International Organizations and Peaceful Change in World Politics
Anders Wivel editor Kai He editor T V Paul editor
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Cambridge University Press
Publishing:31st Jan '25
£29.99
This title is due to be published on 31st January, and will be despatched as soon as possible.
Critically evaluates whether or not international organizations contribute to peaceful change and how they can improve their performance.
A timely diagnosis of international organizations' ability to contribute to peaceful change featuring suggested 'cures' for their shortcomings. Leading scholars critically scrutinize selected global organizations and provide an invaluable guide for scholars and policymakers interested in IOs and the challenges facing contemporary world order.International organizations play an important, if imperfect, role in world politics, solving collective action problems in security, economic, environmental, and global health among others. While many believe that international organisations have formed critical pillars of global governance, sceptics contend that they reflect the power politics of the day and the interests of hegemonic powers. This volume examines whether international organizations contribute to or detract from peaceful change, acting as agents of both status quo and stasis. Providing a historical overview of international organizations, from the nineteenth century to the current day, a team of leading scholars offer an overview of how major theoretical approaches – Liberalism, Constructivism, Rationalism and Realism – have contributed to our understanding of the role played by international organizations in peaceful change. In particular, the roles of the United Nations General Assembly, UN Peacekeeping, UN Environment Program, World Health Organization, World Trade Organization and G20 are analysed.
ISBN: 9781009509350
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
362 pages