Beyond UN Subcontracting : Task-sharing with Regional Security Arrangements and Service-providing NGOs. Special Issue

Beyond UN Subcontracting : Task-sharing with Regional Security Arrangements and Service-providing NGOs. Special Issue
Author: T.G. (ed.) Weiss
Publisher:
Total Pages: 207
Release: 1997
Genre:
ISBN:

(1) Regional institutions, the UN and international security: a framework for analysis by Muthiah Alagappa. (2) Devolving responsibilities: a framework for analysing NGOs and services by Leon Gordenker & Thomas G Weiss. (3) Before and after Dayton: the UN and NATO in the former Yugoslavia by Dick A Leurdijk. (4) The Liberian conflict and the ECOWAS - UN partnership by Clement E Adibe. (5) Searching for OAS/UN task-sharing opportunities in Central America and Haiti by Joaquin Tacsan. (6) On the front lines in the near abroad: the CIS and OSCE in Georgia's civil wars by S Neil MacFarlane. (7) NGO relief in war zones: towards an analysis of the new aid paradigm by Mark Duffield. (8) Democratisation from the outside in: NGO and international efforts to promote open elections by Vikram K Chand. (9) NGOs and development assistance: a change in mind-set? by Ian Smillie. (10) NGOs and the environment: from knowledge to action by Sheila Jasanoff. (11) UN task-sharing: towards or away from global governance? by Edwin M Smith & Thomas G Weiss.

Beyond UN Subcontracting

Beyond UN Subcontracting
Author: Thomas G. Weiss
Publisher: Springer
Total Pages: 280
Release: 2016-07-27
Genre: Political Science
ISBN: 1349262633

Beyond UN Subcontracting sheds light, through a series of post-Cold War case studies, on whether one United Nations' efforts both to devolve responsibility for security to regional institutions and the delivery of some of their services to international nongovernmental organisations are a step toward or away from better global governance. The cases are designed to explore patterns of interaction and to provide lessons for the future.

The New Politics of Financing the UN

The New Politics of Financing the UN
Author: Anthony McDermott
Publisher: Springer
Total Pages: 221
Release: 2016-07-27
Genre: Political Science
ISBN: 1349277657

The UN has suffered from its earliest days as a result of persistent financial problems, which left it on the edge of apparent bankruptcy. This book looks at the history of the regular and peace-keeping budgets. It focuses on the role of the US, simultaneously the UN's biggest contributor of funds and its largest debtor. It examines possible solutions against the background today of the UN attempting to reform itself to meet the challenges posed by globalization and an increasing number of civil wars.

Russian Peacekeeping Strategies in the CIS

Russian Peacekeeping Strategies in the CIS
Author: D. Lynch
Publisher: Springer
Total Pages: 273
Release: 1999-10-27
Genre: Political Science
ISBN: 0333984218

Peacekeeping operations have become a central issue in international relations since the end of the Cold War. This work underlines the mixture of defensive and offensive stimuli driving Russian 'peacekeeping' strategies, and highlights the dangers that the new Russian Federation faces in undertaking these operations.

What's Wrong with the United Nations and How to Fix It

What's Wrong with the United Nations and How to Fix It
Author: Thomas G. Weiss
Publisher: John Wiley & Sons
Total Pages: 320
Release: 2016-09-01
Genre: History
ISBN: 1509507477

Seven decades after its establishment, the United Nations and its system of related organizations and programs are perpetually in crisis. While the twentieth-century’s world wars gave rise to ground-breaking efforts at international organization in 1919 and 1945, today’s UN is ill-equipped to deal with contemporary challenges to world order. Neither the end of the Cold War nor the aftermath of 9/11 has led to the “next generation” of multilateral institutions. But what exactly is wrong with the UN that makes it incapable of confronting contemporary global challenges and, more importantly, can we fix it? In this revised and updated third edition of his popular text, leading scholar of global governance Thomas G. Weiss takes a diagnose-and-cure approach to the world organization’s inherent difficulties. In the first half of the book, he considers: the problems of international leadership and decision making in a world of self-interested states; the diplomatic complications caused by the artificial divisions between the industrialized North and the global South; the structural problems of managing the UN’s many overlapping jurisdictions, agencies, and bodies; and the challenges of bureaucracy and leadership. The second half shows how to mitigate these maladies and points the way to a world in which the UN’s institutional ills might be “cured.” Weiss’s remedies are not based on pious hopes of a miracle cure for the UN, but rather on specific and encouraging examples that could be replicated. With considered optimism and in contrast to received wisdom, he contends that substantial change is both plausible and possible.

Japan and Multilateral Diplomacy

Japan and Multilateral Diplomacy
Author: Philippe Régnier
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 237
Release: 2017-10-05
Genre: Political Science
ISBN: 1351806904

This title was first published in 2001: Japan has a long history of being isolated from multilateral diplomacy. With its increasing economic power, Japan has become more concerned with external foreign relations and hence more involved in multilateral diplomacy. This coherent and interrelated text, brings together studies of the central issues involved, written by prominent Japanese and Western scholars, analyzing the emergence of Japan in multilateral fora from historical, domestic and international perspectives. Those concerned with international relations will find this text an essential guide for courses and research.

Africa's Challenge to International Relations Theory

Africa's Challenge to International Relations Theory
Author: K. Dunn
Publisher: Springer
Total Pages: 255
Release: 2001-02-20
Genre: Political Science
ISBN: 033397753X

Africa has been noticeably absent in international relations theory. This new collection of essays by contemporary Africanists convincingly demonstrates the importance of the continent to every theoretical approach in international relations. This collection breaks new ground in how we think about both international relations and Africa, re-examining such foundational concepts as sovereignty, the state, and power; critically investigating the salience of realism, neo-liberalism, liberalism in Africa, and providing new thinking about regionalism, security and identity.

The United Nations & Regional Security

The United Nations & Regional Security
Author: Michael Charles Pugh
Publisher: Lynne Rienner Publishers
Total Pages: 324
Release: 2003
Genre: Regionalism (International Organization)
ISBN: 9781588262325

Events in Europe over the past decade or so have created a dynamic requiring conceptual and practical adjustments on the part of the UN and a range of regional actors. This volume explores the resulting collaborative relationships in the context of peace operations in the Balkans.

World Orders in the Making

World Orders in the Making
Author: Jan Nederveen Pieterse
Publisher: Springer
Total Pages: 289
Release: 2016-07-27
Genre: Political Science
ISBN: 1349268941

Humanitarian action confronts us with the dilemmas of international relations in the age of globalization. The approach in this book is holistic, comparative and analytical. Humanitarian intervention is considered from the point of view of political economy, public administration, international relations, international law, the military, political theory, sociology, culture and media studies. Chapters discuss experiences across Bosnia, Rwanda, Somalia, Iraq, Haiti and other cases, if we are moving towards global governance humanitarian intervention is part of this motion. It is a harbinger of a new global politics, which is all the more reason to consider it scrupulously.

The Fragility of the 'Failed State' Paradigm

The Fragility of the 'Failed State' Paradigm
Author: Neyire Akpinarli
Publisher: BRILL
Total Pages: 284
Release: 2010
Genre: Law
ISBN: 9004178120

The absence of effective government, one of the most important issues in current international law, became prominent with the failed state concept at the beginning of the 1990s. Public international law, however, lacked sufficient legal means to deal with the phenomenon. Neither attempts at state reconstruction in countries such as Afghanistan and Somalia on the legal basis of Chapter VII of the UN Charter nor economic liberalisation have addressed fundamental social and economic problems. This work investigates the weaknesses of the failed state paradigm as a long-term solution for international peace and security, arguing that the solution to the absence of effective government can be found only in an economic and social approach and a true universalisation of international law.