What Constitutes Compliance
Compliance Studies are designed to ascertain the
credibility of the Summit process based on the ability of the
Summit members to implement their communiqué commitments
in the post-Summit period. Based on the six most significant
commitments emerging from the 1997 Denver communiqué,
compliance studies have been conducted by the University of
Toronto G8 Research Group in the areas of Russia, Employment,
Climate Change, Transnational Organized Crime, Development and
Anti-Personnel Landmines.
Having identified the major commitments in the
communiqué, defining compliance becomes the next central
task. First Order Compliance is defined to mean national
government action geared towards the domestic implementation of
legislative and administrative regulations designed to execute
summit commitments. As such, compliance is measured according to
governmental actions designed to modify existing instruments
within the executive and legislative branch to accommodate the
commitments reached. By identifying the introduction of new
executive actions, we are then able to assess whether or not the
domestic political processes within the seven countries are in
conformance with the direction of the target as specified in the
summit commence.
Beyond the enactment of legislation, first order compliance
also includes other executive actions such as the initiation of
specific programs, the appointment of special representatives,
budgetary allocations, resource distributions, proposals for
national action plans, recommendations for increased R&D
spending, and the establishment of new positions, posts, task
forces and working groups. Any executive initiatives are
included if they aim to reach the welfare target as specified in
the communiqué.
The Scoring Method
A three-level measurement process is used to categorize the
commitments:
- full conformance with a commitment is measured by +1
- complete failure to implement a commitment is measured by
-1
- a "work in progress" is measured by "0" and means that a
resolution has been initiated, but not completed, within the one
year time frame (i.e., from the time of the last summit to the
time of the forthcoming summit)
The commitments selected for the 1997 compliance study are as
follows:
- Russia - "We support the goal of early Russian accession to
the WTO on the basis of conditions generally applicable to newly
acceding members".
- Employment - "Measures that expand the availability of high
quality education and training and increase the responsiveness of
labor markets to economic conditions will aid the ability of our
people to adjust to all types of structural changes".
- Climate Change - "At the Third Conference of the Parties to
the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change in Kyoto, we must
forge a strong assessment that is consistent with the Berlin
Mandate and that contains quantified and legally-binding emission
targets that will result in reductions of greenhouse gas
emissions by 2010".
- Transnational Organized Crime - "We will combat illegal
firearms trafficking, by considering a new international
instrument. We will seek to adopt standard systems for firearms
identification and a stronger international regime for import and
export licensing of firearms".
- Development - "We will work with African countries to ensure
adequate and well-targeted assistance for those countries which
have the greatest need and carry out the necessary broad-based
reforms. This assistance will include support for democratic
governance, respect for human rights, sound public
administration, efficient legal and judicial systems,
infrastructure development, rural development, food security,
environmental protection, and human resource development
including health and education of their people".
- Anti-Personnel Landmines - "We reaffirm the UN General
Assembly resolution approved overwhelmingly, calling for
concluding and effective, legally-binding international agreement
to ban anti-personnel landmines as soon as possible".