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Chicago Journal of International Law

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199

Abstract

This Article explores the rise of a new model of global governance: the “click-and-commit world order,” characterized by digitally mediated pledging platforms through which a wide array of actors—states, corporations, cities, NGOs, and individuals—publicly commit to addressing global problems through non-binding promises. In contrast to traditional treaty-making, these pledging platforms offer a decentralized, voluntary framework for international cooperation that relies on public declarations rather than negotiated obligations.

Within the U.N. system, this mode of governance developed within the United Nations Global Compact and the Paris Climate Agreement, where bottom-up pledges were institutionalized within formal and informal international structures. The internet now amplifies and democratizes this model, enabling coordination and norm diffusion without requiring state action or legal enforcement. Examples such as the Net Zero Space Initiative and a range of climate-related platforms illustrate how the pledging order bypasses formal treaty regimes in favor of reputational incentives, public transparency, and symbolic participation.

The Article evaluates the values, risks, and institutional dynamics of this emergent order, including its emphasis on pluralism, voluntarism, and functional over status-based participation. Ultimately, the pledging order reflects a shift from constitutional, rule-restraining global law toward a voluntarist, productivity-oriented attempt to address 21st-century transnational challenges—particularly where formal multilateralism has stalled.

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