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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
31

Tarptautinių organizacijų komunikacinė praktika Lietuvoje: UNESCO ir JTVP atvejis / Communication practice in Lithuania of international organizations: case of UNESCO and UNDP

Šapokaitė, Žaneta 18 February 2011 (has links)
Informacinių technologijų, inovacijų ir besiformuojančių naujų socialinių struktūrų paskatinti globalizacijos procesai kasdien intensyvėja. Informacijos srautai tarsi sujungia pasaulį, ima formuotis bendri interasai tarp valstybių. Daugybė aktualių nacionalinių klausimų, vienoje ar kitoje šalyje, virsta globaliais. Šiandieninės problemos išsprūsta iš valstybinės galios ribų ir aplinkosaugos, saugumo, švietimo, skurdo klausimai tampa aktualūs visam pasauliui. Siekdamos užkirsti kelią ar surasti tam tikrų sprendimų, kaip intensyvėjančios globalios problemos galėtų būti suvaldytos, valstybės ima bendradarbiauti. Tokį bendradarbiavimą iliustruoja ne tik užsienio politikos plėtotė ar tarptautinių santykių vystymasis, bet ir tarptautinių organizacijų kūrimasis. Nors aukščiausios tarptautinės organizacijos valdymo institucijos numato organizacijos veiklos politiką, priima tam tikus tarptautinius standartus, o valstybės narės privalo nuolat jų laikytis, vis dėl to kiekviena šalis, priklausanti bet kuriai tarptautiniai organizacijai, gali siekti nacionalinių ir globalių interesų įgyvendinimo. Net ir maža politiškai bei ekonomiškai silpna valstybė gali apčiuopiamai prisidėti prie globalių problemų sprendimų. Tokia yra ir Lietuva. Priklausanti ne vienai tarptautiniai organizacijai, ši valstybė siekia ir nacionalinių ir globalių tikslų. Tokie tikslai įgyvendinami kruopščiai planuojant veiksmus, tiriant nuolat kintančią aplinką ir kuriant efektyvias komunikacines strategijas. Tarptautinių... [toliau žr. visą tekstą] / Summary Induced by information technologies, innovations and developing new social structures- globalization process increase every day. Information flows connects the world, starts to develop new mutual interests between countries. Many relevant national questions in one or another country become global. Today those problems slip from national power and so environmental, security, education, poverty questions becomes important for everyone. Actually countries start to collaborate by trying to stop or find certain decisions, how growing global problems could be controlled. That kind of collaboration illustrates not only development of foreign countries or increase of international relations, but also formation of international organizations. Although the authority institutions of all the highest international organizations plans the work politics, accepts certain international standards and member countries have to follow them and still every country that belongs to any international organization, can pursue national and global interest accomplishment. Even small politically and economically week countries can greatly contribute to solutions of global problems. Actually Lithuania is also that kind of country. Member of international organizations, this country pursue national and global goals. These goals can be accomplished by accurately planning actions, researching constantly changing environment and creating effective communication strategies. By applying actions and... [to full text]
32

Malnutrition Through Constructivism: How International Organizations Succeed in Sustaining Nutrition Interventions in Kenya

Ali, Elham 01 January 2015 (has links)
International organizations (IOs) such as the United Nations Children’s Fund have immense power in influencing state agenda and policies in issues in health such as advocating micronutrient interventions in developing countries. Scholarly literature classifies IOs as “norm entrepreneurs” who can alter state behavior through many forms of rhetoric. The theoretical model, constructivism, notes that IOs are autonomous actors in their decision-making who use states as tools to pursue their own interests. Thus, how do these IOs succeed in sustaining malnutrition-related interventions and programs in Kenya? In this thesis, I argue that IOs can effectively improve malnutrition outcomes by improving the allocation and accessibility of nutritional resources and services, setting an institutional framework for implementing and sustaining programs at hand, and fostering the operation of tools that will assist interventions to scale-up to national nutrition policies. To accomplish this, specific IOs possess external effects such as political will, strong funding, and a multi-sectoral nutrition approach, and multilateral IOs have internal factors such as authority, autonomy, and are able to find opportunities in uncertain situations. I also argue that IOs presented in this paper have made limited strides in reducing aggregate malnutrition rates of stunting, wasting and underweight in Kenya. I ground my analysis on constructivism to understand IO behavior towards malnutrition interventions for children under five in Kenya.
33

Honduras - In the aftermath of the coup d’état : A case study on the development of the regime five years after the coup occurred

Kantola, Dunja January 2014 (has links)
In 2009, Honduras was affected by a military coup, where the former president Manuel Zelaya was deposed. The coup was supported by the National Congress and the Supreme Court, with the arguments that the action was a necessary act for defending and maintaining the democracy in the country. It is therefore interesting to see what type of regime that has emerged afterwards. The study is analysed by Robert Dahl´s theory about polyarchy and Joakim Ekman´s theory about hybrid regimes since Honduras shows tendencies towards both types of regimes in the present state. The study has three different perspectives regarding the empirical data to obtain a comprehensive picture as possible of what kind of regime that Honduras is considered to be today. The material consists of the national constitution to get a glimpse of the formal aspects of the political shape in the country as well as reports provided by international organizations to get the view from the outside world but the primary material is from interviews with people determined important by the positions in the Honduran civil society. The results display that Honduras has significant democratic elements; free elections and a constitution that recognizes the basic liberties, which according to Dahl meets up with the criteria of a democratic polyarchy. However, the lack of accountability for government institutions, corruption and violations against freedom of speech - where the most affected groups are journalists, human right defenders and indigenous people, indicates that Honduras have more similarities to that what Joakim Ekman refers to as a hybrid regime.
34

Making a meal of it: the World Food Programme and legitimacy in global politics

Ross, D. A. January 2008 (has links)
The world faces many complex and difficult problems at the global level – problems that are increasingly recognised as requiring political as much as technical solutions. While such issues are often taken to concern, in broad terms, global governance, more specifically, the political aspects of such governance are fundamentally linked to interactions between the United Nations system and the power exercised by the United States of America (US). One important and distinctive arena within which these interactions can be viewed is the international food aid regime, and its central organisation, the World Food Programme (WFP) - an area lacking in concerted political science study in recent years. This thesis is concerned with the role of the US in shaping the legitimacy of the WFP within the institutional context of the international food aid regime. Legitimacy is defined as deriving from the three elements of inclusion, accountability and effectiveness. The WFP and international regime are, it is argued, well respected, relatively effective, and enjoy high levels of legitimacy. At a micro level there are many specific historical and localised factors resulting in this legitimacy; at the macro level many of these factors can be linked to the interaction of norms and interests between the US and the regime. / In particular, the regime’s development and success has been closely related to both a congruence between the US domestic feed-the-hungry norm and the regime’s international feed-the-hungry norm, and a process of divergence between those norms. It is this normative interplay that has enabled US power to be deployed and constrained in a manner resulting in high levels of legitimacy for the WFP. While in many respects this has limited WFP’s capacity to do more with the problem of global hunger than merely ameliorate it, the nature of the problem is much bigger than the capacities of any single operational agency of the United Nations.
35

States under scrutiny : international organizations, transformation and the construction of progress /

Dahl, Matilda, January 2007 (has links)
Diss. Stockholm : Stockholms universitet, 2007.
36

Effectiveness and success of human rights and environmental regimes : defining the roles of organizations, states, and the hegemon /

Hazel, Anne L. January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (M.A.)--Carleton University, 2003. / Includes bibliographical references (p. 146-152). Also available in electronic format on the Internet.
37

Odpovědnost mezinárodních organizací / Responsibility of international organizations

Brožová, Sandra January 2014 (has links)
The Responsiblity of International Organizations - Abstract The subject of this thesis is the responsibility of international organizations as a consequence of internationally wrongful acts, as a manifestation of international personality, and as the subject-matter of official and unofficial codification. This thesis defines the international organization as an intergovernmental organization, discusses the character of its international personality (universal and particular) and explains the legal nature of international responsibility, including the main differences between the responsibility of States and international organizations. The thesis then focuses on responsibility of international organizations in various branches of international public law - it discusses questions of contractual and tort liability, of attribution in UN peacekeeping missions, and of the rights of individuals to due process when dealing with responsibility of international organizations. The following is an analysis of the importance of codification of international law and the contribution of non-official codification activities for the work of the International Law Commission as the main codification organ of the United Nations. Draft articles on the Responsibility of International Organizations, which was, together with the...
38

Reinventando sentidos para a cultura: uma leitura do papel normativo da Unesco através da análise da convenção para a promoção e a proteção para a diversidade das expressões culturais.

Vieira, Mariella Pitombo January 2009 (has links)
303f. / Submitted by Suelen Reis (suziy.ellen@gmail.com) on 2013-04-11T19:57:59Z No. of bitstreams: 1 Tese Mariella Vieiraseg.pdf: 2548489 bytes, checksum: d251f7ee4da3d49fc92c67acdf53925b (MD5) / Approved for entry into archive by Maria Alice Ribeiro(malice@ufba.br) on 2013-05-07T14:27:34Z (GMT) No. of bitstreams: 1 Tese Mariella Vieiraseg.pdf: 2548489 bytes, checksum: d251f7ee4da3d49fc92c67acdf53925b (MD5) / Made available in DSpace on 2013-05-07T14:27:34Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 1 Tese Mariella Vieiraseg.pdf: 2548489 bytes, checksum: d251f7ee4da3d49fc92c67acdf53925b (MD5) Previous issue date: 2009 / A esfera cultural vem se tornando uma instância protagonista de legitimação e visibilidade das práticas sociais na contemporaneidade. Sua ascensão é fruto de um concurso de fatores possibilitados por um contexto sócio-histórico no qual temas relativos às questões de identidade e diferença ganham visibilidade acentuada. Parte-se aqui da hipótese de que instituições como a Unesco vem contribuindo para elevar o tema da cultura a uma pauta importante para a agenda política internacional. O objetivo dessa tese foi o de investigar o papel Unesco enquanto narradora de categorias de compreensão social (acerca da noção de cultura e seus imediatos corolários, a exemplo da idéia de diversidade cultural) que acabam por orientar práticas e saberes dos agentes implicados na esfera cultural. Optou-se por tomar os bastidores da elaboração da Convenção da Unesco sobre a Promoção e a Proteção da Diversidade das Expressões Culturais como caminho empírico para ilustrar a problemática eleita pela pesquisa. Amparando-se no modelo analítico das configurações do sociólogo Norbert Elias, buscou-se mapear a complexa trama de interdependências que se forjou em torno da formulação do referido tratado de modo a compreender as vicissitudes do processo (identificação de atores sociais, lutas por definição de sentido, enfim, as disputas de poder inerentes ao processo) que resultaram na cosmologia presente no texto da convenção. / Salvador
39

Storming the Security Council: The Revolution in UNSC Authority Over the Projection of Military Force

Cleveland, Clayton 11 July 2013 (has links)
Why have states requested international authorization for their projections of military force more after 1989? One perspective suggests powerful states should not make such requests. Rather, they should look to their own power instead of international organizations. Another view suggests international authorization is a way to provide credible signals about state intentions. A third perspective suggests states view international authorization of military force as appropriate. I establish that states have changed their behavior, requesting international authorization more often after 1989. Then, I develop hypotheses involving material power, burden-sharing, informational signaling, and international norms. I assess their ability to explain the increase in authorization requests through evidence from over 150 military force projections by a wide range of states and through a detailed evaluation of United States behavior. The U.S. provides a strong test case for the theories evaluated, since powerful states should be least susceptible to pressures for requesting authorization, and yet it does so more frequently after 1989. I find the expectation that states should request international authorization emerged after the U.S. set a precedent during the Persian Gulf War. The end of the Cold War changed the perceived "viability" of different strategies for projecting military force for U.S. policy-makers. Requesting authorization from the UN became a plausible alternative. The decision to request international authorization--and the justifications U.S. decision makers offered for doing so--led to the expectation by other states that the U.S. would do so for future projections of military force. This international norm helps explain the politics of international authorization for the airstrikes on Iraq (1998), the Iraq War (2003) and the Libyan intervention (2011). The response of other countries to the Clinton Administration's failure to request authorization for airstrikes on Iraq in 1998 demonstrates that expectations regarding whether the U.S. should request authorization had shifted. The subsequent consolidation of the norm helps explain the requests for authorization by the Bush Administration for the Iraq War in 2003 and by the Obama Administration for Libya in 2011. The dissertation increases our understanding of the relationship, and the role of authority, between states and international organizations.
40

[en] MUST INTERNATIONAL SOCIETY BE DEFENDED?: BORDERING TECHNIQUES AND INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATIONS / [pt] EM DEFESA DA SOCIEDADE INTERNACIONAL?: ORGANIZAÇÕES INTERNACIONAIS E (RE)CONSTRUÇÃO DE ESTADOS

LETÍCIA CARVALHO DE SOUZA 01 November 2016 (has links)
[pt] A tese investiga a participação de organizações internacionais em processos de (re)construção de estados, com ênfase no trabalho realizado pela Liga das Nações e pela Organização das Nações Unidas no período entre 1919 e 2009. O objetivo é discutir a institucionalização e a transformação dos processos de (re)construção ao longo do tempo; e reinterpretá-los como um conjunto de técnicas de governo relacionadas à preservação e à promoção de versões bastante específicas sobre as possibilidades de ordem no sistema internacional e a constante (re)produção de suas fronteiras. / [en] The thesis investigates the involvement of international organizations in states reconstruction processes, emphasizing the role played by the League of Nations and the United Nations in the period between 1919 and 2009. The aim is to discuss the institutionalization and the transformation of (re)construction processes over time; and reinterpret them as a set of techniques of government related to the preservation and promotion of specific versions of order in the international system and the constant (re)production of its borders.

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