"Fully-automated liberalism? Blockchain technology and
international cooperation in an anarchic world
Bernhard Reinsberg 1, 2
1 – University of Glasgow, School of Social and Political Sciences, 40 Bute Gardens,
Glasgow, G12 8RT, bernhard.reinsberg@glasgow.ac.uk
2 – Centre for Business Research, University of Cambridge
Abstract: A recent wave of scholarship attests that the liberal world order is under threat.
While there is disagreement about the underlying reasons for this diagnosis, there are few
attempts to further our understanding of how the liberal order can be reinvigorated. This
article probes the potential of blockchain technology to promote international cooperation.
Blockchain technology is a data structure that enables global governance stakeholders to
establish decentralized governance systems which provide high-powered incentives for
enhanced cooperation. By outlining the contours of a blockchain-based global governance
system for climate policy, the article illustrates that blockchain technology holds theoretical
promise to foster cooperation in three ways: leveraging new sources of information through
blockchain-based prediction markets; allaying coordinating problems through reducing the
cost of transactions for side payments; and allowing states and other global governance actors
to make more credible commitments given guaranteed execution of blockchain-enabled smart
contracts.
By empowering local knowledge holders and non-state actors that traditionally
lacked the means to coordinate efforts to influence global politics, blockchain technology also
promises to advance an international order based on liberal values. In actuality, however,
emerging blockchain-based global governance systems will fall short of the libertarian ideal
of ‘fully-automated liberalism’ as their design and operation will remain under the shadow of
power. "
[end of partial quote]