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Outlook on Space: The Development of Space Research and International Organizations
In: The Western political quarterly, Band 19, Heft 3, S. 546
ISSN: 1938-274X
Where Do We Go from Here? Reforming the International Monetary System
In: Challenge: the magazine of economic affairs, Band 14, Heft 2, S. 17-48
ISSN: 1558-1489
Bericht über die International Conference on Information Processing (ICIP) in Paris vom 15. bis 20.6. 1959
In: Blätter der DGVFM, Band 4, Heft 3, S. 311-316
ISSN: 1864-0303
The United Nations and the Maintenance of International Peace and Security
In: The Western political quarterly, Band 9, Heft 1, S. 175
ISSN: 1938-274X
The Bolsheviks and the World War. The Origin of the Third International
In: Slavonic Year-Book. American Series, Band 1, S. 385
A Rule of Law View on the Relations of International Courts and Tribunals
In: 33(2) Temple International and Comparative Law Journal (2019)
SSRN
Trilateral perspectives on international legal issues, 1996, relevance of domestic law and policy
In: Trilateral perspectives on international legal issues 1996
Climate policy at the International Monetary Fund: No voice for the vulnerable?
In: Global policy: gp
ISSN: 1758-5899
AbstractThe climate crisis prompted the International Monetary Fund (IMF), an international lender of last resort, to implement wholesale reforms to incorporate climate policy into its operations. At the IMF, selected countries from the Global North—historically the largest emitters of greenhouse gases—dominate decision‐making. This raises several questions. Can the Fund implement an ambitious and effective climate policy? How are climate‐vulnerable developing countries and their interests represented in everyday decision‐making at the institution? Drawing on scholarship on the political economy and legitimacy of international organizations, we focus on the formal distribution of decision‐making power within the IMF to evaluate the IMF's shift toward climate change. Our empirical analysis of the representation of 57 self‐identifying climate‐vulnerable developing countries (the V20) at the IMF and within its Executive Board shows that these countries, speaking for almost a third of the Fund's membership, command a vote share of merely 5.6%. Our assessment of the Climate Strategy adopted by the IMF amplifies equity concerns over its climate policies and further attests to the disregard of requests by developing countries. Barring meaningful governance reform to increase the voice and representation of climate‐vulnerable developing countries, the IMF's approach to addressing climate change is unlikely to translate into legitimate and effective climate policy.
Morality and Progress : IR narratives on international revisionism and the status quo
Scholars debate the ambitions and policies of today's 'rising powers' and the extent to which they are revising or upholding the international status quo. While elements of the relevant literature provide valuable insight, this article argues that the concepts of revisionism and the status quo within mainstream International Relations (IR) have always constituted deeply rooted, autobiographical narratives of a traditionally Western-dominated discipline. As 'ordering narratives' of morality and progress, they constrain and organize debate so that revisionism is typically conceived not merely as disruption, but as disruption from the non-West amidst a fundamentally moral Western order that represents civilizational progress. This often makes them inherently problematic and unreliable descriptors of the actors and behaviours they are designed to explain. After exploring the formations and development of these concepts throughout the IR tradition, the analysis is directed towards narratives around the contemporary 'rise' of China. Both scholarly and wider political narratives typically tell the story of revisionist challenges China presents to a US/Western-led status quo, promoting unduly binary divisions between the West and non-West, and tensions and suspicions in the international realm. The aim must be to develop a new language and logic that recognize the contingent, autobiographical nature of 'revisionist' and 'status quo' actors and behaviours.
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Exploring democracy in the Russian Federation: political regime, public opinion and international assistance
In: Contemporary politics, Band 16, Heft 1, S. 33-48
ISSN: 1469-3631
International Aid and Urban Change: Humanitarian Presence in Bamako, Abidjan, Nairobi and Juba
The presence of expatriate humanitarian workers in African cities is not neutral. Country capitals receive large and sudden influx of expatriates during humanitarian crises responses. This book examines the influence of this presence on the local urban ecosystem, from the building of a security discourse to the self-segregation of aid agencies in expatriate enclaves. The examples of Abidjan, Bamako, Juba and Nairobi illustrate different variants of urban change induced by the normative power of aid organisations.
Supply chain and logistics in national, international and governmental environment: concepts and models
In: Contributions to management science