Autonomous policy making by international organizations /
The volume seeks to determine the ways in which IO's contribute to the solution of global problems by influencing international decision-making in ways that go beyond the lowest common denominator of national interests.
Clasificación: | Libro Electrónico |
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Otros Autores: | , |
Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
London ; New York :
Routledge,
1998.
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Colección: | Routledge/ECPR studies in European political science ;
5. |
Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Chapter 1 Autonomous policy making by international organizations
- Purpose, outline and results / BOB REINALDA
- part Part I Theoretical perspectives / INE MEGENS
- chapter 2 International organizations
- The ugly duckling of international relations theory?
- chapter 3 The decision-making approach to international organizations
- Cox and Jacobson's anatomic lesson revisited
- chapter 4 Organization theory and the autonomy of the International Labour Organization
- Two classic studies still going strong
- chapter 5 Two-level interaction as source of influence
- The European Union and equal treatment policies
- chapter 6 A rational choice analysis of international organizations
- How UNEP helped to bring about the Mediterranean Action Plan
- part Part II Security and human rights
- chapter 7 Non-proliferation
- Reinforcing the IAEA nuclear safeguards regime in the 1990s
- chapter 8 The margin beyond intergovernmentalism
- The Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe
- chapter 9 The role of NATO's bureaucracy in shaping and widening the North Atlantic Treaty Organization
- chapter 10 An early window of opportunity
- The intervention by the Council of Europe in the Saar problem, 1952-1954
- chapter 11 The effectiveness of the Council of Europe's human rights regime
- part Part III Economics
- chapter 12 Filling the transitional void
- The crucial role of International Financial Institutions in assisting Eastern European reforms
- chapter 13 The increased influence of EU monetary institutions in determining national policies
- A transnational monetary elite at work
- chapter 14 International economic organizations
- More policy making, less autonomy
- part Part IV Conclusion
- chapter 15 Why do international organizations never die?