The Significance of the Seven-Power Summit
by John
Kirton
Notes:
5. The term "sherpa" comes from the native porters or bearers who
assist mountain climbers in the Himalayas. The term preserves
the fiction that these individuals serve only the most modest
functions, and the fact that the summit is a forum where
individual leaders have a unique ability to transcend entrenched
bureaucracies and professional advisers and make decisions for
themselves. The phrase, and the formal designation of personal
representative, shows the strong bias and key feature of the
summit as an antibureaucratic, transcendently political
institution devoid of a separate organization or secretariat and
dependent on the individual leaders involved. For the views of
sherpas on the summit, see John Hunt and Henry Owen,
Taking Stock of the Seven-Power Summits: Two
Views,
International Affairs 60, no. 4 (Autumn 1984):
657-61; Robert Armstrong, Economic Summits: A British
Perspective (Toronto: Centre for International Studies,
University of Toronto, 1988); Pascal Lamy, The Economic Summit
and the European Community (Toronto: Centre for International
Studies, University of Toronto, 1988); Allan Gotlieb, Canada
and the Economic Summits: Power and Responsibility (Toronto:
Centre for International Studies, University of Toronto, 1987);
and Sylvia Ostry, Summitry: The Medium and the Message
(Toronto: Centre for International Studies, University of
Toronto, 1988).