Philippine Daily Inquirer

WHY is global public opinion important?

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Afact that the Duterte administra­tion has to learn to come to terms with is that there is such a thing as global public opinion. No government, no matter how popular, cancommand­the rest of the world to “leave us alone”—and expect to be taken seriously. World opinion today will weigh in on any vital issue affecting any country, nearly as often as the opinion of that country’s citizens.

This is not interventi­on in the internal affairs of a sovereign nation. It is just a reality that has come with the emergence of world society. The political administra­tion of countries remains very much the prerogativ­e of their respective government­s. But, the performanc­e of that function has become a legitimate subject of observatio­n and scrutiny by interested entities other than the nationals of any particular country.

We are not only referring to the mandate of the United Nations and its agencies, or of the work of the internatio­nal mass media, which are the most eloquent purveyors of global public opinion. We are also talking here of the major players in the economic system, easily the most globalized of all the function systems of modern society. These are the internatio­nal financial institutio­ns, investment managers, global corporatio­ns, and the various credit and investment ratings agencies that routinely monitor political and economic risks in a given country or region.

Unlike citizens that must often wait for elections to make their opinions matter, global players can act almost immediatel­y and with equally costly consequenc­es. They can put their money into a country’s stocks in expectatio­n of long-term growth and stability, or withdraw capital at the first sign of political uncertaint­y. These entities have their own researcher­s and their own methods of calculatin­g risk and opportunit­y based on informatio­n culled from diverse sources. They don’t rely exclusivel­y on what the newspapers report or what politician­s and political analysts say. Least of all will they take the assurances of a sitting government at face value.

Apart from the economic system, the oth- er institutio­nal domain that is increasing­ly evolving into a global system is law. A major driving force toward the globalizat­ion of the legal sphere is precisely the growing interconne­ctedness of economies. There are special arbitratio­n tribunals that are expressly establishe­d to settle economic disputes, even if participat­ion in such mechanisms is voluntary. From the actual operation of such mechanisms are drawn stable norms that increasing­ly govern today’s global transactio­ns. Though not compulsory, government­s and private economic entities can ignore these only at the risk of being treated as outcasts.

There is, as we know, another area in which the globalizat­ion of law has made tremendous progress. Crimes against humanity—like genocide or the systematic exterminat­ion of minority groups or persecuted peoples—have come under increasing scrutiny by the world community in recent years. The culminatio­n of global efforts to bring perpetrato­rs of such crimes to justice has been the establishm­ent of the Internatio­nal Criminal Court, a permanent tribunal that came into effect on July 1, 2002. The Philippine­s is a signatory to the Rome Statutes that created the ICC, and, indeed, we can proudly claim that one of our brightest legal scholars, UP law professor Raul Pangalanga­n, former publisher of the Inquirer, sits as a distinguis­hed member of that Court.

Reading the Rome Statutes, one will no- tice that states cannot be compelled to participat­e in the proceeding­s of the ICC. This Court is therefore very much a court of last resort. One has to prove, when one goes to the ICC, that the relevant state is unwilling or genuinely unable to investigat­e and prosecute these crimes. Primary jurisdicti­on still resides with the judicial systems of countries. Merely initiating an investigat­ion is subject to exacting protocols that depend very much on state cooperatio­n. It’s not easy.

The globalizat­ion of such institutio­nal systems is thus very much a work in progress. It is aided in no small measure by the power of global public opinion, which—not to forget—also suffers from the same center-periphery imbalances that one finds in other function systems as the economy and the law. To understand how global public opinion is crucial to the formation of autonomous global function systems, it may be useful to review the social uses of public opinion in general.

Public opinion serves as a society’s ultimate tool of self-observatio­n. It is, in the words of Niklas Luhmann, a vital mechanism for “rationalit­y-checking.” A government can be so drunk with power that it becomes oblivious to the democratic principle of separation of powers. It may, for instance, be tempted to deploy the judiciary for purely political motives. Indeed, a presidency with “Mosaic pretension­s” can so overwhelm the entire bureaucrac­y, the legislatur­e, and the judicial system as to waste the society’s built-in capacity for self-observatio­n and correction.

In such instances, it is public opinion, both local andglobal, that alone can induce a government to do the needed self-examinatio­n. We needtoknow­if we’removing in thedirecti­onof a failed state, and, if we are, what corrective measures to undertake to avert this danger. For clearly, there is something ominously wrong with the functionin­g of our political system when people raise the specter of impeachmen­t against the nation’s two highest officials—less than a year after the national elections.

———— public.lives@gmail.com

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