4.1 Article

Legitimating the Antarctic Treaty System: from rich nations club to planetary ecological democracy?

Journal

AUSTRALIAN JOURNAL OF INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS
Volume 76, Issue 3, Pages 266-285

Publisher

ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/10357718.2022.2056876

Keywords

Antarctica; legitimacy; geopolitics; environmental governance; nationalism; postcolonialism; posthumanism

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This paper explores how the Antarctic Treaty System (ATS) has been legitimized through input, output, and throughput legitimacy as the only authoritative decision-making context for Antarctic matters, and points out the importance and limitations of maintaining this legitimacy. The analysis also raises concerns about the inhibiting centrality of nation states and the logic of sovereignty during times of global ecological and geopolitical change.
Like other international institutions, the Antarctic Treaty System (ATS) relies on the goodwill and self-binding commitment of its members. Legitimacy, understood as the belief in the 'rightfulness' of a governing arrangement by its stakeholders, lies at the heart of the ATS' success as a multilateral institution. Global warming and geopolitical power shifts are poised to challenge established forms of Antarctic legitimacy and effectiveness, with external calls for Antarctic democratisation and reform increasing. Using the concepts of input, output, and throughput legitimacy, this paper explores how the ATS has been legitimated as the only authoritative decision-making context for Antarctic matters, internally amongst Treaty Partners as well as externally towards the rest of the international community. It argues that the increase of input legitimacy through the inclusion of more consultative parties led to a perceived lack of output legitimacy for some especially environmental critics which illustrates the importance but also the limits of maintaining consensus about throughput legitimacy: the agreed upon processes and rules of decision-making. Finally, the analysis problematises the inhibiting centrality of nation states and the logic of sovereignty during times of global ecological and geopolitical change and asks how an ambitiously democratic future of Antarctic governance in the Anthropocene might look like.

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