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Amy Burchfield, Access & Faculty Services Librarian amy.burchfield@law.csuohio.edu | June 06, 2008 - 09:57
The American Society of International Law (ASIL) has recently added another excellent information product to their already long list of print and electronic publications. The Interest Group on International Organizations now publishes ASIL’s Reports on International Organizations, which are known as ASIL RIO.
The goal of ASIL RIO is to highlight the work of international organizations that are generally not well-known to international lawyers. While plenty of information sources cover the UN, EU or WTO, few discuss the work of INTERPOL, the AU, ASEAN, UNEP or the OSCE, to name a couple of the international organizations featured in the first issue of ASIL RIO.
ASIL RIO is browsable by international organization or by topical keywords such as economic growth, judicial reform, sanctions, corruption or democracy.

John Maszka | 22/06/2008, 11:07
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International organizations' norms will only be viewed with legitimacy, and hence become embedded within each individual state, when the respective constituents of each state accept them. Constructive Sovereignty is an emerging theory pioneered by John Maszka intended to address globalization's increasing onslaught against state sovereignty. The theory maintains that states are not the primary actors, their constituents are. Therefore, their preferences are not fixed. Since states merely represent the preferences of their constituents, they will only adhere to and ultimately embed those international norms their constituency will accept. Rather than push for larger and more powerful international organizations that will impose global norms from the outside in, the theory of Constructive Sovereignty posits that ultimately change must come from the inside out. That is to say, from each state's own constituency. As each state's constituents become more and more international, they will become more receptive to international norms. In this way, international norms are embedded and viewed with legitimacy while each state's sovereignty is maintained and respected.