Spelling suggestions: "subject:"[een] INTERNATIONAL COOPERATION"" "subject:"[enn] INTERNATIONAL COOPERATION""
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An exploration into managerial perception and its influence on performance in cross cultural setting. The case of Japan International Cooperation Agency's support for development.Inamori, Takao January 2010 (has links)
There is a wealth of studies which suggest that manager's positive
perceptions/expectations can considerably influence organisational
performance; unfortunately, little empirical evidence has been obtained from
development studies. This first time research explores how Japanese aid
workers' perceptions towards the local staff affects their behaviour and
performance in cross-cultural project settings. Moreover, this research focuses
on the perceptual and behavioural trait differences of successful and
unsuccessful aid workers.
With cooperation from Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA), 244
valid responses were obtained from the aid workers (managers) through a webbased
survey.
As a result of statistical analysis, positive causal relationships were confirmed
between perception related factors and behaviour related factors and the
organisational performance variable. These results strongly suggest that aid
worker¿s positive perceptions result in positive behaviour in local colleagues and
subsequently higher organisational performance. In addition, it was discovered
that the aid workers' positive perception/expectation about work and their local
colleagues was related to higher organisational performance, whilst conversely,
the negative perception on their part was generally associated with negative
behaviour and lower organisational performance.Although the differences in perceptual tendencies suggested by that these
findings apply to Japanese aid managers; however, as human nature is
universal, positive perception and behaviour should bring out positive output in
most organisations. It is recommended that there is a need for people-related
and cross-cultural management skills to ensure successful future activities, and
stress management competencies to maintain positive managerial perception
on the part of aid workers. / Japan/World Bank Graduate Scholarship Program (JJ/WBGSP).
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When war ends: building peace in divided communitiesFrancis, David J. January 2012 (has links)
No / This volume critically examines what happens when war formally ends, the difficult and complex challenges and opportunities for winning the peace and reconciling divided communities. By reviewing a case study of the West African state of Sierra Leone, potential lessons for other parts of the world can be gained. Sierra Leone has emerged as a 'successful' model of liberal peacebuilding that is now popularly advertised and promoted by the international community as a powerful example of a country that they finally got right. Concerns about how successful a model Sierra Leone actually is, are outlined in this project. As such this volume: provides a critical understanding of the nature, dynamics and complexity of post-war peacebuilding and development from an internal perspective; critically assesses the role and contribution of the international community to state reconstruction and post-war peacebuilding and evaluates what happens when war ends; and explores the potential relevance and impact of comparative international efforts of post-war state building and reconstruction in other parts of Africa and the world. The collection focuses not only on understanding the root causes of conflict but also identifying and appreciating the possibilities and opportunities for peace. The lessons found in this book resonate well beyond the borders of Sierra Leone and Africa in general.
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Multinational operations in Somalia, Haiti and Bosnia : a comparative studyOrsini, Dominique. January 1997 (has links)
No description available.
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[pt] A ABORDAGEM ESTRATÉGICA DA CHINA PARA O DESENVOLVIMENTO: AS MUDANÇAS DE CONJUNTURA NA COOPERAÇÃO INTERNACIONAL / [en] CHINA S STRATEGIC APPROACH TO DEVELOPMENT: THE CHANGING LANDSCAPE OF INTERNATIONAL COOPERATIONPEDRO HENRIQUE V A DE STEENHAGEN 08 October 2019 (has links)
[pt] A China estabeleceu as bases para sua ascensão meteórica na década de 1970, porém foi durante os anos 1990 e particularmente 2000 que ela chamou a atenção do mundo. Atualmente, o país tem uma posição extremamente relevante nas relações internacionais, e o crescente interesse nele é inevitável, especialmente em seu desenvolvimento e em suas iniciativas de cooperação internacional. Esta dissertação objetiva verificar a ascensão recente da China à categoria de potência global e comparar a abordagem ocidental e tradicional de cooperação internacional e a política externa chinesa relacionada a essa agenda,
de forma a discutir sobre a estratégia da China de Xi Jinping no campo da cooperação internacional e sobre como o país asiático poderá modificar sua operação. Nesse sentido, primeiramente, ela analisará brevemente as reformas econômicas da China e sua trajetória desenvolvimentista, bem como recentes
transformações políticas, econômicas e diplomáticas. Posteriormente, examinará similaridades e diferenças entre a cooperação internacional ocidental e chinesa. Finalmente, inspecionará as mudanças de conjuntura da cooperação internacional para o desenvolvimento, baseando-se na retórica e na prática chinesas e na
natureza experimental de suas iniciativas, como Um Cinturão, Uma Rota, que, se bem-sucedida, pode favorecer a China na arena global. / [en] China provided the bases for its meteoric rise in the 1970s, but it was during the 1990s and particularly the 2000s that it really called the world s attention. Now, the country holds an extremely relevant place in international relations, and the growing interest in it is inevitable, especially in its development and in its international cooperation initiatives. This dissertation aims to check China s recent rise as a global power and to compare Western traditional approach to international cooperation and Chinese foreign policy related to this agenda in order to discuss China s strategy during Xi Jinping s presidency in the field of development cooperation and how the Asian country may change its operation. In this regard, firstly, it will briefly analyse China s economic reforms and developmental trajectory, as well as more recent political, economic and diplomatic transformations. Afterwards, it will examine Western and Chinese similarities and differences regarding international cooperation. Finally, it will inspect the changing landscape of international development cooperation, based on China s rhetoric and practice and on the experimental nature of its initiatives, such as the Belt and Road Initiative, which, if successful, might favour China in the global stage.
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Saudi-American Bilateral Relations: a Case Study of the Consequences of Interdependence on International RelationsMerdad, Jamil M. (Jamil Mahmoud) 05 1900 (has links)
This study examines the consequences of interdependence between Saudi Arabia and the United States from 1960 to 1978 as it relates to the concepts of cooperation and conflict. Research on interdependence focuses primarily on relations among Western countries and on whether interdependence is increasing or decreasing between them. It has rarely addressed relations between countries with different levels of economic development or the consequence of interdependence for international relations in terms of conflict and cooperation. Specifically, this study examines the following question: Does the level of interdependence between Saudi Arabia and the United States have any affect on the level of bilateral conflict and cooperation between the two countries? The hypotheses are tested using regression analysis. The primary conclusion is that increases in bilateral interdependence between Saudi Arabia and the United States from 1960 to 1978 produced increased cooperation as well as conflict.
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Developing country health systems and the governance of international HIV/AIDS fundingPoku, Nana K., Whitman, Jim R. January 2012 (has links)
Donor country initiatives for the prevention and mitigation of HIV/AIDS are not a matter of simple burden sharing. Instead, they have brought in their wake many of the complexities and unforeseen effects that have long been associated with more general overseas development assistance. In the case of funding directed toward HIV/AIDS, these effects are by no means either secondary or easily calculable. It is widely acknowledged that there is no consensus framework on how these impacts may be defined, no framework/toolkit for the evaluation of impacts and no longitudinally significant data that could provide the substance for those evaluations. The subject of this study focuses not on the health outcomes of funding but on how donor-recipient relations could be better deliberated, negotiated and coordinated. We argue that effective leadership and governance of developing country health systems for HIV/AIDS work requires a reconfiguration of how donor-recipient relations are conceived and contracted, and for this purpose, we propose an adaptation of the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development Paris Declaration principles of aid effectiveness.
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Organised crime in the Southern African development community with specific reference to motor vehicle theftLebeya, Seswantsho Godfrey 30 November 2007 (has links)
International police co-operation is a recipe for success in the fight against transnational organised crime. Such cooperation has never been without challenges, especially in the light of disharmonious national laws. SARPCCO has made promising advances towards the elimination of blockages which hamper police cooperation. The joint, bilateral, simultaneous operations which are continuously carried out and the transferring of skills through training are exemplary to the rest of the world. SARPCCO is, however, struggling to make serious inroads into the organised motor vehicle theft because of the problems in returning them to their lawful owners.
The objective of this study is to analyse the laws used by the SARPCCO member countries in fighting motor vehicle theft, transnational organised crime, recoveries, repatriation, prosecution and extradition of offenders. The SARPCCO member countries on which the analysis is done are Lesotho, South Africa, Swaziland and Zambia. / Jurisprudence / LL. M.
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Co-operation in training and accreditation of accountants in Southern Africa : views of South African public accountants and auditorsDoussy, F. (Frank), 1958- 07 1900 (has links)
The study was prompted mainly by the need for and possibility of collaboration or even
mutual accreditation of practising chartered accountants and auditors in the countries of
Southern Africa. In establishing common ground between these countries of Southern
Africa it was found that the countries share not only geographical space but also strong and
increasingly important trade links, movement of people between the countries and in some
instances a common history, culture and language in the form of English. The current
harmonisation process of accounting standards worldwide enhanced this process.
A literature study was done emphasising South Africa as part of the Southern African
region, with a special emphasis on accountancy education. An analysis of current
international co-operation was done with special reference to the current international
harmonisation process. As part ofthe background an analysis was done of the current status
of the accountancy profession in each Southern African country.
As this study was done from a South African perspective, the emphasis was on the views
of members of the accounting profession in public practice with regard to greater cooperation
in the region in the accountancy field. This was achieved by means of an empirical
survey.
It was found that the aforesaid professionals are overwhelmingly in support of greater cooperation
in the region. They believe that it would enhance the status of individual
accounting bodies worldwide~ that costs, information and infrastructure could be shared;
and that it would enhance professionalism and improve service to clients.
Specific areas were identified where co-operation could be improved, namely that academic
training should be harmonised, practical tralning should be interchangeable and agreements
should be reached with individual countries. Some concern was expressed that above all,
control should be maintained over the standards of academic and practical education.
It is recommended that the bodies governing the accountancy establishment in South Africa,
especially the South African Institute of Chartered Accountants and the Public Accountants'
and Auditors' Board, should increase their current efforts to establish greater formal
relations with other countries in the Southern African region. / Auditing / D. Compt. (Accounting Science)
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An analysis of the implementation of the South Africa-China bilateral agreement : a case study of the South African Agricultural Technology Demonstration CentreTshetlo, Piet Thabo 03 April 2014 (has links)
This research was based on the implementation analysis of the South Africa-China bilateral agreements, specifically the case of the South African Agricultural Technology Demonstration Centre (SAATDC).
In this regard, the researcher was of the view that, with implementation analysis, it is possible to identify the particular circumstances that could affect implementation of a particular policy, both in advance of a policy’s adoption or after it is implemented.
This research tracked the implementation of the SAATDC bilateral agreement to examine whether this bilateral agreement was effectively implemented or not. There is a need to translate political commitment into a practical programme for successful implementation. Implementation is one of the major problems confronting developing nations, of which South Africa is one.
Furthermore the researcher investigated whether the SAATDC bilateral agreement meets necessary pre-conditions of policy implementation, necessary for successful policy implementation, and examines whether these pre-conditions are adequately addressed in the bilateral policy document.Previous research has shown that once these preconditions are met, the potential for successful implementation of a policy increases.
There is a need in South Africa to fully exploit opportunities provided through similar Chinese aid projects for the benefit of local workers such as artisans, engineers and project managers by ensuring that bilateral agreements adequately address factors that could undermine South Africa’s ASGISA and JIPSA objectives regarding skills and technology transfer. It is important to investigate whether the bilateral agreement here makes sufficient provision for adequate involvement of South African engineers, artisans and South African companies in the implementation of such Chinese aid programmes or projects. There is a need to enhance the sophistication of local artisans and engineers as required by the ASGISA and JIPSA strategy and objectives. / Public Administration & Management / M. Admin. (Public Administration)
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State cooperation within the context of the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court : a critical reflectionNgari, Allan Rutambo 03 1900 (has links)
Thesis (LLM)--Stellenbosch University, 2013. / Bibliography / ENGLISH ABSTRACT: This thesis is a reflection of the provisions of the Rome Statute in relation to the most
fundamental condition for the effective functioning of the Court – the cooperation of
states. It broadly examines the challenges experienced by the Court with respect to
application of Part IX such as whether non-State Parties to the Rome Statute can,
notwithstanding their right not to be party, be compelled to cooperate with the Court
owing to the customary international law obligation for all States to repress, find and
punish persons alleged to have committed the crimes within the jurisdiction of the
Court (war crimes, crimes against humanity, and genocide). This is particularly
challenging where such persons are nationals of non-States Parties. The various
meanings of international cooperation in criminal matters is discussed with reference
to and distinguished from the cooperation regime of the International Criminal
Tribunals for Rwanda and the former Yugoslavia.
For States Parties to the Rome Statute, the thesis evaluates the measure of their
inability or unwillingness to genuinely prosecute persons alleged to have committed
crimes within the jurisdiction of the Court within the context of the principle of
complementarity. It seeks to address, where such inability or unwillingness has been
determined by the Court, how effective the cooperation between the States Parties and
the Court could best serve the interests of justice. The thesis answers the question on
what extent the principle of complementarity influences the cooperation of States with
the Court, whether or not these States are party to the Rome Statute. The concept of
positive complementarity that establishes a measure of cooperation between the Court
and the national criminal jurisdictions is further explored in the context of the Court’s capacity to strengthen local ownership of the enforcement of international criminal
justice.
A nuanced discussion on the practice of the Court with respect to the right of persons
before the Court is developed. The rights of an accused in different phases of Court
proceedings and the rights of victims and affected communities of crimes within the
Court’s jurisdiction are considered at length and in the light of recently-established
principles regulating the Court’s treatment of these individuals. These persons are key
interlocutors in the international criminal justice system and have shifted the
traditional focus of international law predominantly from states to individuals and
bring about a different kind of relationship between States as a collective and their
treatment of these individuals arising from obligations to the Rome Statute.
Finally the thesis interrogates the enforcement mechanisms under the Rome Statute.
Unlike States, the Court does not have an enforcement entity such as a Police Force
that would arrest persons accused of committing crimes within its jurisdiction,
conduct searches and seizures or compel witnesses to appear before the Court. Yet,
the Court must critically assess its practice of enforcing sentences that it imposes on
convicted persons and in its contribution to restorative justice, the enforcement of
reparations orders in collaboration with other Rome Statute entities such as the Trust
Fund for Victims. / AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: Hierdie tesis is 'n weerspieëling van die bepalings van die Statuut van Rome in
verhouding tot die mees fundamentele voorwaarde vir die effektiewe funksionering
van die Hof - die samewerking van State. Dit ondersoek breedweg die uitdagings wat
deur die Hof ervaar word met betrekking tot die toepassing van Deel IX soos
byvoorbeeld of State wat nie partye is tot die Statuut van Rome, nieteenstaande hul
reg om nie deel te wees nie, verplig kan word om saam te werk met die Hof weens die
internasionale gewoontereg verpligting om alle persone wat na bewering misdade
gepleeg het binne die jurisdiksie van die Hof (oorlogsmisdade, misdade teen die
mensdom en volksmoord) te verhinder, vind en straf. Dit is veral uitdagend waar
sodanige persone burgers is van State wat nie partye is nie. Die verskillende
betekenisse van die internasionale samewerking in kriminele sake word bespreek met
verwysing na, en onderskei van, die samewerkende stelsel van die Internasionale
Kriminele Tribunale vir Rwanda en die voormalige Joego-Slawië.
Vir State wat partye is tot die Statuut van Rome, evalueer die tesis - in die konteks
van die beginsel van komplementariteit - die mate van hul onvermoë, of
ongewilligheid om werklik persone te vervolg wat na bewering misdade gepleeg het
binne die jurisdiksie van die Hof. Dit poog om aan te spreek, waar so 'n onvermoë of
ongewilligheid bepaal is deur die Hof, hoe effektiewe samewerking tussen State wat
partye is en die Hof, die belange van geregtigheid die beste kan dien. Die tesis
beantwoord die vraag op watter mate die beginsel van komplementariteit die
samewerking van die State met die Hof beïnvloed, ongeag of hierdie State partye is
tot die Statuut van Rome. Die konsep van positiewe komplementariteit wat
samewerking vestig tussen die Hof en die nasionale jurisdiksies aangaande kriminele sake word verder ondersoek in die konteks van die Hof se vermoë om plaaslike
eienaarskap in die handhawing van die internasionale kriminele regstelsel te versterk.
'n Genuanseerde bespreking op die praktyk van die Hof met betrekking tot die reg van
persone voor die Hof word ontwikkel. Die regte van 'n beskuldigde in die verskillende
fases van die hof verrigtinge en die regte van slagoffers en geaffekteerde
gemeenskappe van misdade binne die hof se jurisdiksie word in diepte bespreek in die
lig van die onlangs gevestigde beginsels wat die Hof se behandeling van hierdie
individue reguleer. Hierdie persone is sleutel gespreksgenote in die internasionale
kriminele regstelsel en het die tradisionele fokus verskuif van die internasionale reg
van State na individue, en bring oor 'n ander soort verhouding tussen State as 'n
kollektiewe en hulle behandeling van hierdie individue as gevolg van hul verpligtinge
aan die Statuut van Rome.
Ten slotte bevraagteken die tesis die handhawings meganismes onder die Statuut van
Rome. In teenstelling met State, het die Hof nie 'n handhawing entiteit soos 'n
Polisiemag wat persone kon arresteer wat beskuldig word van misdade binne sy
jurisdiksie, deursoek en beslagleggings uitvoer of persone dwing om as getuies te
verskyn voor die Hof nie. Tog, moet die Hof sy praktyk van uitvoering van vonnisse
wat dit oplê op veroordeelde persone en in sy bydrae tot herstellende geregtigheid die
handhawing van herstelling in samewerking met ander Statuut van Rome entiteite
soos die Trust Fonds vir Slagoffers krities assesseer.
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