Dynamics of International Norm Change: Rules against Wartime Plunder

Author:

Sandholtz Wayne1

Affiliation:

1. University of California, Irvine, USA

Abstract

International norms change over time, but we do not fully understand how and why they evolve as they do. In this article, I explore a general model of international norm change. The model builds on two foundations. First, normative systems themselves generate tensions that lead to change. Those tensions are of two major types: (1) conflicts between the generality of rules and the specificity of concrete experience; and (2) conflicts between separate bodies of rules. Second, specific disputes push these normative conflicts to the fore and provoke arguments about the meaning and application of rules. The outcomes of those arguments necessarily modify the rules. The process of normative change is thus a cycle, linking rules to actions to arguments, which in turn reshape the rules. In order to explore the empirical utility of the model, the article assesses the evolution of the rules of war with respect to the plundering of artistic and cultural treasures. Relying on both secondary and archival materials, the analysis focuses on two crucial turns through the cycle of normative change, the Napoleonic Wars and World War II. The empirical account shows that the cycle of normative change depicted in the abstract does correspond to real-world processes.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Political Science and International Relations,Sociology and Political Science

Reference99 articles.

1. Alvarez, Jose E. (2001). `Constitutional Interpretation in International Organizations', in Jean-Marc Coicaud and Veijo Heiskanen (eds) The Legitimacy of International Organizations, pp. 104—54. Tokyo: United Nations University Press.

2. Document. American Association of Museums guidelines concerning the unlawful appropriation of objects during the Nazi era

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