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Transnational attention, domestic agenda-setting and international agreement: Modeling necessary and sufficient conditions for media-driven humanitarian interventions

Transnationale Aufmerksamkeit, nationales Agenda-Setting und Internationales Abkommen: Eine Modellierung der notwendigen und hinreichenden Bedingungen für medien-getriebene, humanitäre Interventionen

Julian Junk and Joachim Blatter

Discussion Papers, Research Unit: Global Governance from WZB Berlin Social Science Center

Abstract: Interventions based solely or partially on humanitarian grounds are rare; but, over the course of the last two decades, they have become increasingly common phenomena of international politics. Nevertheless international relations theories have thus far not been able to adequately account for their occurrence. The authors present a theoretical framework to explain humanitarian interventions as a result of a multilevel process driven by media attention and political entrepreneurship. They argue that drawing the developed world’s public attention to a humanitarian crisis does not suffice to prompt international political reaction to it—it is only a necessary but not a sufficient condition. They therefore develop a consistent, detailed, and falsifiable theoretical model that systematically traces the necessary steps from the spaces of a humanitarian tragedy through the domestic arenas of potentially intervening states to the international arena where agreements on interventions must be reached. The authors take Putnam’s two-level game as a template for their model, but they exchange Putnam’s interestbased approach with an information-driven approach. The authors examine the structural prerequisites for domestic “windows of recognition,” deduce logical consequences of these “windows of recognition” for the possibility to reach an international agreement to intervene, and describe the functions and roles of peace entrepreneurs who try to overcome structural constraints.

Date: 2010
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