The proliferation of “minilateral” summits is reshaping how international security problems are addressed, yet these summits remain a poorly understood phenomenon. In this groundbreaking work, Kjell Engelbrekt contrasts the most important minilateral summits—the G7 (formerly G8) and G20—with the older and more formal UN Security Council to assess where the diplomacy of international security is taking place and whether these institutions complement or compete with each other.
Engelbrekt’s research in primary-source documents of the G7, G8, G20, and UN Security Council provides unique insight into how these institutions deliberate on three policy areas: conflict management, counterterrorism cooperation, and climate change mitigation. Relatively informal and flexible, GX diplomacy invites more countries to take a seat at the table and allows nontraditional security threats to be placed on the agenda. Engelbrekt concludes, however, that there is a continuing need for institutions like the UN to address traditional security problems.
High-Table Diplomacy will provoke discussion and further research on the role of minilateral summits among scholars of international relations, security studies, and international organizations.
Table of Contents
List of Illustrations
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Abbreviations
1. A Puzzle and Conceptual Framework
2. Great-Power Diplomacy and International Security in Historical Context
3. Conflict Management
4. Counterterrorism Cooperation
5. Climate Change Mitigation
Conclusions
Appendix: List of Interviewees
Bibliography
Index
Reviews
"Much to his credit, Engelbrekt has sought to provide a unified picture of contemporary global order. He has focused on peace and security matters—his ‘High Table’ diplomacy approach unites power perspectives with ‘order’ perspectives. Engelbrekt's analysis integrates formal and informal institutions, great powers and middle powers, in ways much of the literature ignores. Today’s global order is far more complex including the actors and their complicated arrangements and Engelbrekt has provided us with a more complete map of global governance than most."—Alan S. Alexandroff, Director of the Global Summitry Project, Munk School of Global Affairs, University of Toronto
About the Author
Kjell Engelbrekt is a professor in the Swedish Defence University’s Department of Political Science and a member of the Royal Swedish Academy of War Studies and a Nonresident Senior Fellow on Global Security at the Chicago Council on Global Affairs.