Can the moral hazard caused by IMF bailouts be reduced?
In: Geneva reports on the world economy
In: Special report 1
2112094 Ergebnisse
Sortierung:
In: Geneva reports on the world economy
In: Special report 1
In: Background Paper, (October 1991) 38
World Affairs Online
In: Nordic journal of international law: Acta Scandinavica juris gentium, Band 84, Heft 1, S. 59
ISSN: 0029-151X, 0902-7351
In: Wissenschaft und Frieden, 1977,2
World Affairs Online
In: International affairs: a Russian journal of world politics, diplomacy and international relations, Band 60, Heft 3, S. 43-53
ISSN: 0130-9641
World Affairs Online
This edited volume provides a multidisciplinary perspective on the contribution of the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY) to law, memory, and justice. It explores some of the accomplishments, challenges and critiques of the ICTY, as well as some of its less visible legacies.
In: Journal of international peacekeeping volume 22, nos 1/4 (2018)
In: Cross cultural & strategic management, Band 23, Heft 2
ISSN: 2059-5808
Purpose
Although qualitative methods have now gained a stronger foothold in International Business (IB) research, they remain under-researched, especially regarding how researchers can overcome obstacles created when interviewers exhibit 'multiculturality' during international field research projects. This paper analyses how researchers' multicultural backgrounds create challenges and opportunities in data collection during in-depth interviewing, and how such backgrounds further impact on the power imbalance between researchers and interviewees.
Design/methodology/approach
The two multicultural co-authors of this paper draw upon their 141 in-depth interview experiences with expatriates and local staff across five separate field research projects in Mainland China, Hong Kong SAR, South Korea, Finland, and the US. Field research experiences are analysed through a Bourdieusian inspired 'epistemic reflexive' self-interrogation process between the two co-authors.
Findings
This paper suggests five strategies to cope with the power imbalance between the researcher and the respondent in terms of social categorisation and language: activating the 'favoured' ethnicity, putting the 'desired' passport forward, constantly reassuring of belonging to the 'right' social category, bonding in the interviewee's mother tongue and adopting a multilingual approach characterised by frequent code-switching.
Originality/value
This paper emphasises the relevance of exploratory, self-reflexive analysis, and uncovers how social categorisation and language influence the interviewer-interviewee power imbalance. Distinct methodological contributions are proposed accordingly for IB literature: placing 'multiculturality' as an important concept at the forefront of qualitative IB research; and identifying ethnicity and accent as key factors in terms of securing and conducting interviews.
In: The Fletcher forum of world affairs, Band 28, Heft 1, S. 29-42
ISSN: 1046-1868
ElBaradei discusses the role of International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) inspections, the various obstacles encountered, & how to surmount them. The issue of weapons of mass destruction in Iraq is addressed; ElBaradei was not surprised that they found no evidence of reconstituted programs, but maintains that Iraq initially did not behave as a nation with nothing to hide, lacking transparency & cooperation, until Jan/Feb 2003. He also comments on IAEA's limited access in Iraq following the fall of the regime. Attention turns to Iran; the obligations placed on it by the IAEA; & reports of technology supplied to Iran by Russia, the People's Republic of China, & Pakistan. ElBaradei then speaks on North Korea's behavior since 1993, the multilateral approach to negotiations, & what might be done to prevent such a crisis from recurring. In addition, he addresses efforts to stem proliferation, including the Proliferation Security Initiative; whether the behavior of North Korea, Iran, & Iraq is linked to Bush's "axis of evil" speech; & his call to restrict production of new nuclear materials for reprocessing & enrichment to multinationally controlled facilities. J. Zendejas
In: International review of the Red Cross: humanitarian debate, law, policy, action, Band 34, Heft 301, S. 315-317
ISSN: 1607-5889
This year, the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies has celebrated an important anniversary. Seventy-five years ago, five men from five different Societies — American, British, French, Italian and Japanese — sat together to forge a union of Societies around the world, a global consortium united in its quest to serve humanity. Decades later, with a membership of 162 National Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies, a total of 124 million individual members and 250,000 employees, the Federation has marked 75 years of response to the suffering of humankind. Now some changes are in order to help us meet our humanitarian goals. Yet our mission, governed by the fundamental principle of humanity, the cornerstone of the International Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement, remains constant.
Since the rise and fall of the militant Islamist movement in Somalia, an array of actors have intervened in Somalia with disparate aims and implications in terms of the post-transition period (August 2012 up to the present). Both regional states (Ethiopia and Kenya) and organizations (IGAD and AU) have contributed to the international re-engagement with Somalia, the most notable being the Africa Union Mission for Somalia (AMISOM since 2007). Al-shabaab, among other insurgent movements, continues to forcefully resist external-led interventions aimed at rebuilding the Somali state. Outside the region, the European Union has been particularly involved in providing support to state-building efforts with a focus on the security sector, especially the maritime dimension of security (through EUNAVFOR ATALANTA and EUCAP Nestor since July 2012) and the creation of security forces (through EUTM Somalia). This paper contributes to the debate on the interplay between insurgency, externally led state-building efforts and the particular domestic dynamics and how these contribute to or undermine the state reconstruction process. ; FCT - Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia
BASE
In: Handbuch der österreichischen Steuerlehre Bd. 6
In: International Relations Plus, Heft 1(19)
ISSN: 2587-3393
In this study, the author intends to investigate the possible threats that affect the national security of the Republic of Moldova in the context of the Russian Federation's ignorance of the state neutrality status, as explained by the delay in the process of political Regulation of the Transnistrian conflict, caused by the illegal existence of Russian military forces, funding of illegitimate institutions and separatist military structures on the left bank of the Dniester, including providing weapons and military equipment. Looking into these issues, the author particularly stresses that the process of strengthening the stability and security of a vulnerable state on the inside is painstaking and requires efforts both from state institutions, the whole society and international support. In this regard, the Republic of Moldova has undertaken to deepen its relations with the European Union by signing the Association Agreement in June 2014, which provides inter alia for the enhancement of forms of cooperation focused on common interests in the field of security promotion, defense cooperation and crisis management. By this, Moldova has accepted the challenges of aligning to the standards of development of the Community, while also benefiting from the support on behalf of development partners in a variety of domains: political, economic, social, etc. In conclusion, the author notes that in the course of cooperation, it is relevant for the European Union to ensure its security. Thus, the national interests of the Republic of Moldova in relation to certain risks and threats to national security converge with those of the Union. The European Union is politically and financially supportive of the actions that are undertaken to clarify them, but the institutions of the Moldovan State are exclusively responsible for the results of these actions/inactions.
This report synthesises the main findings from the value chain- and governance analysis in FarFish, and point at some potential policy changes that could improve governance of the SFPAs and the high seas fisheries of the European external fishing fleet. This is the final deliverable from work package 3 (WP3) of the FarFish project, containing lessons learned and policy recommendations based on the work conducted in T3.1 Evaluation of governance structures and T3.2 Value chain analysis. The overall objective of FarFish is to improve knowledge on and management of EU fisheries outside Europe, while contributing to sustainability and long-term profitability. To this end, WP3 has conducted value chain analysis and evaluations of the governance structure of the EU external fishing fleet in the selected case studies. The studies have provided insights to how these fisheries are managed and conducted, and how the fisheries are utilized and are contributing to the seafood supply, including to the European market and partner countries. This report synthesises the main findings from these studies. Based on the lessons learned as well as interaction with other areas within the project, we discuss recommendations for potential policy changes that could improve governance of the SFPAs and European high seas fisheries. The fisheries and value chains analysed are highly professional and are based on the different companies' commercial considerations. The recommendations to improve the performance of these companies or to achieve wider socio-economic goals are therefore directed at the potential for changes and improvements by way of regulations. The suggestions would in most cases require further elaboration and discussions, hence the term potential.
BASE