Columbia International Affairs Online: Working Papers

CIAO DATE: 05/2014

Governance Transfer by the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS)

Christof Hartmann

February 2014

Research Center (SFB) 700

Abstract

In the early 1990s, ECOWAS already committed its member states to standards of democracy and human rights. The organization developed its framework for governance transfer primarily through its 1999 and 2001 protocols in the wake of democratization processes in its member states. Overall standards are more developed in the fields of (liberal) democracy and human rights than in the rule of law and good governance. ECOWAS’s instruments for protecting democracy and human rights are far-reaching, allowing for sanctions and military interventions under the so-called ‘Mechanism.’ By comparison, there are few instruments to actively promote governance standards beyond election observation missions. In practice, ECOWAS has generally reacted to political crises and security threats in its member states with a mixture of diplomatic interventions, fact-finding missions, and (the threat of ) sanctions. These measures were mostly carried out by individual member states and only loosely linked to regional rules and procedures.