'Who defends the Liberal International Order and why? The case of contestation in digital standard-setting' talk by Professor Sarah Eaton

Wednesday 14 February 2024, 1:30pm to 3:00pm

Venue

Online (Zoom)

Open to

All Lancaster University (non-partner) students, Alumni, Applicants, External Organisations, Postgraduates, Public, Staff, Undergraduates

Registration

Free to attend - registration required

Registration Info

Please register via Trybooking: https://www.trybooking.com/uk/DCVT

Event Details

Lancaster University Confucius Institute Academic Seminar Series

'Who defends the Liberal International Order and why? The case of contestation in digital standard-setting' with Professor Sarah Eaton

Abstract:

Sarah Eaton (Humboldt Universität zu Berlin)

Daniel Fuchs (Humboldt Universität zu Berlin)

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Recent scholarship has illuminated growing threats to the so-called Liberal International Order (LIO), emanating from both rising and established powers. Circumstances of power transition lead China and other rising powers to demand increased voice within existing multilateral institutions. Rising powers dissatisfied with their degree of influence may attempt to revise rule-making more fundamentally by “regime shifting” or “competitive regime creation” (Morse and Keohane 2014). Yet, as recent literature shows, rising powers are not the only ones seeking to revise the international system. Challenges to LIO institutions emanate increasingly from established powers, principally the US (Morse and Keohane 2014; Zürn 2018; Chan 2021; Kruck and Zangl 2020; Kruck et al. 2022)

This paper looks at the other side of the coin, by analyzing the politics of institutional defence. Amid rising contestation across global governance arenas, who stands up to defend multilateral institutions? And why are they loyal to the old order? How do they go about trying to save it? We develop a theoretical framework to identify the structural attributes of LIO defenders and the alternatives. We also conceptualize the how of instititutional defense. We then carry out a plausibility probe of the framework through case study analysis of current contestation in the arena of digital standardization, shaped largely by China’s emergence as a central player in this issue area.

Speaker Biography:

Sarah Eaton is Professor of Transregional China Studies at Humboldt University Berlin and co-founder of the Berlin Contemporary China Network. She is interested in the study of contemporary Chinese politics and political economy from comparative and transregional perspectives. Her current research focuses on the dynamics of rising power in the field of technical standard-setting, for which she has received funding from both the European Research Council (Consolidator Grant) and the German Research Foundation

Speaker

Sarah Eaton

Humboldt University Berlin

Contact Details

Name Lancaster University Confucius Institute
Email

ci@lancaster.ac.uk

Website

https://www.lancaster.ac.uk/confucius-institute/research/seminars