organization established by treaty between governments
An international organization is a formal group created by an agreement between governments to work together on shared concerns. These organizations matter because they provide a structured way for countries to cooperate on issues like trade, security, and humanitarian aid that often require coordinated action across borders.
AI-generated from the Wikipedia summary — may contain errors.
The offices of the United Nations in Geneva (Switzerland), which is the city that hosts the highest number of international organizations in the world An international organization, also known as an international institution or intergovernmental organization (IGO), is an association of states established by a treaty or other type of instrument governed by international law to pursue the common aim of its member states. An IGO possesses its own legal personality separate from its member states and can enter into legally binding agreements with other IGOs or with other states. The United Nations (UN), the Council of Europe, the African Union, the Organization of American States (OAS), the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO), Mercosur, and BRICS are examples of IGOs. International organizations are composed of primarily member states, but may also include other entities, such as other international organizations, firms, and nongovernmental organizations. Additionally, entities may hold observer status. Under international law, although treaties are typically between states, intergovernmental organizations also have the capacity to enter into treaties. The traditional view was that only states were subjects of international law, but with the founding of the United Nations, that view expanded to include intergovernmental organizations.
Within the international relations literature, international organizations facilitate cooperation between states by reducing transaction costs, providing information, making commitments more credible, establishing focal points for coordination, facilitating the principle of reciprocity, extending the shadow of the future, and enabling interlinkages of issues, which raises the cost of noncompliance. States may comply with the decisions of international organizations, even when they do not want to, for rational cost-benefit calculations (to reap concrete rewards of future cooperation and avoid punishment) and normative reasons (social learning and socialization).
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).