Suchergebnisse
Filter
56 Ergebnisse
Sortierung:
A Review of: "Glasbergen, Pieter, Frank Biermann, and Arthur P. J. Mol, eds.Partnerships, Governance, and Sustainable Development: Reflections on Theory and Practice": Cheltenham, UK, and Northampton, MA: Edward Elgar Publishing, Ltd, 2008. 314 pp. $145.00 (cloth). ISBN 978-1-84720-405-9
In: Society and natural resources, Band 23, Heft 8, S. 801-803
ISSN: 1521-0723
Collective Management of TRIPS: APEC, New Regionalism and Intellectual Property
The Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation forum (APEC) took up intellectual property (IP) issues in 1995, quite late in the evolution of its program of regional economic cooperation, and even then with a measure of caution and uncertainty. The way APEC has handled cooperation on IP issues shows how its priorities and modalities have shifted expediently to respond to political and economic developments, and exemplifies two broad themes in APEC's evolution: . first, the question of scope and objectives – whether APEC is to deliver 'hard' trade liberalisation outcomes of lowering or eliminating tariff barriers, or is to concentrate on softer, less precise outcomes in the field of economic cooperation, trade facilitation and regulatory and administrative convergence, conceived in a broader, less legalistic and more collaborative sense, including on areas traditionally reserved for domestic regulation; and . second, the changeable relationship of the regional process with multilateral trade negotiations, both the Uruguay Round negotiations leading up to the World Trade Organization (WTO) package of trade agreements, and subsequent WTO negotiations –APEC has been variously viewed as a defensive hedge against multilateral failure, a decisive shift away from multilateralism to regionalism, a regional caucus on multilateral issues, a preliminary deal-making mechanism to facilitate multilateral outcomes, and other less determinate forms of regional economic integration, with suggestions even that is antithetical to free trade and provides implicit support for an Asian brand of mercantilism. The very informality, flexibility and even ambivalence that make possible this range of perceptions of APEC – through such consciously pliable constructs as 'open regionalism,' 'concerted unilateralism,' 'early voluntary sectoral liberalisation,' and 'pathfinding initiatives,' and a culture of valuing consensus and soft policy convergence over hard normative outcomes - have at once been viewed as the distinctive, defining strength of APEC and as its abiding weakness. APEC is either an innovative experiment in 'new regionalism' or as an inadequate substitute for tough, binding liberalisation commitments. Given that APEC is at any time a consensus expression of the will and preoccupations of its member economies, the deliberate (almost constitutional) eschewal of institutional compliance mechanisms (apart from soft means such as peer pressure and normative lock-in), the need to react to a shifting multilateral climate, and the economic diversity and geographical extent of APEC, this uncertainty or changeability of focus and of ambition is inevitable. Yet this leaves open a debate as to the core nature of the APEC endeavour, and the suspicion that its function is to forge an Asia-Pacific regional identity as an achievement of value in itself – the process itself being the outcome. This applies to broader systemic issues, but especially to the continuing uncertain position of intellectual property (IP) issues in international trade and economic relations. Despite the incorporation of IP standards within trade rules through the Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS), IP remains a contested element of the multilateral trade law system, and an uncertain component of regional economic cooperation. Rreflectinged this indefinite position of IP rules in trade and economic relationsambivalence, APEC's work on IP issues has been less about compliance with formal obligations as an end in itself, and more about exploring cooperative approaches to implementing international standards for mutual benefit. In this context, TRIPS serves more as a framework for regional cooperation on IP – or a lexicon for policy dialogue – aimed at achieving regional goals for economic and regulatory cooperation, rather than as an adversarial compliance-oriented legal instrument born of trade tensions: regional cooperation as a tentative step towards the 'collective management' of TRIPS. The collective management of TRIPS, consciously expressed as an ideal, would combine a collaborative, mutually supportive approach to the articulation of domestic IP policies within the TRIPS framework for optimal economic and social outcomes and the enhancement of regional economic relations, with enforcement of trading partners' IPRs undertaken collaboratively as a performance of positive comity, rather than as a grudging concession in a zero-sum deal struck between atomistic protagonists.
BASE
Collective Management of TRIPS: APEC, New Regionalism and Intellectual Property
The Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation forum (APEC) took up intellectual property (IP) issues in 1995, quite late in the evolution of its program of regional economic cooperation, and even then with a measure of caution and uncertainty. The way APEC has handled cooperation on IP issues shows how its priorities and modalities have shifted expediently to respond to political and economic developments, and exemplifies two broad themes in APEC's evolution: . first, the question of scope and objectives – whether APEC is to deliver 'hard' trade liberalisation outcomes of lowering or eliminating tariff barriers, or is to concentrate on softer, less precise outcomes in the field of economic cooperation, trade facilitation and regulatory and administrative convergence, conceived in a broader, less legalistic and more collaborative sense, including on areas traditionally reserved for domestic regulation; and . second, the changeable relationship of the regional process with multilateral trade negotiations, both the Uruguay Round negotiations leading up to the World Trade Organization (WTO) package of trade agreements, and subsequent WTO negotiations –APEC has been variously viewed as a defensive hedge against multilateral failure, a decisive shift away from multilateralism to regionalism, a regional caucus on multilateral issues, a preliminary deal-making mechanism to facilitate multilateral outcomes, and other less determinate forms of regional economic integration, with suggestions even that is antithetical to free trade and provides implicit support for an Asian brand of mercantilism. The very informality, flexibility and even ambivalence that make possible this range of perceptions of APEC – through such consciously pliable constructs as 'open regionalism,' 'concerted unilateralism,' 'early voluntary sectoral liberalisation,' and 'pathfinding initiatives,' and a culture of valuing consensus and soft policy convergence over hard normative outcomes - have at once been viewed as the distinctive, defining strength of APEC and as its abiding weakness. APEC is either an innovative experiment in 'new regionalism' or as an inadequate substitute for tough, binding liberalisation commitments. Given that APEC is at any time a consensus expression of the will and preoccupations of its member economies, the deliberate (almost constitutional) eschewal of institutional compliance mechanisms (apart from soft means such as peer pressure and normative lock-in), the need to react to a shifting multilateral climate, and the economic diversity and geographical extent of APEC, this uncertainty or changeability of focus and of ambition is inevitable. Yet this leaves open a debate as to the core nature of the APEC endeavour, and the suspicion that its function is to forge an Asia-Pacific regional identity as an achievement of value in itself – the process itself being the outcome. This applies to broader systemic issues, but especially to the continuing uncertain position of intellectual property (IP) issues in international trade and economic relations. Despite the incorporation of IP standards within trade rules through the Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS), IP remains a contested element of the multilateral trade law system, and an uncertain component of regional economic cooperation. Rreflectinged this indefinite position of IP rules in trade and economic relationsambivalence, APEC's work on IP issues has been less about compliance with formal obligations as an end in itself, and more about exploring cooperative approaches to implementing international standards for mutual benefit. In this context, TRIPS serves more as a framework for regional cooperation on IP – or a lexicon for policy dialogue – aimed at achieving regional goals for economic and regulatory cooperation, rather than as an adversarial compliance-oriented legal instrument born of trade tensions: regional cooperation as a tentative step towards the 'collective management' of TRIPS. The collective management of TRIPS, consciously expressed as an ideal, would combine a collaborative, mutually supportive approach to the articulation of domestic IP policies within the TRIPS framework for optimal economic and social outcomes and the enhancement of regional economic relations, with enforcement of trading partners' IPRs undertaken collaboratively as a performance of positive comity, rather than as a grudging concession in a zero-sum deal struck between atomistic protagonists.
BASE
SERVANTS IN SOCIETY: VICTORIAN SERVANTS IN AFFLUENT EDINBURGH
In: Family & community history: journal of the Family and Community Historical Research Society, Band 2, Heft 2, S. 129-140
ISSN: 1751-3812
TRIPs goes east: China's interests and international trade in intellectual property
In: China and the World Trading System, S. 345-362
The Blackwell encyclopedia of social psychology
In: Blackwell Reference Online
A special issue of cognition and emotion: Culture and emotion
In: Cognition and emotion 16,1
Special issue on expectancy-value models of attitude and behavior
In: Journal of applied social psychology 28,15
Achieving Adaptive Governance of Forest Wildfire Risk Using Competitive Grants: Insights From the Colorado Wildfire Risk Reduction Grant Program
In: Review of policy research, Band 37, Heft 5, S. 657-686
ISSN: 1541-1338
AbstractCompetitive grants are increasingly used to induce proactive collaborative action by a range of actors to reduce forest wildfire risks. Given the rigidity of past wildfire risk governance, it is important to assess the adaptability of competitive grants as a new governance approach. Adaptive governance theory is used as a lens to assess the adaptability of the Colorado Wildfire Risk Reduction Grant (WRRG) program, which awards funds to successful applicants to reduce fuel on non‐federal lands at a community scale. Four best practices from the theory were applied: participation of and collaboration among diverse actors; co‐production of knowledge and learning toward adaptive management; cross‐scale interactions and fit between the scale of governance and the scale of the ecological problem; and the capacity for innovation and re‐organization. Using data and information about the WRRG structure and processes, awarded grantees from the first five granting cycles from 2013 to 2016, our direct participation‐observation as part of the Advisory Committee, and results from the WRRG effectiveness monitoring report, we examine the extent to which the WRRG program exhibited adaptive governance attributes. For each adaptive governance attribute, we found evidence of factors facilitating and frustrating adaptiveness of the WRRG program. We situate our findings within the broader context of using competitive grants as a forest wildfire risk governance approach and address additional directions for adaptive governance research.
Framing the Need for Active Management for Wildfire Mitigation and Forest Restoration
In: Society and natural resources, Band 20, Heft 3, S. 245-259
ISSN: 1521-0723
Forest conservation policy: a reference handbook
In: Contemporary world issues
Correction to: Organizational Change in the US Forest Service: Negotiating Organizational Boundaries in the Collaborative Process
In: Environmental management: an international journal for decision makers, scientists, and environmental auditors, Band 64, Heft 1, S. 127-127
ISSN: 1432-1009
Organizational Change in the US Forest Service: Negotiating Organizational Boundaries in the Collaborative Process
In: Environmental management: an international journal for decision makers, scientists, and environmental auditors, Band 64, Heft 1, S. 64-78
ISSN: 1432-1009