Institutional Breakdown and International Cooperation: the European Agreement to Recognize Croatia and Slovenia Academic Article uri icon

abstract

  • Using the logic of a two-phase cooperation framework (first bargaining to reach an agreement, then enforcement of the negotiated agreement), this article examines how the risk of institutional breakdown can help promote international cooperation. I argue first that the risk of institutional breakdown can help promote bargaining cooperation by raising the opportunity costs of bargaining failure, thus providing a strong incentive for states who value the fragile international institution to negotiate a cooperative agreement. Having helped states to reach a cooperative bargain, the risk of institutional breakdown can also play a role in the subsequent enforcement phase. I argue second that the risk of valued institutional breakdown can reduce state preferences for defection, moving the enforcement problem away from the standard Prisoners' Dilemma structure. To illustrate these arguments, I examine the European Community's decision to recognize the breakaway Yugoslav republics of Croatia and Slovenia.

published proceedings

  • European Journal of International Relations

author list (cited authors)

  • BEARCE, D. H.

citation count

  • 4

complete list of authors

  • BEARCE, DAVID H

publication date

  • December 2002