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This book challenges the traditional view that meaningful analogies
cannot be drawn between domestic and international politics.
Alexandru V. Grigorescu shows that there are important parallels to
be drawn across these two realms, if political interactions among
states over the past two centuries are compared to those within
states going back about a thousand years. He focuses specifically
on the evolution of institutions that restrain concentrated power,
such as courts, assemblies, and bureaucracies. Restraining Power
through Institutions begins by developing a set of theoretical
arguments about the emergence, change, and consolidation of
institutional restraints on power. These are primarily derived from
literature focusing on domestic politics going back to events such
as those surrounding the signing of the Magna Carta and the
emergence and evolution of the Curia Regis in England, or of the
Estates General and Parlements in France. It then assesses the
relevance of such arguments for the evolution of numerous
international institutions: international courts, such as the
Permanent Court of Arbitration, International Court of Justice, and
International Criminal Court; international assemblies and
parliaments, such as the Assembly of the League of Nations, UN
General Assembly; and European Parliament; and international
secretariats, such as those of the Central Commission for the
Navigation of the Rhine, League of Nations, UN, and World Bank. The
similarities between developments in the domestic and international
realms lead to a number of important conclusions about future
expectations for international institutions and for world politics
more broadly. In particular, the book argues that complementing the
traditional focus on efforts to acquire power with the "Lockean"
focus on restraining power offers a more complete depiction of
international politics. This novel perspective consequently shifts
the focus from the interests and actions of a handful of powerful
states to those of virtually all states and groups of states,
regardless of how powerful they are.
This work posits that, over the past two centuries, democratic
norms have spread from domestic politics to intergovernmental
organizations (IGOs). Grigorescu explores how norms shaped IGO
decision-making rules such as those driving state participation,
voting, access to information, and the role of NGOs and
transnational parliaments. The study emphasizes the role of
'normative pressures' (the interaction between norm strength and
the degree to which the status quo strays from norm prescriptions).
Using primary and secondary sources to assess the plausibility of
its arguments across two centuries and two dozen IGOs, the study
focuses on developments in the League of Nations, the International
Labor Organization, the United Nations, the World Bank, the
European Union, and the World Trade Organization.
The Ebb and Flow of Global Governance challenges the traditionally
dichotomous distinction between international intergovernmental
organizations and international nongovernmental organizations.
Alexandru Grigorescu argues that international organizations are
best understood as falling on an 'intergovernmental-nongovernmental
continuum'. The placement of organizations on this continuum is
determined by how much government involvement factors into their
decision-making, financing, and deliberations. Using this
fine-grained conceptualization, Grigorescu uncovers numerous
changes in the intergovernmental versus nongovernmental nature of
global governance over the past century and a half. These changes
are due primarily to ideological and institutional domestic shifts
in powerful states. The Ebb and Flow of Global Governance assesses
the plausibility of these arguments through archival research on a
dozen organizations from the global health, labor, and technical
standards realms. Grigorescu concludes that there has been a
continuous ebb and flow in world politics, rather than an
inexorable movement towards greater roles for nongovernmental
actors, as existing literature argues.
The Ebb and Flow of Global Governance challenges the traditionally
dichotomous distinction between international intergovernmental
organizations and international nongovernmental organizations.
Alexandru Grigorescu argues that international organizations are
best understood as falling on an 'intergovernmental-nongovernmental
continuum'. The placement of organizations on this continuum is
determined by how much government involvement factors into their
decision-making, financing, and deliberations. Using this
fine-grained conceptualization, Grigorescu uncovers numerous
changes in the intergovernmental versus nongovernmental nature of
global governance over the past century and a half. These changes
are due primarily to ideological and institutional domestic shifts
in powerful states. The Ebb and Flow of Global Governance assesses
the plausibility of these arguments through archival research on a
dozen organizations from the global health, labor, and technical
standards realms. Grigorescu concludes that there has been a
continuous ebb and flow in world politics, rather than an
inexorable movement towards greater roles for nongovernmental
actors, as existing literature argues.
This work posits that, over the past two centuries, democratic
norms have spread from domestic politics to intergovernmental
organizations (IGOs). Grigorescu explores how norms shaped IGO
decision-making rules such as those driving state participation,
voting, access to information, and the role of NGOs and
transnational parliaments. The study emphasizes the role of
'normative pressures' (the interaction between norm strength and
the degree to which the status quo strays from norm prescriptions).
Using primary and secondary sources to assess the plausibility of
its arguments across two centuries and two dozen IGOs, the study
focuses on developments in the League of Nations, the International
Labor Organization, the United Nations, the World Bank, the
European Union, and the World Trade Organization.
Dependence with complete connections is a more general type of
stochastic process than the well-known Markovian dependence,
accounting for a complete history of a stochastic evolution. This
book is an authoritative survey of knowledge of the subject,
dealing with the basic theoretical understanding and also with
applications. These arise in a variety of situations as diverse as
stochastic models of learning, branching processes in random
environments, continued fractions and dynamical systems. Thus the
book will appeal to mathematicians working in probability theory,
ergodic theory and number theory, as well as applied
mathematicians, engineers, biologists and social scientists
interested in applications of stochastic methods.
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Cauchemar (Paperback)
Alexandra Grigorescu
bundle available
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R406
Discovery Miles 4 060
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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