Volume 3, Issue 4 p. 400-420

Comparing the legitimacy and effectiveness of global hard and soft law: An analytical framework

Sylvia I. Karlsson-Vinkhuyzen,

Corresponding Author

Finland Futures Research Centre, Turku School of Economics, Helsinki, Finland

Sylvia I. Karlsson-Vinkhuyzen, Finland Futures Research Centre, Turku School of Economics, Pinninkatu 47, 33100 Tampere, Finland. Email: sylvia.karlsson@tse.fiSearch for more papers by this author
Antto Vihma,

Finland Futures Research Centre, Turku School of Economics, Helsinki, Finland

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First published: 28 December 2009
Citations: 47

Abstract

The international norms that are developed as tools of global governance can be placed on a continuum from traditional “hard law” treaties to the vaguest and voluntary “soft law.” In this article we develop an analytical framework for comparing norms on different positions along the continuum, thus for comparing international hard and soft law. We root the framework in both the rationalist and the constructivist paradigms of international relations by focusing on two overarching evaluative criteria: effectiveness and legitimacy. These broad concepts are divided into smaller building blocks encompassing mechanisms through which norms can exert influence; for example, by changing material incentives, identities, and building capacity, and by contributing to building source-based, procedural, and substantive legitimacy. We illustrate the applicability of the framework with three norm processes of varying degrees of “softness” in global climate governance.

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