International Institutions (Four-Volume Set) (Sage Library of International Relations) (1ST ed.)

International Institutions (Four-Volume Set) (Sage Library of International Relations) (1ST ed.)

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Table of Contents: VOLUME 1: CAUSES Coordination Versus Prisoners′ Dilemma: Implications for international cooperation and regimes - Duncan Snidal Theories and Empirical Studies of International Institutions - Lisa L. Martin and Beth A. Simmons Multilateralism:...

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Table of Contents:
VOLUME 1: CAUSES
Coordination Versus Prisoners′ Dilemma: Implications for international cooperation and regimes - Duncan Snidal
Theories and Empirical Studies of International Institutions - Lisa L. Martin and Beth A. Simmons
Multilateralism: The anatomy of an institution - John Gerard Ruggie
International Organization: A state of the art on an art of the state - Friedrich Kratochwil and John Gerard Ruggie
World Society and the Nation-State - John W. Meyer, John Boli, George M. Thomas and Francisco O. Ramirez
Regime Dynamics: The rise and fall of international regimes - Oran R. Young
Introduction: Epistemic communities and international policy coordination - Peter M. Haas
Transnational Advocacy Networks in International and Regional Politics - Margaret E. Keck and Kathryn Sikkink
Why States Act through Formal International Organizations - Kenneth W. Abbott and Duncan Snidal
Interests, Power, and Multilateralism - Lisa L. Martin,
Regimes and the Limits of Realism: Regimes as autonomous variables - Stephen D. Krasner
The Demand for International Regimes - Robert O. Keohane
International Public Goods without International Government - Charles P. Kindleberger
International Agreements: A rational choice approach - Jack L. Goldsmith and Eric A. Posner
The False Promise of International Institutions - John J. Mearsheimer
VOLUME 2: CONSEQUENCES: WHEN, WHERE, AND WHY INTERNATIONAL INSTITUTIONS ARE EFFECTIVE
Global Communications and National Power: Life on the Pareto frontier - Stephen D. Krasner
Cave! Hic Dragones: A critique of regime analysis - Susan Strange
The Politics, Power, and Pathologies of International Organizations - Michael N. Barnett, and Martha Finnemore
Sharing Sovereignty: New institutions for collapsed and failing states - Stephen D. Krasner
Norms and State Structure: UNESCO and the creation of state science bureaucracies - Martha Finnemore
Institutional Conditions for Diffusion - David Strang and John W. Meyer
The Institutional Dynamics of International Political Orders - James G. March and Johan P. Olsen
International Regimes, Transactions, and Change: Embedded liberalism in the postwar economic order - John Gerard Ruggie
Is the Good News about Compliance Good News about Cooperation? - George W. Downs, David M. Rocke, and Peter N. Barsoom
Do Treaties Constrain or Screen? Selection bias and treaty compliance - Jana von Stein
The Origins of Human Rights Regimes: Democratic delegation in postwar Europe - Andrew Moravcsik
VOLUME 3: TYPES OF INSTITUTIONS: SECURITY AND ECONOMIC
From Balance to Concert: A study of international security cooperation - Robert Jervis
NATO′s Functions after the Cold War - John S. Duffield
Beyond Anarchy: The importance of security institutions - David A. Lake
Norms and Security: The case of international assassination - Ward Thomas
The Role of Multilateral Institutions in International Trade Cooperation - Giovanni Maggi
The New Wave of Regionalism - Edward D. Mansfield and Helen V. Milner
Regulatory Shift: The rise of judicial liberalization at the WTO - Judith L. Goldstein and Richard H. Steinberg
The Politics of Dispute Settlement Design: Explaining legalism in regional trade pacts - James McCall Smith
An Exclusive Country Club: The effects of the GATT on trade, 1950-94 - Joanne Gowa and Soo Yeon Kim
Institutions in International Relations: Understanding the effects of the GATT and the WTO on world trade - Judith L. Goldstein, Douglas Rivers and Michael Tomz
International Law and State Behavior: Commitment and compliance in international monetary affairs - Beth Simmons
Balance-of-Payments Financing: Evolution of a regime - Benjamin J. Cohen
The Political Economy of International Monetary Relations - J. Lawrence Broz and Jeffry A. Frieden
VOLUME 4: TYPES OF INSTITUTIONS: ENVIRONMENT, HUMAN RIGHTS, INTERNATIONAL COURTS, MULTILATERALISM, REGIONALISM
Introduction: Legalization and world politics - Judith Goldstein, Miles Kahler, Robert O. Keohane and Anne-Marie Slaughter
In the Shadow of Law or Power? Consensus-based bargaining and outcomes in the GATT/WTO - Richard H. Steinberg
Europe Before the Court: A political theory of legal integration - Anne-Marie Burley and Walter Mattli
Legalization, Trade Liberalization, and Domestic Politics: A cautionary note - Judith Goldstein and Lisa L. Martin
Feminist Approaches to International Law - Hilary Charlesworth, Christine Chinkin and Shelley Wright
The Politics of International Regime Formation: Managing natural resources and the environment - Oran R. Young
Regime Design Matters: Intentional oil pollution and treaty compliance - Ronald B. Mitchell
Women′s Rights, the European Court, and Supranational Constitutionalism - Rachel A. Cichowski
The Power of the European Parliament as a Conditional Agenda Setter - George Tsebelis
The Justice Cascade: The evolution and impact of foreign human rights trials in Latin America - Ellen L. Lutz and Kathryn Sikkink
Incomplete Internalization and Compliance with Human Rights Law - Ryan Goodman and Derek Jinks
Reconstituting the Global Public Domain - Issues, Actors, and Practices - John Gerard Ruggie
Legitimacy and Authority in International Politics - Ian Hurd
Governance in a Partially Globalized World - Robert O. Keohane


Biographical Note:
Judith Goldstein is the Janet M. Peck Professor in International Communication at Stanford University and a Professor of Political Science at UCLA. She serves on the editorial boards of several prestigious journals including International Organization, International Studies Quarterly and World Politics. She has published extensively in journals and books and participates actively in the American Political Science Association. Her research Interests range from International Relations, American Foreign Policy, Foreign Economic Policy to International Institutions, International Trade, World Trade Organization and NAFTA.

Richard Steinberg is Professor of Law at UCLA. He is on the editorial boards of the American Journal of International Law and International Organization. He is also a member of the Council on Foreign Relations. He has written numerous articles and books on international law. His most recent books are International Law and International Relations (co-edited, 2007, Cambridge University Press), and The Evolution of the Trade Regime: Economics, Law, and Politics of the GATT/WTO (co-authored, 2006, Princeton University Press).

Prior to arriving at UCLA School of Law, Richard Steinberg worked as Assistant General Counsel to the United States Trade Representative in Washington, D.C., and later as an associate with Morrison & Foerster in San Francisco. He also served as Project Director at the Berkeley Roundtable on International Economy (BRIE) at UC Berkeley.



Publisher Marketing:

Sovereign nations share the international system with a host of non-state transnational actors. Some of these entities, such as the United Nations, have been created by states themselves, often as a result of the need to jointly solve a common problem. Other international entities, such as Amnesty International or Oxfam, are created when members of society organize across traditional national boundaries to deal with a collective concern. To understand and explain contemporary world politics we need to consider these institutions, both public and private, as key actors influencing issues of war and peace.

Although transnational actors are not new on the world stage, the number and type of these international entities expanded dramatically after World War II. This collection examines both the rise of these post-war transnational actors and their effect on international politics and policies.

Volume I: Causes - Why Do International Institutions Exist?
Volume II: Consequences - When, Where and Why International Institutions are Effective?
Volume III: Types of Institutions - Security and Economic
Volume IV: Types of Institutions - Environment, Human Rights, International Courts, Multilateralism, Regionalism




Contributor Bio:Steinberg, Richard
Richard Steinberg is Professor of Economics, Philanthropic Studies, and Public Affairs at IUPUI. He coedited The Nonprofit Sector: A Research Handbook, 2nd Ed., coauthored Economics for Nonprofit Mangers, and was Co-President of ARNOVA from 1992-1994. His research focuses on determinants of giving and volunteering, the theory of nonprofit organizations, public policy, and nonprofit managerial economics.