ID | 156228 |
Title Proper | Leveling the playing field |
Other Title Information | cost diffusion and the promotion of “responsible” arms export norms |
Language | ENG |
Author | Erickson, Jennifer L |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | Why do states take the lead in diffusing norms they once resisted? I address this question in the context of new humanitarian arms trade norms, culminating in the 2013 Arms Trade Treaty (ATT). Although most major arms exporting states have supported the ATT and similar initiatives, only some have chosen to invest resources in becoming leaders of these initiatives to spread new norms beyond their borders. I examine British and German arms export policies and practices to argue that states that choose leadership following costly norm adoption may do so as a means to share the costs of those norms with other international actors and reduce future adaptation costs. By delving deeper into the agency of norm diffusion, the article offers insights into powerful states’ motivations for norm leadership following costly norm adoption, the dynamics of norm diffusion, and the institutional form international norms eventually take. |
`In' analytical Note | International Studies Perspectives Vol. 18, No.3; Aug 2017: p.323–342 |
Journal Source | International Studies Perspectives 2017-09 18, 3 |
Key Words | Leadership ; Arms Exports ; Arms Trade Treaty ; Norm |