Non-State Actors / IGOs

Why and in What Ways Have the Concept of Global Civil Society and Organizations Seeking to Represent it been Criticized?

Charlotte Ng • Jun 24 2008 • Essays

This essay presents some of the major criticisms of global civil society, namely its conceptual vagueness and incoherence; its rhetorical function as a legitimation device that arguably undermines the transnational demos; and finally its maintenance and reproduction of the neoliberal order.

Describe the Major Proposals to Revise the International Financial Architecture to Limit the Frequency and Severity of Financial Crises in Developing Countries in the Future

Charlotte Ng • Jun 19 2008 • Essays

The devastating financial crises that have hit developing nations in Latin America and Asia over the past several decades have given rise to numerous rallying calls to reform the “international financial architecture.” Liberalizing the financial system to foreign capital flows have contributed to immense domestic political and economic turmoil, and in some nations even to violence.

NATO in Afghanistan: Fighting to Define its Future

Adam Groves • Jun 18 2008 • Essays

Almost sixty years after it was first formed, NATO has changed a great deal from the organisation which once prepared to fight the Red Army in Germany’s Fulda Gap. This essay will argue that the alliance is now fighting fto define its future, in Afghanistan.

Evaluating the Potential of Public-Private Partnerships in Global Governance

Fedor Meerts • May 29 2008 • Essays

This essay deals with a central question regarding the value of Public-Private Partnerships: what governance functions can they accomplish that neither public nor private authority can accomplish independently? The question boils down to two subsidiary questions, which will be dealt with in turn: (1) What governance functions cannot be accomplished unilaterally by public actors on the one hand and private actors on the other? (2) How can PPPs overcome these governance problems?

A Bloodless War: An Analysis of the Weapons used by the International Campaign to Ban Landmines

Nicolo Nourafchan • May 22 2008 • Essays

Through an analysis of the International Campaign to Ban Landmines, this essay sheds some light on the strategies which successful transnational action networks have pursued in their efforts to shape policy .

Considering Cognitivism’s Contribution: Possibilities for Constructive Cooperation between Rationalist and Cognitivist Theorists of International Regimes

Fedor Meerts • Apr 26 2008 • Essays

All but the staunchest realist would agree that international regimes form an important part of the emerging mechanisms of global governance. In tandem with the study of international relations, the study of international regimes has long been dominated by interest-based or neo-liberal theories – both rationalist schools of thought. However, not rightfully so.

What are the Consequences of Globalization for Public and for Private Transnational Legal Orders?

anon • Apr 19 2008 • Essays

This essay will examine the explosive growth in public and private transnational legal fora and the empirical creation of interlegality before arguing that this growth creates a need for new conceptualizations of international law that are not bound by assumptions of Westphalian sovereign states or the classic liberal separation of private and public.

International Knowledge Institutions and the Generation of an Epistemic Function in Global Governance

anon • Apr 17 2008 • Essays

Understanding the processes by which global knowledge institutions generate epistemic functions and impact governance requires inquiring into the construction of global problems, the legitimation of new institutions, and the complex dynamics of disseminating cooperative solutions.

What are Private International Regimes and What are Their Global Governance Functions?

anon • Apr 15 2008 • Essays

Identifying and analysing private international regimes requires first accepting the reality that authority exists outside public actors in the international system. This essay will argue the governance functions which international regimes create for themselves revolve around regulation and the provision of public goods.

Donor-NGO Relations: Resource Exchange & Interdependence?

Adam Groves • Apr 14 2008 • Essays

In the context of an expanding global civil society, the role of NGOs is attracting increasing attention. This essay will critically assess the notion that there exists a ‘strategic interdependence’ between international donors and local NGOs by analysing the resource exchange which occurs between them.

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