This article has multiple issues. Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page . (Learn how and when to remove these messages)
|
World federalism or global federalism is a political ideology advocating a democratic, federal world government. A world federation would have authority on issues of global reach, while the members of such a federation would retain authority over local and national issues. The overall sovereignty over the world population would largely reside in the federal government. [1]
World federalism is distinguished from unitary world government models by the principle of subsidiarity, where decisions are made as much as possible at the most immediate level, preserving national agency to a large degree. Proponents maintain that a world federation offers a more effective and accountable global governance structure than the existing United Nations organization, while simultaneously allowing wide autonomy for continental, national, regional and local governments.
Unlike the more generic concept of world government, world federalism describes a specific form of global governance, i.e., that of a federal, democratic world republic. The difference between world federalism and other types of global governance are outlined below.
The United Nations is not a legislative body and is thus limited to a mostly advisory role. [2] Its stated purpose is to foster cooperation between existing national governments rather than exert authority over them. [3] [4]
Furthermore, membership of the United Nations organization is reserved for states, [5] not individuals (see World Citizenship).
A unitary world government would consist of a single, central government body with supreme sovereignty. While administrative subdivisions might exist, their powers are delegated by the central government. In a world federation based on subsidiarity, the delegation is the other way round, from local to central. Global federal government is subsidiary to local in that it only does what local government cannot. [6]
Plans that sought to unify the known world by conquest have historically aimed at a centralized, unitary government, rather than a federal government. World federalists generally do not support violent paths towards a world federation (see World Federalism § Current proposals for establishing a world federation)
A confederation is a union of sovereign nations, which are pursuing a common cause. Member states in a confederation are sometimes free to secede from the confederation.
In a federation based on subsidiarity, nations choose to give up their sovereignty over global issues they cannot manage to a central authority empowered to manage these issues at the global level. Sovereignty over national issues remains with the nation.
Different forms of federalism can be applied at the global level. Traditional federalism is the model adopted by the United States, in which the States relinquish their sovereignty to the federal government, which in turn represents them in front of other nations. It constitutes a centralized model of world federalism. The most decentralized model of world federalism is the confederation of States, or world confederalism, which gives the States a higher degree of power and freedom in which countries preserve their sovereignty, relinquishing to the federal authority only the powers to manage and regulate intergovernmental relationships. The European Union can be considered an example of such system of government, because its Member States preserve their sovereignty even though they relinquish part of it to the community's authorities in specific matters. [7]
World federalism has evolved from more general proposals for a world government. Proposals for a world government can be found as far back as Ancient Greece, India and China, mostly tied to a mystical cosmology. Alexander the Great pursued the goal of conquering the entire known world and subjugating it under his rule. World governments in various forms later appeared in the works of Dante Alighieri, [8] Immanuel Kant, [9] Anacharsis Cloots [10] and Johann Gottlieb Fichte, [11] where it was explicitly proposed as a means to securing world peace. A world parliament [12] as integral part of a world republic was mentioned first by Pecqueur in 1842. [13] The idea has been popularized by a number of prominent authors, such as Alfred Tennyson, F.A. Hayek, and H. G. Wells.
The late 19th century has also seen the establishment of a number of international institutions, such as the International Committee of the Red Cross, the Telegraphic Union, the Universal Postal Union and the Inter-Parliamentary Union with the goal of serving as "an international congress which should meet periodically to discuss international questions".
The Campaign for World Government was founded in 1937 by pacifists and feminists Rosika Schwimmer and Lola Maverick Lloyd. The campaign aimed to learn from the weaknesses of the League of Nations by establishing a federal world government as an effective means to abolish war. Such a democratic world government would represent the interests of the world's people, rather than merely the national interests of member states. The pamphlet "Chaos, War or a New World Order?" [14] (1937) outlines the campaign's approach to put the demands into practise: a World Constitutional Convention would be held to lay the groundwork for a Federation of Nations with democratic elections. The pamphlet further includes several policy suggestions, e.g., universal membership, direct representation, separation of powers, abolition of military forces, standardization of an international date system, the peaceful transfer of people out of population-dense regions, and a combined global free-trade and command economy. [15] [16]
Advocacy tactics involved congressional testimony, lobbying of legislators, national letter-writing campaigns, and participation in world government conferences. The campaign succeeded in motivating the resolution at the 1938 New York State Constitutional Convention encouraging President Roosevelt to call a world constitutional convention, and several Congressional resolutions and bills, including the "Alexander Peace Bill" (H.J.R. 610, 76th Cong. (1940)), and the "Tenerowicz Peace Bill" (H.J.R. 131, 77th Cong. (1941)). The organization was also one of the few independent observers of the 1944 Dumbarton Oaks conference at which the United Nations was first planned. [15]
The rise of nationalism and the growing threat of fascism in Europe caused a resurgence of the idea of a unified world under democratic principles. With the release of the book Union Now , Clarence Streit proposed a political union of democratic nations. The United States, United Kingdom, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, South Africa, Ireland, France, Belgium, the Netherlands, Switzerland, Denmark, Norway, Sweden and Finland were to form the seed for a democratic world republic. A world congress, made up of a House of Representative and a Senate should decide on matters related to defence, trade and currency. [17]
During World War II, multiple other world federalist organizations were founded, especially in the United States. Inspired by Clarence Streit's Union Now , Harris Wofford Jr. founded the Student Federalists in 1942. The organization's success prompted Newsweek to predict he would become President of the United States. [18]
The 1943 book One World by the Republican Wendell L. Willkie about his world tour through the Allied countries became an instant bestseller, further promoting the concept of world federalism and decolonisation to a wider audience. The publication of Emery Reves' The Anatomy of Peace in 1945, translated into thirty languages, further popularised the idea and was publicly endorsed by Albert Einstein. [19]
In 1947, the Committee to Frame a World Constitution was founded, releasing "The Preliminary Draft of a World Constitution" in 1948.
Also in 1947, over 50 world federalist organizations formulated the Montreux Declaration, encapsulating the demands of the world federalist movement in light of WWII:
We world federalists are convinced that the establishment of a world federal government is the crucial problem of our time. Until it is solved, all other issues, whether national or international, will remain unsettled. It is not between free enterprise and planned economy, nor between capitalism and communism that the choice lies, but between federalism and power politics. Federalism alone can assure the survival of man.
The United World Federalists emerged as the main advocacy group for world federalism in the United States after WWII. The United World Federalists was a non-partisan, non-profit organization with members in forty-eight states, founded in Asheville, North Carolina on February 23, 1947, as the result of a merger of five existing world government groups: Americans United for World Government; World Federalists, U.S.A.; Student Federalists; Georgia World Citizens Committee; and the Massachusetts Committee for World Federation. The organization was renamed to World Federalists, USA (1960s), World Federalists Association (1970s) [20] and then Citizens for Global Solutions, which is active to this day.
In 1949, six U.S. states — California, Connecticut, Florida, Maine, New Jersey, and North Carolina — applied for an Article V convention to propose an amendment "to enable the participation of the United States in a world federal government". [21] Multiple other state legislatures introduced or debated the same proposal. [22] These resolutions were part of this effort. [23]
During the 81st United States Congress (1949-1952), multiple resolutions were introduced favoring a world federation. [24]
In 1948, Garry Davis entered a meeting of the newly founded United Nations General Assembly, in which a vote on the Universal Declaration of Human Rights was expected to fail due to conflicts of national interests. He ripped his US passport, declared himself "World Citizen Number One" and asked for asylum in the United Nations, whose assembly hall had been declared international territory for the duration of the meeting. He was promptly arrested.
After his release, Davis and several supporters founded "Operation Oran", entering a session of the United Nations General Assembly, where he gave a short speech before being escorted out of the hall:
"I interrupt you in the name of the people of the world not represented here. Though my words may be unheeded, our common need for world law and order can no longer be disregarded.
We, the people, want the peace which only a world government can give. The sovereign states you represent divide us and lead us to the abyss of total war.
I call upon you no longer to deceive us by this illusion of political authority. I call upon you to convene forthwith a World Constitutional Assembly to raise the standard around which all men can gather, the standard of true peace, of One Government for One World."
Prominent people, such as Albert Camus, [25] André Breton, Albert Schweitzer and Albert Einstein publicly supported Garry Davis, fueling the sudden public interest in the idea. The first meeting of the World Citizens' Movement in Paris a month after his speech gathered 25,000 people. Garry Davis founded the World Service Authority, promoting the idea of world citizenship. Over 750,000 people from over 150 countries registered as world citizens between 1948 and 1950, and over 300 cities declared themselves as world citizen communities. Davis further founded the World Government of Citizens in his hometown of Ellsworth in 1953. [26]
The movement for world federalism has declined from its peak in the 1950s, due to a lack of funding and successors for the activists who founded the original world federalist organizations. [27]
Major active world federalist organizations include World Constitution and Parliament Association (WCPA), Citizens for Global Solutions and Democracy Without Borders.
The World Federalist Movement/Institute for Global Policy acts as the umbrella organization for world federalist advocacy, albeit its focus has shifted away from its original core issue towards projects like Responsibility to Protect and the Coalition for the International Criminal Court. [28]
There are a number of proposals for the establishment of a world federation:
Reform of the UN and existing international institutions:
Regional Unification:
Other:
Numerous books and articles have been written on the practical implementation of world federalist goals.
A comprehensive analysis and a roadmap to world federalism is presented in the book World Federalist Manifesto, Guide to Political Globalization, in which the author presents a model of world federalism divided into international legislative, executive, judicial and financial branches and the world government shares the authority with Member States, in a way that both are sovereign within their respective sphere of competence. [34]
Albert Einstein grew increasingly convinced that the world was veering off course. He arrived at the conclusion that the gravity of the situation demanded more profound actions and the establishment of a "world government" was the only logical solution. [35] [36] In his "Open Letter to the General Assembly of the United Nations" of October 1947, Einstein emphasized the urgent need for international cooperation and the establishment of a world government. [37] In the year 1948, Einstein invited United World Federalists, Inc.(UWF) president Cord Meyer to a meeting of ECAS [38] [39] and joined UWF as a member of the advisory board. [40] [41] Einstein and ECAS assisted UEF in fundraising [41] and provided supporting material. [42] [43] Einstein described United World Federalists as: "the group nearest to our aspirations". [44]
There is no salvation for civilization, or even the human race, other than the creation of a world government.- Albert Einstein, Letter to World Federalists, Stockholm Congress, 1949 [45] [46]
Einstein and other prominent figures sponsored the Peoples' World Convention (PWC), which took place in 1950-51 [47] [48] and later continued in the form of world constituent assemblies in 1968, 1977, 1978-79, and 1991. [49] [50] This effort was successful in creating a world constitution, Constitution for the Federation of Earth and a Provisional World Government. [49]
The Constitution for the Federation of Earth , drafted by international legal experts in 1968 and finalized in 1991, is a world constitution of a world federalist government, [49] and its work today is being carried forward under the Provisional World Government. [51] Fourteen parliamentary sessions of a Provisional World Parliament have been held under the framework of this constitution from 1982 to the present [52] and have passed dozens of acts of legislation on issues of global concern. [53] [54]
Debate around world government falls into four broad categories, which is often applied also to world federalism: [55]
The establishment of a world federation would require extraordinary amounts of coordination and trust from all nations of the world, which are in economic and political competition with each other. Critics argue that world federalism is thus an unreachable utopia.
Proponents of world federalism point to existential crises, such as climate change, war and pandemics, which make global coordination necessary and inevitable.
An argument revolving around political realism asserts that, while conventional approaches (diplomacy, deterrence, disarmament, international organizations, etc.) have not avoided the most undesirable outcomes, world federalism instead is a realistic extension of the proven concepts of rule of law and liberal democracy to the global level. [4]
Critics argue that a concentration of power on a global level would raise the risks and probability of tyranny, deterioration of human rights, and cultural homogenization.
Proponents of world federalism point out that democratic and republican principles are at the core of world federalism, which are commonly seen as safeguards against tyranny and oppression in nation states. Realizing the inherent risks of the concentration of power, world federalists advocate a vertical separation of powers between different levels of government (subsidiarity), horizontal separation of powers between different government branches (checks and balances), democratic participation, and constitutionally enshrined human and civil rights. [56]
Critics argue that the problems world federalism proposes to solve (e.g. climate change, war, pandemics, hunger) are too big to be solved by political means only, i.e. even if a world federation existed, it would not be capable of alleviating these issues.
World federalists argue that these issues originate from the insistence on national sovereignty and the lack of democratic structures at the global level. Effective global governance could therefore deal directly with the root cause of these problems.
Critics argue that it is unnecessary to establish a world federation to solve global problems. They point to existing structures of global governance, such as international organizations and the United Nations. [57]
World federalists maintain that current structures of global governance are not capable of enforcing decisions, and that they are not democratically representing the world's population.
A world federation has been mentioned in several works of fiction, along with more general concepts of world government.
World Federalist Movement/Institute for Global Policy member organizations | World Federalist Movement/Institute for Global Policy associated organizations |
Organization | Abbreviation | Headquarters | Country | Founded |
---|---|---|---|---|
Weltföderalisten Deutschlands e.V. | Hamburg | Germany | 1949 (defunct) | |
Weltbürgervereinigung e.V. | Oldenburg | Germany | 2007 (defunct) | |
Association of World Citizens Deutschland e.V | AWC | Freiburg | Germany | |
Center for United Nations Constitutional Research | CUNCR | Brussels | Belgium | |
Democracy Without Borders | DWB | Berlin | Germany | 2003 |
Equilibrismus e.V. | Munich | Germany | 2005 | |
Eine-Welt-Partei e.V. | Wiesbaden | Germany | 2003 (defunct) | |
Federal Union | United Kingdom | 1938 | ||
Global Voice | Amsterdam | Netherlands | 2004 | |
Global Week of Action for a World Parliament (Democracy Without Borders) | Berlin | Germany | 2013 | |
One World Trust | Wotton-under-Edge | United Kingdom | 1951 | |
The Federal Trust | London | United Kingdom | 1945 | |
Together First | London | United Kingdom | ||
UN Parliamentary Assembly Campaign (Democracy Without Borders) | Berlin | Germany | 2007 | |
World Parliament Experiment (Democracy Without Borders) | Berlin | Germany | 2019 | |
Én Verden | Oslo | Norway | 1970 | |
FN-forbundet | Copenhagen | Denmark | 1970 | |
Movimento Federalista Europeo | Pavia | Italy | 1943 | |
Weltföderalisten der Schweiz | Morges | Switzerland | 1960 | |
WF Beweging Nederland | Den Haag | Netherlands | 1948 | |
Union of European Federalists | Brussels | Belgium | 1946 | |
Union of European Federalists France | Lyon | France | ||
Union of European Federalists Spain | Spain | 2012 | ||
World Democratic Governance Project Association | apGDM-WDGpa | Barcelona | Spain | |
Young European Federalists | JEF | Brussels | Belgium | 2004 |
United World | UW | Netherlands | Netherlands | 2020 |
Weltstaat-Liga [58] | Munich | Germany | 1947 (defunct) |
Organization | Abbreviation | Headquarters | Country | Founded |
---|---|---|---|---|
Center for Development of International Law | New York | USA | ||
Centro Mexicano de Responsibilidad Global | CEMERG | Mexico | ||
Citizens for Global Solutions | CGS | Washington, D.C. | USA | 2003 |
Coalition for the International Criminal Court | CICC | New York | USA | 1995 |
Democracia Global | DG | Buenos Aires | Argentina | |
Democratic World Federalists | DWF | San Francisco | USA | 2004 |
The Streit Council, Inc. (formerly Federal Union, Inc.) | SC | Washington, D.C. | USA | 1939 |
Institute for Global Leadership | Worcester | USA | 2001 | |
International Coalition for the Responsibility to Protect | New York | USA | 2008 | |
United World | UW | United States | USA | 2020 |
Vote World Parliament | Shawville | Canada | 2004 | |
World Constitution and Parliament Association | WCPA | Denver, Colorado | USA | 1958 |
Workable World Trust | St. Paul | USA | 2014 | |
World Federalist Movement/Institute for Global Policy | WFM | New York | USA | 1947 |
World Federalist Movement Canada | WFMC | Ottawa | Canada | 1951 |
World Federalist Movement Toronto Chapter | Toronto | Canada | ||
World Service Authority | Washington, D.C. | USA | 1953 | |
Young World Federalists | YWF | West Palm Beach | USA | 2019 |
Organization | Abbreviation | Headquarters | Country | Founded |
---|---|---|---|---|
Advocates for Youth and Health Development | Abuja | Nigeria | 2008 | |
African Federation Association - WFM Uganda | Kampala | Uganda | 1993 | |
Citizens for Development Network | Kigali | Rwanda | 2014 |
Organization | Abbreviation | Headquarters | Country | Founded |
---|---|---|---|---|
Asian Youth Center | Hyderabad | India | 1984 | |
Global Federal League | GFL | Bhubaneswar | 2021 | |
Japanese Parliamentary Committee for World Federation | JPCWF | Tokyo | Japan | 1945 |
One World | Jerusalem | Israel | ||
South Asian Federalists | New Delhi | India | ||
The Federal Government of the World (Beta) | FGW | Tokyo | Japan | 2021 |
The Global Trust | Rajkot | India | 1996 | |
United World | UW | Iran | Iran | 2020 |
WFM Asian Center | Osaka | Japan | ||
World Citizens Association of Australia | WCAA | Sydney | Australia | |
World Party Japan | Matsudo | Japan | 1998 |
Federalism is a mode of government that combines a general level of government with a regional level of sub-unit governments, while dividing the powers of governing between the two levels of governments. Two illustrative examples of federated countries—one of the world's oldest federations, and one recently organized—are Australia and the Federated States of Micronesia, (Micronesia).
The term federalist describes several political beliefs around the world. It may also refer to the concept of parties, whose members or supporters call themselves Federalists.
World government is the concept of a single political authority with jurisdiction over all of Earth and humanity. It is conceived in a variety of forms, from tyrannical to democratic, which reflects its wide array of proponents and detractors.
A federation is an entity characterized by a union of partially self-governing provinces, states, or other regions under a federal government (federalism). In a federation, the self-governing status of the component states, as well as the division of power between them and the central government, is constitutionally entrenched and may not be altered by a unilateral decision, neither by the component states nor the federal political body without constitutional amendment.
A confederation is a political union of sovereign states united for purposes of common action. Usually created by a treaty, confederations of states tend to be established for dealing with critical issues, such as defence, foreign relations, internal trade or currency, with the central government being required to provide support for all its members. Confederalism represents a main form of intergovernmentalism, defined as any form of interaction around states that takes place on the basis of sovereign independence or government.
The Emergency Committee of Atomic Scientists (ECAS) was founded by Albert Einstein and Leó Szilárd in May, 1946, primarily as a fundraising and policy-making agency. Its aims were to warn the public of the dangers associated with the development of nuclear weapons, promote the peaceful use of nuclear energy, and ultimately work towards world peace, which was seen as the only way that nuclear weapons would not be used again.
Democratic globalization is a social movement towards an institutional system of global democracy. One of its proponents is the British political thinker David Held. In the last decade, Held published a dozen books regarding the spread of democracy from territorially defined nation states to a system of global governance that encapsulates the entire world. For some, democratic mundialisation is a variant of democratic globalisation stressing the need for the direct election of world leaders and members of global institutions by citizens worldwide; for others, it is just another name for democratic globalisation.
A supranational union is a type of international organization and political union that is empowered to directly exercise some of the powers and functions otherwise reserved to states. A supranational organization involves a greater transfer of or limitation of state sovereignty than other kinds of international organizations.
Sovereigntism, sovereignism or souverainism is the notion of having control over one's conditions of existence, whether at the level of the self, social group, region, nation or globe. Typically used for describing the acquiring or preserving political independence of a nation or a region, a sovereigntist aims to "take back control" from perceived powerful forces, either against internal subversive minority groups, or from external global governance institutions, federalism and supranational unions. It generally leans instead toward isolationism, and can be associated with certain independence movements, but has also been used to justify violating the independence of other nations.
Citizens for Global Solutions is a grassroots-level membership organization in the United States working towards the establishment of a world government in order to avoid future atomic wars.
The Anatomy of Peace is a book by Emery Reves, first published in 1945. It expressed the world federalist sentiments shared by Albert Einstein and many others in the late 1940s, in the period immediately following World War II.
The United Nations Parliamentary Assembly (UNPA) is a proposed parliamentary body within the United Nations (UN) system.
Cord Meyer IV was a war veteran, a world federalist, a CIA official and a writer. After serving in World War II as a Marine officer in the Pacific War, where he was both injured and decorated, he led the United World Federalists in the years after the war. Around 1949, he began working for the CIA, where he became a high-level operative, retiring in 1977. After retiring from intelligence work in 1977, Meyer wrote as a columnist and book author.
Cosmopolitan democracy is a political theory which explores the application of norms and values of democracy at the transnational and global sphere. It argues that global governance of the people, by the people, for the people is possible and needed. Writers advocating cosmopolitan democracy include Immanuel Kant, David Held, Daniele Archibugi, Richard Falk, and Mary Kaldor. In the cosmopolitan democracy model, decisions are made by those affected, avoiding a single hierarchical form of authority. According to the nature of the issues at stake, democratic practice should be reinvented to take into account the will of stakeholders. This can be done either through direct participation or through elected representatives. The model advocated by cosmopolitan democrats is confederal and decentralized—global governance without world government—unlike those models of global governance supported by classic World Federalism thinkers, such as Albert Einstein.
German-born scientist Albert Einstein was best known during his lifetime for his development of the theory of relativity, his contributions to quantum mechanics, and many other notable achievements in modern physics. However, Einstein's political views also garnered much public interest due to his fame and involvement in political, humanitarian, and academic projects around the world. Einstein was a peace activist and a firm advocate of global federalism and world law. He also wrote: “the population of Europe has grown from 113 million to almost 400 million during the last century… a terrible thought, which could almost make one reconciled to war!”. He favoured the principles of socialism, asserting that it was an ideological system that fixed what he perceived as the inherent societal shortcomings of capitalism.
A world constitution is a proposed framework or document aimed at establishing a system of global governance. It seeks to provide a set of principles, structures, and laws to govern the relationships between states and address global issues. The concept of a world constitution reflects the aspiration for greater international cooperation, peace, and the resolution of global challenges.
The World Federalist Movement/Institute for Global Policy, Ltd. is an organization that advocates for a democratic world government of a world federalist system, formed in 1947 in Montreux, Switzerland.
The World Federalist Movement — Canada (WFMC) is a member organization of the World Federalist Movement, a global citizens movement dedicated to promoting institutions of world governance. WFMC has a national headquarters in Ottawa, and active branches in Toronto, Vancouver, Victoria, and Montreal. Since its founding in 1951, the WFMC and its predecessor organizations have been a strong advocate for the application of the principles of democratic federalism to world affairs. It advocates for the strengthening international bodies and democratizing existent global institutions.
The World Constitution and Parliament Association (WCPA), formally known as the World Committee for a World Constitutional Convention (WCWCC), is an international committee established as an international non-governmental organization (INGO) dedicated to the establishment of world peace through a democratic federal world government. WCPA is responsible for advancing the work of the Provisional World Government and its institutions established under the Constitution for the Federation of Earth (CFoE).
The World Constitutional Convention (WCC), also known as the World Constituent Assembly (WCA) or the First World Constituent Assembly, took place in Interlaken, Switzerland and Wolfach, Germany, 1968. The convention aimed to foster global cooperation and world peace through the development of a World constitution and establishment of a democratic federal world government.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link){{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)