Pluralist Democracy in International Relations 2018
DOI: 10.1007/978-3-319-70422-7_7
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David Mitrany and the Purposes of Functional Pluralism

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Cited by 5 publications
(5 citation statements)
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“…Mitrany felt that states can integrate in limited functional, technical, and or economic areas. Thus, by implication international agencies would meet human needs, aided by knowledge and expertise; which invariably would attract the loyalty of the populations stimulate their participation, and expand the area of integration (Holthaus, 2018).…”
Section: Concept Of Regional Integrationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Mitrany felt that states can integrate in limited functional, technical, and or economic areas. Thus, by implication international agencies would meet human needs, aided by knowledge and expertise; which invariably would attract the loyalty of the populations stimulate their participation, and expand the area of integration (Holthaus, 2018).…”
Section: Concept Of Regional Integrationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…His belief in people’s innate cooperative inclinations places Mitrany in a tradition of early 20th-century British pluralists including guild socialists such as G. D. H. Cole and liberals such as Leonard Hobhouse who was his academic mentor. Though they differed in the extent of their radicalism and transformative ambition (Holthaus, 2018), pluralists concurred that inside existing (liberal) states patterns of voluntary association and cooperation were already evident and ripe for expansion. These states were constituted not by singular ‘peoples’ or ‘societies’ but by a ‘complex of associations held together by the wills of their members’ (quoted in Long, 1993: 360; also see Wright, 1978.…”
Section: International Functionalismmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The past two decades have seen some resurgence of interest in international functionalism and a re-evaluation of the work of David Mitrany as its ‘founder’ and most influential exponent (e.g. Ashworth, 2017; Hammarlund, 2005; Holthaus, 2018; Steffek, 2015). Much of this work is inspired by the same underlying concerns that also animated Mitrany: a (qualified) scepticism of the state as a model of social and political organization and – by implication – a leeriness of centralizing and territorial models of international integration that seek (partially) to reproduce state-like structures at a supranational scale.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Rather, functionalists assume the prevalence of pluralist politics with multiple and diverse actors, who can and do make contact and build coalitions across national frontiers and national bureaucracies. Such a perspective is especially conducive for understanding the involvement of multiple actors as well as their modes of cooperation vis-à-vis common technical, political and economic issues (Holthaus 2018). The Caspian Sea region and the CEP are subject to more complex and interconnected dynamics than pure high politics.…”
Section: Geopolitical Views On the Caspian Sea Regionmentioning
confidence: 99%