Challenges traditional classifications of international organizations as either government-run or nongovernmental. By considering them as complex mixes of the two that exist on a continuum, subtle changes in global governance can be observed. Such changes tend to repeat themselves, and we may soon experience a return to past trends.
Challenges traditional classifications of international organizations as either government-run or nongovernmental. By considering them as complex mixes of the two that exist on a continuum, subtle changes in global governance can be observed. Such changes tend to repeat themselves, and we may soon experience a return to past trends.
Alexandru Grigorescu is a professor of political science at Loyola University Chicago. He is the author of Democratic Intergovernmental Organizations? (Cambridge, 2015). Prior to his academic career he worked as a diplomat in the Romanian Foreign Ministry and at the United Nations.
Inhaltsangabe
1. The Intergovernmental-nongovernmental continuum in global governance 2. Causes of intergovernmentalism and nongovernmentalism 3. Global governance in the health realm 4. Global governance in the labor realm 5. Global governance in the technical standards realm 6. Conclusions.
1. The Intergovernmental-nongovernmental continuum in global governance 2. Causes of intergovernmentalism and nongovernmentalism 3. Global governance in the health realm 4. Global governance in the labor realm 5. Global governance in the technical standards realm 6. Conclusions.
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