that require sustained efforts now to produce big benefits later. It gets states to contribute to collective goods that otherwise would be under-provided due to free-riding. Since interactions are repeated, agents can hone their abilities to perform delegated tasks, and principals can adopt a more sanguine win some/lose some mentality toward one another. Thus, by entrusting tasks to IGO-agents, state-principals can achieve greater things than their narrow or short-term interests would normally permit.Footnote 48

An alternative way to overcome the allure of the self and the present is through socialization, a process by which social interactions induct newcomers into particular modes of thinking, feeling, and acting.Footnote 49 Through recurring interactions, a state develops or changes how it understands its role, responsibilities, and interests.Footnote 50 As certain types of behavior are removed from its choice set and other types of behavior become automatic, the state becomes more predictable, trustworthy, and collaborative within its group.Footnote 51 This shifts the state away from thinking only about narrow or short-term interests, and it also makes the state's promises more credible. In international relations scholarship, two of the most important arenas for socialization are individual IGOsFootnote 52 and the broader post-World War II “liberal world order.”Footnote 53 For the latter, the United States drew on its hegemonic position and its identity as a liberal democracy to construct a system of norms, institutions, and laws by which the US bound itself to other states in the hopes of prolonging its own leadership.

Although delegation and socialization can help governments commit to collective goals and endure immediate pain in order to achieve future gain, neither is failsafe. The success of delegation often hinges on IGO-agents having sufficient insulation from their state-principals; without such buffers, states will simply impede or reverse what their agents do. Meanwhile, the success of socialization often hinges on widespread and continuous grooming of a group identity; without such grooming, states will simply revert to their narrow or short-term interests. If delegation or socialization unravel, the underlying Prisoners’ Dilemma (which once had been transformed into a repeated game) eventually degenerates to its one-shot essence. Even if the game has not officially concluded, players begin to sense its eventual end. In a self-fulfilling prophesy, counting on broad or long-term benefits becomes questionable, which makes cooperation chancier and reinstates the pull of narrow or short-term interests.Footnote 54

During the COVID-19 pandemic, socialization quickly proved inadequate. In the past several years, a series of challenges—including populist unrest, financial crises, refugee flows, Brexit, the securitization of public health, and a newly assertive China—have rocked regional integration and the Western-led liberal world order, chipping away at group identities and norms.Footnote 55 Meanwhile, the United States has exhibited “hegemonic fatigue.”Footnote 56 Consequently, while public health experts certainly displayed some cross-country networks and similar ways of thinking about the crisis, socialization was not as deep among heads of government. Rather than considering themselves partners on an interconnected planet, several key government leaders focused only on the immediate needs of their own countries. This may be unfortunate, but it is not new: nationalist and protectionist leanings predate the COVID-19 outbreak.Footnote 57

Delegation also fell apart. If the World Health Organization could coordinate the response to the virus, all countries would benefit from this collective good. However, the WHO has never been given full authority to dictate the activities of all other actors in global health governance.Footnote 58 In fact, as WHO staff attempted to guide the world's response, state-principals themselves were among the most severe impediments, and little stopped them from rescinding or undermining the authority they already had delegated.Footnote 59 Skittish about broadcasting vulnerabilities, some national governments were slow to report crucial information to the World Health Organization. Curious whether they could capitalize from keeping their economies running while others shut theirs down, some countries were reluctant to enter lockdowns advocated by public health experts. With chagrin, the WHO Director-General noted that numerous governments had been unresponsive, even though the World Health Organization had “rung the alarm bell loud and clear.”Footnote 60

Behind it all, there was friction between health policy's hoped-for and wider long-term gains versus economic policy's guaranteed and concentrated short-term pains. As noted by the virologist guiding Germany's COVID-19 response:

People see that the hospitals are not overwhelmed, and they don't understand why their shops have to shut. They only look at what's happening here, not the situation in, say, New York or Spain. This is the prevention paradox, and for many Germans I'm the evil guy who is crippling the economy.Footnote 61

With the “prevention paradox,” not only policy failures but also successes prompt people to question whether broad, long-term benefits were truly worth their costs. The paradox operates at the domestic level and also internationally: when the WHO acts cautiously it is criticized for failing to stop preventable deaths, but when it acts aggressively it is accused of overreacting.Footnote 62

Pattern 3: The Divided Reaction to Experts

The prevention paradox relates to a third pattern from the initial months of the COVID-19 crisis: a divided reaction to experts. Schisms existed at the subnational, national, and international levels as some people readily deferred to public health officials but other people challenged them, questioning the efficacy and even the legality of their policy recommendations.Footnote 63 Skepticism toward experts certainly hit the World Health Organization; ironically, some of it was fueled by people in the public health profession itself. In July 2020, for instance, 239 scientists from thirty-two countries published an open letter contradicting WHO assertions about airborne virus transmission.Footnote 64 Highly visible to laypeople, quarrels like this made the underlying science seem open to interpretation,Footnote 65 and some observers questioned whether the WHO was politically neutral enough to interpret the science appropriately.Footnote 66

International relations scholarship helps to explain the divided reaction to experts, who appear most explicitly in work on “epistemic communities.”Footnote 67 Epistemic communities are networks of professionals who have an authoritative claim over expertise and policy-relevant knowledge within a particular domain. These professionals do not always come from a single discipline, but they nevertheless share some values, causal beliefs, applied competencies, and ways of validating knowledge.Footnote 68 One element of epistemic communities are experts within intergovernmental organizations, which are examined in earlier IR scholarship concerning functionalism and neofunctionalism. Functionalism advocated the creation of numerous IGOs, arranged along functional lines.Footnote 69 Neofunctionalism predicted that as states and their citizens became more accustomed to entrusting tasks to unelected IGO experts, cooperation would spill into additional geographic areas and more challenging policy issues.Footnote 70 Indeed, from the 1940s onward, functionalist and neofunctionalist principles appeared to triumph as integration widened and deepened in Europe and the UN system encompassed the World Health Organization and other specialized agencies.

Real-world developments and IR scholarship reflected optimism that by moving authority from power-hungry nation-states to professionalized supranational experts in IGOs and elsewhere, policymaking could be more stable, efficient, and neutral.Footnote 71 In short, it could be less political. Initially, much work on epistemic communities and their functionality emphasized such upsides.

Over time, however, IR scholarship also explored downsides: perhaps policymaking could never be fully apolitical, or even if it could, that might entail a problematic “democratic deficit.”Footnote 72 Surely individual experts (and sometimes entire professions) have political leanings, so how could their advice ever be completely free of politics?Footnote 73 If experts in a given area confidently express a consensus view, could that be due to partisanship or groupthink, rather than the discovery of an objective truth?Footnote 74 If a more diverse group of experts is consulted, how can citizens and elected officials handle the resulting contradictions or uncertainty?Footnote 75 And even if unelected specialists are always unbiased and correct, why should IGO staff or wider epistemic communities be able to make recommendations and choices that affect so many people when those people had little say in placing them in their positions?Footnote 76

Suspicions about epistemic communities, functional specialization, and technocratic policymaking reflect larger anti-elite or populist sentiments. Such sentiments simmer within countries, and sometimes (as in the 1930s, 1970s, or recent years) they boil in multiple countries at once. There is more research to be done to understand current anti-elitism, but scholarship already reveals various forms it takes, such as championing folk wisdom rather than formal training, protectionism rather than economic liberalization, outlying areas rather than cosmopolitan cores, unilateralism rather than multilateralism, or nationalism rather than globalism.Footnote 77 In addition, anti-elitism sometimes occurs alongside political polarization, which further affects how receptive particular government officials or segments of the public will be to information from experts.Footnote 78

During the initial months of the COVID-19 crisis, all of this made things very tough for experts subnationally, nationally, and internationally. As a high-level employee in the WHO Secretariat points out, people expect the role of public health experts to be threefold:

  1. 1. Use some form of rigorous analysis to synthesize the evidence.

  2. 2. Test hypotheses and be poised to modify recommendations accordingly.

  3. 3. Advise on the implications—direct and indirect, immediate and eventual—of various policy options.Footnote 79

The first two are thorny. Rigor and synthesis are difficult when a crisis makes the evidence especially rushed, uneven, and incongruent.Footnote 80 Meanwhile, modifying hypotheses and recommendations is solid scientific practice—but when done repeatedly it sows confusion and disrupts policies,Footnote 81 and when done cautiously it risks missing windows of opportunity.Footnote 82

However, it is the third expectation that is most daunting. By definition, public health experts know about public health, but they do not necessarily know about economics, education, or other societal elements that are also part of the crisis. If public health experts operate alone, policymaking will be incomplete.Footnote 83 Yet if experts beyond public health are consulted, the result may be a cacophony of opinions or a toppling of public health as the chief concern.Footnote 84 Further complicating things, most of these experts in public health or other fields are not elected. Since they were not voted into office and cannot be voted out, some elected officials see them as inferior, and some members of the public fear their unaccountability.Footnote 85 For non-specialists it is easy to suspect, and difficult to disprove, that experts are both out of touch and out of reach.

As research on epistemic communities and anti-elitism shows, accepting the benefits of a profession's work also requires accepting a certain amount of risk.Footnote 86 During some crises of the past century, many people have been willing to do that—particularly if they trusted their political leaders, who vouched that the experts, too, could be trusted. But in the initial months of the COVID-19 crisis, that did not happen uniformly.Footnote 87 The pandemic hit during a time when citizens and governments in key places around the world were exhibiting polarization, populism, and a backlash against globalists.Footnote 88 A lack of elite consensus made divided reactions to experts more likely,Footnote 89 and although there are upsides to permitting unelected experts to steer policy, conspicuous segments of the population focused on the (ever-present) downsides instead.Footnote 90

An Agenda for Research

These patterns—the tendency to blame IGOs, the temptation to prioritize narrow or short-term interests, and the divided reaction to experts—look very different from the way Kofi Annan urged the world to handle problems without passports. Yet if the former UN Secretary-General were alive today, he would probably look at the COVID-19 pandemic with dismay, but not surprise. After all, Annan's recommendations are about how people should respond, and he was well aware of obstacles to multilateral, far-sighted, apolitical responses. He readily acknowledged that IGOs were precarious, that people's sense of a shared global fate was embryonic, and that isms such as nationalism or populism still held appeal.Footnote 91

Indeed, IR scholarship helps to make sense of the three patterns. Research on bureaucracy and institutional design examines the challenge of making IGOs accountable to member-states but also insulated from them; research on delegation and socialization exposes governments’ hardships overcoming time-inconsistency and non-credible commitments; and research on epistemic communities and anti-elitism reveals both upsides and downsides for permitting public policy to be formulated by unelected experts. This is how the world can look without a resolute leader to surmount natural aversions to IGOs and the wider interests or specialized knowledge that they embody.Footnote 92

Therefore, even though the pandemic seems extraordinary, its initial political patterns are quite ordinary. That does not mean, however, that no questions remain. In fact, two important sets of questions need to be explored further.

The first set is retrospective: In what ways have current conditions resulted from ordinary IR patterns interacting with specific developments in domestic politics? Blaming IGOs, prioritizing narrow or short-term interests, and reacting in a divided way to experts are recurrent temptations—and yet, at some times in the past, those temptations have been overcome. So what exactly is different about those times, compared to today?

One place to look is within the United States, which has played a pivotal historical role in maintaining order, stability, and institutions at the international level. In recent years, party polarization has reflected and fueled internal divisions in the US, where influential segments of the government and population now exhibit fatigue with global leadership and a craving to “put America first.” The IR literature reveals natural aversions to IGOs, wider interests, and experts—and further attention to developments in US domestic politics could help to explain why resolute leaders step up and surmount these aversions at some points, but not others.

Another place to look is the overall population of states: particular sentiments may be gaining traction in multiple places at the same time. For instance, populism and anti-elitism can take various forms, such as championing folk wisdom, economic protectionism, outlying areas, unilateralism, or nationalism. But when such sentiments take hold in numerous countries concurrently, they pose a serious challenge to formal expertise, economic liberalization, cosmopolitan cores, multilateralism, and globalism. The IR literature reveals that deferring to experts, entrusting tasks to IGOs, and pursuing broader or longer-term interests involve pains as well as gains. Further attention to trends in domestic politics in countries throughout the world could help to explain conditions under which people tend to fixate on the pains, rather than the gains.

Besides these retrospective questions involving domestic politics, a second set of questions is forward-looking and centers on IGOs. How should the performance of intergovernmental organizations be gauged and addressed? As scholarship shows, IGOs are vulnerable due to all three patterns explored above: in addition to being disparaged directly, they embody the wider interests and specialized knowledge that are also being snubbed. Yet while existing research makes sense of the struggles of the World Health Organization and other IGOs, it offers far less guidance on what to do about them.Footnote 93 How can IGO performance be sensibly evaluated? And if poor performance is uncovered, which remedies are best?

A core difficulty is that IGOs are expected to be responsive to their member-states and also strive for the greater good.Footnote 94 As one former WHO Director-General emphasized, “It's not a question of what one or several governments ask you to do; we are working for humanity.”Footnote 95 Since member-states are prone to scapegoat IGOs and are conflicted on the broader or longer-term interests that IGOs embody, it is untenable for IGO performance assessments to be derived from states alone. Researchers must begin by incorporating assessments from a variety of state and non-state actors.Footnote 96 Then they can turn to two policy-relevant questions.

First, when should evaluations of intergovernmental organizations take place? A testable hypothesis is that IGO evaluations are most useful if they occur at regular intervals. Pandemics and other emergencies heighten demands for performance reviews on a post hoc basis, but conducting reviews at regular intervals would make it more likely that some reviews would occur during periods of relative calm. That would afford less tense circumstances for isolating factors and actors to be thanked or blamed. Moreover, post hoc reviews might give an anomalous snapshot, whereas evaluations at regular intervals could reveal more about day-to-day operations and even uncover issues before they become emergencies.

Second, if an IGO is found to be faltering, what is to be done? Here there are many knowledge gaps, because the tools and conditions for improving IGOs are still under-examined. Governments’ proclivity is to punish or marginalize IGOs that displease them,Footnote 97 but it is unclear whether that actually does much good. After all, if an organization proves to be a poor performer, the knee-jerk reaction is to abandon or starve it, but a counter-intuitive (and potentially superior) response would be to feed it. Future research would be incredibly helpful if it investigated not only reform outcomes, but also a wider variety of reform options.

Such practical questions are crucial for the embattled World Health Organization in the COVID-19 crisis. However, the need for answers also goes beyond the WHO to whatever global challenges lie ahead. The next crisis could involve climate change, economic inequality, nuclear proliferation, another pandemic, or something else entirely.Footnote 98 It could be an undreamed-of “black swan,” or an obvious and looming “gray rhino.”Footnote 99 But whatever the form, without a resolute leader the next crisis is likely to produce similar patterns: negative reactions to IGOs as well as the wider interests and expertise that IGOs represent. The world has exhibited these patterns at various points in the past and will exhibit them again in the future.Footnote 100 IR scholarship does an adequate job of explaining why the patterns recur. With more work, it could also say more about how to assess and address IGO performance in response.

Acknowledgements

For valuable feedback, the author thanks Michael Barnett, Kim Yi Dionne, Daniel Drezner, Tanisha Fazal, Martha Finnemore, Michael Horowitz, Philip Lipscy, Jon Pevehouse, and Erik Voeten.

Footnotes

Editor's note: This article is part of an online supplemental issue on COVID-19 and international relations. The authors were invited by IO's editorial team and guest editor Michael C. Horowitz. The manuscript was reviewed based on written non-anonymous reviewer comments and during an online workshop. The revised manuscript was evaluated by the IO editorial team. We appreciate the support of Perry World House at the University of Pennsylvania for making this possible.

2. WHO Emergency Committee 2020.

3. “Coronavirus: WHO Members Agree Response Probe,” BBC, 19 May 2020, retrieved from <https://www.bbc.com/news/world-52726017>.

4. Jason Weaver, “How the ‘Bureaucratic’ World Health Organization Ended Up on the Hot Seat over its COVID Response,” Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, 10 July 2020, retrieved from <https://www.cbc.ca/news/world/world-health-organization-who-covid-1.5641966>.

8. Michael Merson, “The Dangerous Fallout from Cutting US Funding for the WHO,” Washington Post, 15 April 2020, retrieved from <https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/2020/04/15/cutting-us-funding-who-is-unjustified-dangerous/>.

9. David Lynch and Emily Rauhala, “Trump Says US to Withdraw from World Health Organization and Announces New Broadsides against Beijing,” Washington Post, 29 May 2020, retrieved from <https://www.washingtonpost.com/business/2020/05/29/trump-china-hong-kong-who/>.

10. Andrew Shalal, “WTO Report Says 80 Countries Limiting Exports of Face Masks, Other Goods,” Reuters, 23 April 2020, retrieved from <https://www.reuters.com/article/us-health-coronavirus-trade-wto-idUSKCN2253IX>.

11. Mara Pillinger, “Virus Travel Bans are Inevitable, but Ineffective,” Foreign Policy, 23 February 2020, retrieved from <https://foreignpolicy.com/2020/02/23/virus-travel-bans-are-inevitable-but-ineffective/>.

12. See Casey Leins, “10 States with the Most Aggressive Response to COVID-19,” US News, 17 March 2020, retrieved from <https://www.usnews.com/news/best-states/articles/2020-03-17/10-states-with-the-most-aggressive-response-to-coronavirus>; Orion Rummler, “At Least 48 Local Public Health Leaders Have Quit or Been Fired During the Pandemic,” Axios, 10 August 2020, retrieved from <https://www.axios.com/coronavirus-health-officials-california-e28c6c3d-6668-4e04-8d28-271bb1fb45fe.html>.

13. A notable exception was Sweden, where national officials adhered to the recommendation of chief epidemiologist Anders Tegnell not to impose a nation-wide lockdown (Love Liman and Niclas Rolander, “Swedish COVID Expert Says the World Still Doesn't Understand,” Bloomberg News, 28 June 2020, retrieved from <https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2020-06-28/sweden-s-covid-expert-says-the-world-still-doesn-t-understand>).

14. Reid Wilson, “Russia, Brazil Struggle with Coronavirus Response,” The Hill, 8 May 2020, retrieved from <https://thehill.com/policy/international/496714-russia-brazil-struggle-with-coronavirus-response>.

15. Michelle Nichols, “Months Later, UN Security Council Backs Call for Coronavirus Truce,” Reuters, 1 July 2020, retrieved from <https://www.reuters.com/article/us-health-coronavirus-un/months-later-u-n-security-council-backs-call-for-coronavirus-truce-idUSKBN242722>.

16. Gilpin Reference Gilpin1987, 73, 78–79.

17. For a related view, see Drezner Reference Drezner2020.

20. Javier Hernandez, “Trump Slammed the WHO over Coronavirus. He's Not Alone,” New York Times, 29 May 2020, retrieved from <https://www.nytimes.com/2020/04/08/world/asia/trump-who-coronavirus-china.html>.

21. European Union 2020.

22. Gutner and Thompson Reference Gutner and Thompson2010, 231.

24. Biermann and Siebenhuner Reference Biermann and Siebenhuner2009.

26. Hattke, Hensel, and Kulucza Reference Hattke, Hensel and Kulucza2020.

27. See Mathiason Reference Mathiason2007; Johnson Reference Johnson2011; Bearce and Joliff-Scott Reference Bearce and Joliff-Scott2019.

28. See Cox and Jacobson Reference Cox and Jacobson1974; Chorev Reference Chorev2012.

31. Koremenos, Lipson, and Snidal Reference Koremenos, Lipson and Snidal2001.

32. Johnson Reference Johnson2014, 4.

34. Barnett and Finnemore Reference Barnett and Finnemore1999.

38. Youde Reference Youde2015, 129.

40. Insulation is not static, and the WHO's previous successes explain some of its current struggles. For instance, during the 2003 outbreak of Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS), the organization was effective and forceful vis-à-vis member-states. But shortly afterward, when the WHO bureaucracy drafted a new version of the International Health Regulations (IHR) to formalize and insulate the tools it had used for SARS, member-states such as Brazil, Canada, China, India, and Russia prevented the document from giving the WHO real power against non-compliant governments (Buranyi Reference Buranyi2020).

41. See Fazal Reference Fazal2020.

42. Author conversation with high-level employee “A” in the World Health Organization Secretariat, 8 July 2020.

43. Author conversation with high-level employee “B” in the World Health Organization Secretariat, 8 July 2020.

44. See Lake and McCubbins Reference Lake, McCubbins, Hawkins, Lake, Nielson and Tierney2006; Gutner Reference Gutner, Avant, Finnemore and Sell2010; Dreher and Vreeland Reference Dreher and Vreeland2014. For further examples, see Stasavage Reference Stasavage2020 on disaster preparedness or Kenwick and Simmons Reference Kenwick and Simmons2020 on border closures.

47. See Hawkins et al. Reference Hawkins, Lake, Nielson and Tierney2006, 7; Pollack Reference Pollack2002: Vaubel Reference Vaubel2006; Bradley and Kelley Reference Bradley and Kelley2008. Note: situations also can be complicated by trustees, multiple principals, or multiple agents (Nielson and Tierney Reference Nielson and Tierney2003; Alter Reference Alter2008; Elsig Reference Elsig2011).

48. See Abbott and Snidal Reference Abbott and Snidal1998; Lake and McCubbins Reference Lake, McCubbins, Hawkins, Lake, Nielson and Tierney2006. However, even such IGO successes can result in grumbling from states, who are being pushed (as they themselves sought) to overcome the interests of the “present self.”

49. Johnston Reference Johnston2001, 494.

50. See Finnemore Reference Finnemore1996; Sikkink Reference Sikkink2020. Socialization also occurs within states (e.g., Mayer Reference Mayer2014).

51. See Greenhill Reference Greenhill2010; Davis and Meunier Reference Davis and Meunier2011.

52. See Checkel Reference Checkel2005; Gheciu Reference Gheciu2005; Bearce and Bondanella Reference Bearce and Bondanella2007; Hooghe, Lenz, and Marks Reference Hooghe, Lenz and Marks2019.

55. See Kamradt-Scott and McInnes Reference Kamradt-Scott and McInnes2012; Fidler Reference Fidler2019; Patrick Reference Patrick2020.

56. See Gilpin Reference Gilpin1987; Damien Cave and Isabella Kwai, “China is Defensive. The US is Absent. Can the Rest of the World Fill the Void?,” New York Times, 11 May 2020, retrieved from <https://www.nytimes.com/2020/05/11/world/australia/coronavirus-china-inquiry.html>; James Fallows, “The 3 Weeks that Changed Everything: Imagine If the National Transportation Safety Board Investigated America's Response to the Coronavirus Pandemic,” The Atlantic, 29 June 2020, retrieved from <https://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2020/06/how-white-house-coronavirus-response-went-wrong/613591/>.

57. See Drezner Reference Drezner2020, 14.

58. Youde Reference Youde2015, 121, 130.

61. Laura Spinney, “Germany's COVID-19 Expert: ‘For many, I'm the Evil Guy Crippling the Economy,’” The Guardian, 26 April 2020, retrieved from <https://www.theguardian.com/world/2020/apr/26/virologist-christian-drosten-germany-coronavirus-expert-interview>.

63. See Elizabeth Braw, “What Sweden Can Teach Us about Coronavirus,” Politico, 3 July 2020, retrieved from <https://www.politico.com/news/magazine/2020/07/03/what-sweden-can-teach-us-about-coronavirus-348462>; Simon Jenkins, “Was I Wrong about Coronavirus? Even the World's Best Scientists Can't Tell Me,” The Guardian, 2 April 2020, retrieved from <https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2020/apr/02/wrong-coronavirus-world-scientists-optimism-experts>; Cameron Knight and Jackie Borchardt, “‘Unreasonable and Oppressive’: Judge Slams Dr. Amy Acton in order to Reopen Gyms,” Cincinnati Enquirer, 20 May 2020, retrieved from <https://www.cincinnati.com/story/news/2020/05/20/unreasonable-and-oppressive-judge-slams-acton-order-open-gyms/5229032002/>.

64. Mandavilli Reference Mandavilli2020.

65. Allison Snyder and Eileen Drage O'Reilly, “Where the Science Stands on Using Face Masks against Coronavirus,” Axios, 26 June 2020, retrieved from <https://www.axios.com/coronavirus-face-mask-science-e9df446b-e7fb-447b-a980-67a9cf73556a.html>.

66. Emily Rauhala, “Chinese Officials Note Serious Problems in Coronavirus Response: The World Health Organization Keeps Praising Them,” Washington Post, 8 February 2020, retrieved from <https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/asia_pacific/chinese-officials-note-serious-problems-in-coronavirus-response-the-world-health-organization-keeps-praising-them/2020/02/08/b663dd7c-4834-11ea-91ab-ce439aa5c7c1_story.html>.

67. Research on epistemic communities initially focused on environmental policy but later branched into other areas, including health policy (Cross Reference Cross2013).

68. Haas Reference Haas1992, 3.

71. E.g., Keohane Reference Keohane1984; Jacobson, Reisinger, and Mathers Reference Jacobson, Reisinger and Mathers1986; Adler Reference Adler1992.

72. Eilstrup-Sangiovanni Reference Eilstrup-Sangiovanni2006.

73. Chilton and Posner Reference Chilton and Posner2015.

74. See Tetlock and Mitchell Reference Tetlock and Mitchell2015; Nichols Reference Nichols2017.

77. See Nyhan and Reifler Reference Nyhan and Reifler2015; Colgan and Keohane Reference Colgan and Keohane2017; Bearce and Joliff-Scott Reference Bearce and Joliff-Scott2019; Copelovitch and Pevehouse Reference Copelovitch and Pevehouse2019; Voeten Reference Voeten2020.

79. Author conversation with high-level employee “B” in the World Health Organization Secretariat, 8 July 2020.

80. Lindzi Wessel, “It's a Nightmare: How Brazilian Scientists Became Ensnared in Chloroquine Politics,” Science, 22 June 2020, retrieved from <https://www.sciencemag.org/news/2020/06/it-s-nightmare-how-brazilian-scientists-became-ensnared-chloroquine-politics>.

81. Driedger, Maier, and Jardine Reference Driedger, Maier and Jardine2018.

82. Mandavilli Reference Mandavilli2020.

83. Nichols Reference Nichols2017, 201–202.

84. Simon Denyer, “Japan Faces Uptick in Coronavirus Cases but No Political Will for New Shutdowns,” Washington Post, 8 July 2020, retrieved from <https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/asia_pacific/japan-covid-coronavirus-cases-rise-reopen/2020/07/07/8a76fd66-bc74-11ea-97c1-6cf116ffe26c_story.html>.

85. Nichols Reference Nichols2017, 174.

86. See Nichols Reference Nichols2017, 177; Chilton and Posner Reference Chilton and Posner2015; Backus and Little Reference Backus and Littleforthcoming.

87. Laypeople's (mis)perceptions about health topics may be particularly difficult to change (e.g., Blair, Morse, and Tsai Reference Blair, Morse and Tsai2017; Carey et al. Reference Carey, Chi, Flynn, Nyhan and Zeitzoff2020; Arriola and Grossman Reference Arriola and Grossmanforthcoming).

89. See Sunstein Reference Sunstein2006, 79, 85, 95; Horowitz, Stam, and Ellis Reference Horowitz, Stam and Ellis2015; Guisinger and Saunders Reference Guisinger and Saunders2017.

90. David Nather, “Trump's War on the Public Health Experts,” Axios, 16 July 2020, retrieved from <https://www.axios.com/trump-public-health-experts-cdc-fauci-e1509d14-0cf1-4b1c-b107-7753bf95395d.html>.

92. Zürn Reference Zürn2018, 20–21.

93. In part because amassing a literature on IGO performance has been sluggish. The state-centrism of traditional IR theories waylaid scholars into spending years defending that IGOs matter at all (e.g., Finnemore Reference Finnemore1996; Martin and Simmons Reference Martin and Simmons1998; Hurd Reference Hurd2007; Johnson Reference Johnson2014). Today, instead of a cohesive literature on IGO performance, threads reside in disparate bodies of work, such as regime effectiveness (Krasner Reference Krasner1982; Helm and Sprinz Reference Helm and Sprinz2000; Mitchell Reference Mitchell, Underdal and Young2004; Young Reference Young2011), IGOs’ self-assessments (Weaver Reference Weaver2008; Gutner Reference Gutner, Avant, Finnemore and Sell2010; Buntaine Reference Buntaine2016; Honig Reference Honig2019), or delegation and institutional design (Hafner-Burton and Schneider Reference Hafner-Burton and Schneider2019).

94. Additional difficulties and ways to overcome them include: 1) benchmark against more than goals, because IGO goals are often too numerous, contradictory, abstract, imposed, aspirational, politicized, and/or fluid to be used literally (Lipson Reference Lipson2010); 2) consider not only outcomes but also the soundness of IGO processes (Tallberg et al. Reference Tallberg, Sommerer, Squatrito and Lundgren2016; Lall Reference Lall2017); and 3) acknowledge the influence of the wider regime complex, because IGOs commonly operate alongside governments, corporations, non-governmental organizations, and other types of actors (Kahler Reference Kahler2009; Abbott and Snidal Reference Abbott and Snidal2010; Buthe and Mattli Reference Buthe and Mattli2011; Carpenter Reference Carpenter2011; Karns, Mingst, and Stiles Reference Karns, Mingst and Stiles2015; Slaughter Reference Slaughter2017; Farrell and Newman Reference Farrell and Newman2019; Schmitz, Mitchell, and Vijfeijken. Reference Schmitz, Mitchell and Vijfeijken2020).

95. Gro Harlem Brundtland, quoted in Buranyi Reference Buranyi2020.

96. See Gutner and Thompson Reference Gutner and Thompson2010, 233; Johnson Reference Johnson2016.

97. von Borzyskowski and Vabulas Reference von Borzyskowski and Vabulas2019.

98. See Lipscy Reference Lipscy2020.

99. Michelle Wucker, “No, the Coronavirus Wasn't an ‘Unforeseen Problem,’” Washington Post, 17 March 2020, retrieved from <https://www.washingtonpost.com/outlook/2020/03/17/no-coronavirus-pandemic-wasnt-an-unforseen-problem/>.

References

Abbott, Kenneth, and Snidal, Duncan. 1998. Why States Act Through Formal International Organizations. Journal of Conflict Resolution 42 (1):332.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Abbott, Kenneth, and Snidal, Duncan. 2010. International Regulation Without International Government: Improving IO Performance through Orchestration. Review of International Organizations 5 (3):315–44.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Adler, Emanuel. 1992. The Emergence of Cooperation: National Epistemic Communities and the International Evolution of the Idea of Nuclear Arms Control. International Organization 46 (1):101–45.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Alter, Karen. 2008. Agents or Trustees: International Courts in their Political Context. European Journal of International Relations 14 (1):3363.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Annan, Kofi. 2009. Problems Without Passports. Foreign Policy. 9 November. Available at <https://foreignpolicy.com/2009/11/09/problems-without-passports/>. Accessed 23 August 2020..+Accessed+23+August+2020.>Google Scholar
Arriola, Leonardo, and Grossman, Allison. Forthcoming. Ethnic Marginalization and (Non)Compliance in Public Health Emergencies. Journal of Politics.Google Scholar
Axelrod, Robert. 1984. The Evolution of Cooperation. Basic Books.Google Scholar
Azar, Alex. 2020. Secretary Azar Plenary Remarks at World Health Assembly. US Department of Health and Human Services. 18 May. Available at <https://www.hhs.gov/about/leadership/secretary/speeches/2020-speeches/secretary-azar-plenary-remarks-at-world-health-assembly.html>. Accessed 23 August 2020..+Accessed+23+August+2020.>Google Scholar
Backus, Matthew, and Little, Andrew. Forthcoming. I Don't Know. American Political Science Review.Google Scholar
Barnett, Michael, and Coleman, Liv. 2005. Designing Police: Interpol and the Study of Change in International Organizations. International Studies Quarterly 49 (4):593619.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Barnett, Michael, and Finnemore, Martha. 1999. The Politics, Power, and Pathologies of International Organizations. International Organization 53 (4):699732.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bauer, Steffen. 2006. Does Bureaucracy Really Matter? The Authority of Intergovernmental Treaty Secretariats in Global Environmental Politics. Global Environmental Politics 6 (1):2349.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Beach, Derek. 2004. The Unseen Hand in Treaty Reform: The Role and Influence of the Council Secretariat. Journal of European Public Policy 11 (3):408–39.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bearce, David, and Bondanella, Stacy. 2007. Intergovernmental Organizations, Socialization, and Member-State Interest Convergence. International Organization 61 (4):703–33.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bearce, David, and Joliff-Scott, Brandy. 2019. Popular Non-Support for International Organizations: How Extensive and What Does This Represent? Review of International Organizations 14 (1):187216.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Biermann, Frank, and Siebenhuner, Bernd. 2009. Managers of Global Change: The Influence of International Environmental Bureaucrats. The MIT Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Blair, Robert, Morse, Benjamin, and Tsai, Lily. 2017. Public Health and Public Trust: Survey Evidence from the Ebola Virus Disease Epidemic in Liberia. Social Science & Medicine 172:8997.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Bosco, David. 2017. We've Been Here Before: The Durability of Multilateralism. Journal of International Affairs 70 (2):915.Google Scholar
Bradley, Curtis, and Kelley, Judith. 2008. The Concept of International Delegation. Law and Contemporary Problems 71 (1):136.Google Scholar
Buntaine, Mark. 2016. Giving Aid Effectively: The Politics of Environmental Performance and Selectivity at Multilateral Development Banks. Oxford University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Busby, Joshua. Forthcoming. Understanding the Anemic Global Response to COVID-19. Journal of Health Politics, Policy, and Law.Google Scholar
Buthe, Tim, and Mattli, Walter. 2011. The New Global Rulers: The Privatization of Regulation in the World Economy. Princeton University Press.Google Scholar
Carey, John, Chi, Victoria, Flynn, D.J., Nyhan, Brendan, and Zeitzoff, Thomas. 2020. The Effects of Corrective Information about Epidemics: Evidence from Zika and Yellow Fever in Brazil. Science Advances 6 (5):110.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Carpenter, Charli. 2011. Vetting the Advocacy Agenda: Networks, Centrality and the Paradox of Weapons Norms. International Organization 65 (1):69102.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Checkel, Jeffrey, 2005. International Institutions and Socialization in Europe: Introduction and Framework. International Organization 59 (4):801–26.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chilton, Adam and Posner, Eric. 2015. An Empirical Study of Ideological Bias in Legal Scholarship. Journal of Legal Studies 44 (2):277314.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chorev, Nitsan. 2012. The World Health Organization: Between North and South. Cornell University Press.Google Scholar
Colgan, Jeff, and Keohane, Robert. 2017. The Liberal Order is Rigged: Fix It Now or Watch It Wither. Foreign Affairs 96 (3):3640.Google Scholar
Copelovitch, Mark, and Pevehouse, Jon. 2019. International Organizations in a New Era of Populist Nationalism. Review of International Organizations 14 (1):169–86.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cortell, Andrew, and Peterson, Susan. 2006. Dutiful Agents, Rogue Actors, or Both? Staffing, Voting Rules, and Slack in the WHO and WTO. In Delegation and Agency in International Organizations, edited by Hawkins, Darren, Lake, David, Nielson, Daniel, and Tierney, Michael, 255–80. Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cox, Robert, and Jacobson, Harold. 1974. The Anatomy of Influence: Decision-Making in International Organization. Yale University Press.Google Scholar
Cross, Mai'a. 2013. Rethinking Epistemic Communities Twenty Years Later. Review of International Studies 39 (1):137–60.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Davis, Christina, and Meunier, Sophie. 2011. Business as Usual? Economic Responses to Political Tensions. American Journal of Political Science 55 (3):628–46.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Doyle, Michael. 2012. Liberal Peace: Selected Essays. Routledge.Google Scholar
Dreher, Axel, and Vreeland, James. 2014. The Political Economy of the United Nations Security Council: Money and Influence. Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Drezner, Daniel W. 2020. The Song Remains the Same: International Relations After COVID-19. International Organization 74 (S1). <https://doi.org/10.1017/S0020818320000351>.Google Scholar
Driedger, Michelle, Maier, Ryan, and Jardine, Cindy. 2018. Damned If You Do, Damned If You Don't: Communicating about Uncertainty and Evolving Science During the H1N1 Influenza Pandemic. Journal of Risk Research. Available at <https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/13669877.2018.1459793.> Accessed 23 August 2020.Google Scholar
Duffield, John. 2003. The Limits of ‘Rational Design. International Organization 57 (2):411–30.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Eilstrup-Sangiovanni, Mette (ed.). 2006. Debates on European Integration: A Reader. Macmillan.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Elsig, Manfred. 2011. Principal-Agent Theory and the World Trade Organization: Complex Agency and ‘Missing Delegation.’ European Journal of International Relations 17 (3):495517.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
European Union. 2020. COVID-19 Response: WHO Draft Resolution. 19 May Available at <https://apps.who.int/gb/ebwha/pdf_files/WHA73/A73_CONF1Rev1-en.pdf>. Accessed 23 August 2020..+Accessed+23+August+2020.>Google Scholar
Farrell, Henry, and Newman, Abraham. 2019. Weaponized Interdependence: How Global Economic Networks Shape State Coercion. International Security 44 (1):4279.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fazal, Tanisha M. 2020. Health Diplomacy in Pandemical Times. International Organization 74 (S1). <https://doi.org/10.1017/S0020818320000326>.Google Scholar
Fidler, David. 2019. The Once and Future World of Global Health Governance. Council on Foreign Relations. 8 December. Available at <https://www.thinkglobalhealth.org/article/once-and-future-world-global-health-governance>. Accessed 23 August 2020..+Accessed+23+August+2020.>Google Scholar
Finnemore, Martha. 1996. National Interests in International Society. Cornell University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gheciu, Alexandra. 2005. Security Institutions as Agents of Socialization? NATO and the ‘New Europe.’ International Organization 59 (4): 9731012.Google Scholar
Gilpin, Robert. 1987. The Political Economy of International Relations. Princeton University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Graham, Erin. 2013. International Organizations as Collective Agents: Fragmentation and the Limits of Principal Control at the World Health Organization. European Journal of International Relations 20 (2):366–90.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Greenhill, Brian. 2010. The Company You Keep: International Socialization and the Diffusion of Human Rights Norms. International Studies Quarterly 54 (1):127–45.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Grigorescu, Alexandru. 2010. The Spread of Bureaucratic Oversight Mechanisms across Intergovernmental Organizations. International Studies Quarterly 54 (3):871–86.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Guisinger, Alexandra, and Saunders, Elizabeth. 2017. Mapping the Boundaries of Elite Cues: How Elites Shape Mass Opinion Across International Issues. International Studies Quarterly 61 (2):425–41.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gutner, Tamar. 2010. When ‘Doing Good’ Does Not: The IMF and the Millennium Development Goals. In Who Governs the Globe?, edited by Avant, Deborah, Finnemore, Martha, and Sell, Susan, 266–91. Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gutner, Tamar, and Thompson, Alex. 2010. The Politics of IO Performance: A Framework. Review of International Organizations 5 (3):227–48.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Haas, Ernst. 1964. Beyond the Nation-State: Functionalism and International Organization. University of Notre Dame Press.Google Scholar
Haas, Peter. 1992. Introduction: Epistemic Communities and International Policy Coordination. International Organization 46 (1):135.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hafner-Burton, Emilie, and Schneider, Christina. 2019. The Dark Side of Cooperation: When International Organizations Spread Corruption. International Studies Quarterly 63 (4):1108–21.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hattke, Fabian, Hensel, David, and Kulucza, Janne. 2020. Emotional Responses to Bureaucratic Red Tape. Public Administration Review 80 (1):5363.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hawkins, Darren, Lake, David, Nielson, Daniel, and Tierney, Michael, eds. 2006. Delegation and Agency in International Organizations. Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Helfer, Lawrence. 2020. Populism and International Human Rights Law Institutions: A Survival Guide. In Human Rights in a Time of Populism: Challenges and Responses, edited by Neuman, Gerald, 218240. Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Helm, Carsten, and Sprinz, Detlef. 2000. Measuring the Effectiveness of International Environmental Regimes. Journal of Conflict Resolution 44 (5):630–52.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hooghe, Liesbet, Lenz, Tobias, and Marks, Gary. 2019. A Theory of International Organization. Oxford University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Honig, Daniel. 2019. When Reporting Undermines Performance: The Costs of Politically Constrained Organizational Autonomy in Foreign Aid Implementation. International Organization 73 (1):171201.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Horowitz, Michael, Stam, Allan and Ellis, Cali. 2015. Why Leaders Fight. Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hurd, Ian. 2007. After Anarchy: Legitimacy and Power in the United Nations Security Council. Princeton University Press.Google Scholar
Ikenberry, G. John. 1998. After Victory: Institutions, Strategic Restraint, and the Rebuilding of Order After Major Wars. Princeton University Press.Google Scholar
Ikenberry, G. John, and Kupchan, Charles. 1990. Socialization and Hegemonic Power. International Organization 44 (3):283315.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jacobson, Harold, Reisinger, William, and Mathers, Todd. 1986. National Entanglements in International Governmental Organizations. American Political Science Review 80 (1):141–59.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Johnson, Tana. 2011. Guilt by Association: The Link between States’ Influence and the Legitimacy of Intergovernmental Organizations. Review of International Organizations 6 (1):5784.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Johnson, Tana. 2014. Organizational Progeny: Why Governments Are Losing Control Over the Proliferating Structures of Global Governance. Oxford University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Johnson, Tana. 2016. Cooperation, Co-optation, Competition, Conflict: International Bureaucracies and Non-Governmental Organizations in an Interdependent World. Review of International Political Economy 23 (5):737–67.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Johnston, Alastair Iain. 2001. Treating International Institutions as Social Environments. International Studies Quarterly 45 (4):487515.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kahler, Miles. 2009. Networked Politics: Agency, Power, and Governance. Cornell University Press.Google Scholar
Kamradt-Scott, Adam, and McInnes, Colin. 2012. The Securitization of Pandemic Influenza: Framing, Security, and Public Policy. Global Public Health 7 (Sup. 2):S95S110.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Karns, Margaret, Mingst, Karen, and Stiles, Ken. 2015. International Organizations: The Politics and Processes of Global Governance, 3rd ed. Lynne Rienner Publishers.Google Scholar
Kenwick, Michael R. and Simmons, Beth A.. 2020. Pandemic Response as Border Politics. International Organization 74 (S1). <https://doi.org/10.1017/S0020818320000363>.Google Scholar
Keohane, Robert. 1984. After Hegemony: Cooperation and Discord in the World Political Economy. Princeton University Press.CrossRefGoogle 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. 1982. Structural Causes and Regime Consequences: Regimes as Intervening Variables. International Organization 36 (2):185205.CrossRefGoogle 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.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lall, Ranjit. 2017. Beyond Institutional Design: Explaining the Performance of International Organizations. International Organization 71 (2):245–80.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lee, Nathan, Nyhan, Brendan, Reifler, Jason, and Flynn, D.J.. Forthcoming. More Accurate, but No Less Polarized: Comparing the Factual Beliefs of Government Officials and the Public. British Journal of Political Science.Google Scholar
Lipscy, Philip Y. 2020. COVID-19 and the Politics of Crisis. International Organization 74 (S1). <https://doi.org/10.1017/S0020818320000375>.Google Scholar
Lipson, Michael. 2010. Performance under Ambiguity: International Organization Performance in UN Peacekeeping. Review of International Organizations 5 (3):249–84.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Majone, Giandomenico. 1998. Europe's ‘Democratic Deficit’: The Question of Standards. European Law Journal 4 (1):528.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mandavilli, Apoorva. 2020. “239 Experts with One Big Claim: The Coronavirus Is Airborne.” New York Times. 4 July. Available at <https://www.nytimes.com/2020/07/04/health/239-experts-with-one-big-claim-the-coronavirus-is-airborne.html>. Accessed 23 August 2020..+Accessed+23+August+2020.>Google Scholar
Martin, Lisa, and Simmons, Beth. 1998. Theories and Empirical Studies of International Institutions. International Organization 52 (4):729–57.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mathiason, John. 2007. Invisible Governance: International Secretariats in Global Politics. Kumerian Press.Google Scholar
Mayer, Frederick. 2014. Narrative Politics: Stories and Collective Action. Oxford University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Miller, Gary. 2000. Rational Choice and Dysfunctional Institutions. Governance 13 (4):535–47.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Milner, Helen. 1997. Interests, Institutions and Information: Domestic Politics and International Relations. Princeton University Press.Google Scholar
Mitchell, Ronald. 2004. A Quantitative Approach to Evaluating International Environmental Regimes. In Regime Consequences: Methodological Challenges and Research Strategies, edited by Underdal, Arild and Young, Oran, 121–49. Kluwer Academic Publishers.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mitrany, David. 1944. A Working Peace System: An Argument for the Functional Development of International Organization. Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Naoi, Megumi. 2020. Survey Experiments in International Political Economy: What We (Don't) Know About the Backlash Against Globalization. Annual Review of Political Science 23:333–56.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nichols, Tom. 2017. The Death of Expertise: The Campaign Against Established Knowledge and Why It Matters. Oxford University Press.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.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nye, Joseph. 2001. Globalization's Democratic Deficit: How to Make International Institutions More Accountable. Foreign Affairs 80 (4):26.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nyhan, Brendan, and Reifler, Jason. 2015. Does Correcting Myths About the Flu Vaccine Work? An Experimental Evaluation of the Effects of Corrective Information. Vaccine 33 (3):459–64.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Patrick, Stewart. 2020. When the System Fails: COVID-19 and the Costs of Global Dysfunction. Foreign Affairs. July/August. Available at <https://www.foreignaffairs.com/articles/world/2020-06-09/when-system-fails>. Accessed August 23, 2020..+Accessed+August+23,+2020.>Google Scholar
Pevehouse, Jon. 2005. Democracy from Above: Regional Organizations and Democratization. Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pevehouse, Jon. Forthcoming. The COVID-19 Pandemic, Domestic Politics, and Public Opinion. International Organization 74 (S1). <https://doi.org/10.1017/S0020818320000399>.Google Scholar
Pollack, Mark. 2002. Learning from the Americanists (Again): Theory and Method in the Study of Delegation. West European Politics 25 (1):200–19.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ruggie, John. 1982. International Regimes, Transactions, and Change: Embedded Liberalism in the Postwar Economic Order. International Organization 36 (2):379415.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Schmitz, Hans Peter, Mitchell, George, and Vijfeijken, Tosca Bruno-van. 2020. Between Power and Irrelevance: The Future of Transnational NGOs. Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Sikkink, Kathryn. 2020. The Hidden Face of Rights: Toward a Politics of Responsibilities. Yale University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Slaughter, Anne-Marie. 2017. The Chessboard and the Web: Strategies of Connection in a Networked World. Yale University Press.Google Scholar
Stasavage, David. 2020. Democracy, Autocracy, and Emergency Threats: Lessons for COVID-19 from the Last Thousand Years. International Organization 74 (S1). <https://doi.org/10.1017/S0020818320000326>.Google Scholar
Stone, Randall. 2011. Controlling Institutions: International Organizations and the Global Economy. Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sunstein, Cass. 2006. Infotopia: How Many Minds Produce Knowledge. Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Tallberg, Jonas, Sommerer, Thomas, Squatrito, Theresa, and Lundgren, Magnus. 2016. The Performance of International Organizations: A Policy Output Approach. Journal of European Public Policy 23 (7):1077–96.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tetlock, Philip, and Mitchell, Gregory. 2015. Why So Few Conservatives and Should We Care? Society 52 (1):2834.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Trump, Donald. 2020. Remarks by President Trump on Actions Against China. 29 March. Available at. <https://www.whitehouse.gov/briefings-statements/remarks-president-trump-actions-china/>. Accessed 23 August 2020..+Accessed+23+August+2020.>Google Scholar
Vaubel, Roland. 2006. Principal-Agent Problems in International Organizations. Review of International Organizations 1 (2):125–38.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Voeten, Erik. 2020. Populism and Backlashes against International Courts. Perspectives on Politics 18 (2):407–22.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
von Borzyskowski, Inken, and Vabulas, Felicity. 2019. Hello, Goodbye: When Do States Withdraw from International Organizations? Review of International Organizations 14:335–66.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Weaver, Catherine. 2008. Hypocrisy Trap: The World Bank and the Poverty of Reform. Princeton University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Weber, Max. 2007. From Max Weber: Essays in Sociology. Translated, edited, and with an introduction by Gerth, H.H. and Wright Mills, C.. Routledge.Google Scholar
WHO Emergency Committee. 2020. Statement on the Meeting of the International Health Regulations (2005) Emergency Committee Regarding the Outbreak of Novel Coronavirus. 23 January. Available at <https://www.who.int/news-room/detail/23-01-2020-statement-on-the-meeting-of-the-international-health-regulations-(2005)-emergency-committee-regarding-the-outbreak-of-novel-coronavirus-(2019-ncov)>. Accessed 23 August 2020..+Accessed+23+August+2020.>Google Scholar
Youde, Jeremy. 2015. MERS and Global Health Governance. International Journal 70 (1):19136.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Young, Oran. 2011. Effectiveness of International Environmental Regimes: Existing Knowledge, Cutting-Edge Themes, and Research Strategies. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 180 (50):19853–60.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Zürn, Michael. 2018. A Theory of Global Governance: Authority, Legitimacy, and Contestation. Oxford University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar