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This Handbook offers a state of the art overview of political leadership. Bell draws from not only the fields of political science and international relations but also from organization and management studies, anthropologyand psychology. It focuses on the theory, history of the study, the techniques of leadership, its discourseand the moral basis for leadership. Drawing together contributions from leading researchers in the field from the US, UK & Europe, this work will be of great interest to all students and scholars of political leadership, political psychology and leadership studies.
Auteur
David S. Bell is Professor of French Government & Politics at the University of Leeds, UK. He is the Chair of the PSA Specialist Group in Political Leadership.
Contenu
Part I: What Do We Know about International Organizations? Documentation, Data Sets and Sources
Documentation on International Organizations: What is Available? How is It Being Used? How to Improve its Use?
By Peter Hajnal, University of Toronto, Canada
The Inter Governmental Organization Data in the Correlates of War Project
By Timothy Nordstrom, University of Mississippi, Jon Pevehouse, University of Wisconsin, and Megan Shannon, University of Mississippi, US
The United Nations General Assembly Voting Data
By Eric Voeten, Georgetown University, US
Regional Barometers, International Surveys and International Public Opinion
By Douglas C. Foyle, Wesleyan University, US
What Does Transnational History Tell Us About a World With International Organizations? The Palgrave Dictionary of Transnational History and the League of Nations Search Engine
By Pierre-Yves Saunier, Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, Lyon, France, and Madeleine Herren, University of Heidelberg, Germany
The Easy Availability of International Treaties and the Salience of International Treaty Law
By Bruce Cronin, City University of New York, US
Part II: Fundamental Ideas Promoted by International Organizations
The Rise of Humanitarian Principles and their Use and Promotion by International Organizations
By Gilles Carbonnier, The Graduate Institute of International and Development Studies, Geneva, Switzerland
The Idea of Equality and its Globalization Through International Organizations
By Siep Stuurman, Erasmus University, Rotterdam, Netherlands
International Organizations, the Promotion of Democracy and International Election Observation
By Judith Kelley, Duke University, US
International Organizations as Ideational Innovator. The UN Intellectual History Project and Beyond
By Helge Hveem, University of Oslo, Norway
The Idea of Autonomy (Institutional Independence) in the International Legal Order
By Richard Collins, University of Sheffield, and Nigel D. White, University of Nottingham, UK
Part III: Processes Related to the Black Box of an International Organization
The Co-Existence of Formal and Informal Rules in International Organization
By Randall W. Stone, University of Rochester, US
Bureaucratic Structure and Administrative Behaviour in International Secretariats: The Logics of Hierarchy and Portfolio
By Jarle Trondal, University of Agder, Norway
Problem Solving by Large and Small International Bureaucracies
By Frank Biermann, VU University, Amsterdam, Netherlands, and Bernd Siebenhüner, Carl von Ossietzky University, Oldenburg, Germany
Decision Making by International Organizations in Times of Crisis
By Bertjan Verbeek, Radboud University Nijmegen, Netherlands
The Management of International Non-Governmental Organizations
By David Lewis, London School of Economics, UK
International Organizations and their Bureaucratic Oversight Mechanisms: Transparency and the Democratic Deficit
By Alexandru Grigorescu, Loyola University, Chicago, US
International Socialization Processes and the Diffusion of International Norms
By Brian Greenhill, University of Washington, US
Reaction of National Bureaucracies to International Monitoring Procedures: Adequate or Not?
By Tobias Kelly, University of Edinburgh, UK
The Impact of Military and Economic Sanctions on State Policies and Public Opinion
By Dursun Peksen, East Carolina University, US
Part IV: Actors and the Black Box of an International Organization
Formal Leadership in International Cooperation: The Power of the Chair
By Jonas Talberg, Stockholm University, Sweden
Leadership Styles and Personal Characteristics of Secretaries-General of International Organizations
By Kent Kille, The College of Wooster, US
Multilateral Diplomats in the 21th Century
By James Muldoon Jr., Rutgers University, Newark, US
The Special Representatives of the United Nations Secretary-General
By Manuel Fröhlich, University of Jena, Germany
The Professionalized Representatives of International NGO Coalitions
By Wolf-Dieter Eberwein and Sabine Saurugger, Institut d'Etudes Politiques, Grenoble, France
Part V: Structures of International Organizations and Change
United Nations Studies and the Alterations of the International Civil Service
By Thomas G. Weiss, City University of New York, US
Modernizing the United Nations System through International Civil Society
By John Trent, University of Ottawa, Canada, et al.
Reforming the United Nations Security Council: Proposals, Strategies and Preferences
By Thomas Dörfler, University of Bamberg, Germany, and Madeleine O. Hosli, Leiden University, Netherlands
Organizational Change and the Actual Reform of the Food and Agriculture Organization
By Sean Lowrie, Kings College, London, UK
Expanding the Mandate of International Organizations: How Do They Do This?
By Nina Hall, Oxford University, UK
Military Crisis Management and the Challenge of Effective Inter-Organizationalism
By Joachim A. Koops, Free University Brussels, Belgium
The Politics of Inter-Regionalism: Relations between Regional International Organizations
By Andrea Ribeiro Hoffmann, University of Erfurt, Germany, and Anna van der Vleuten, Radboud University Nijmegen, Netherlands
Part VI: Evolving International Architectures
The Expanding World's Financial Architecture
By Dries Lesage, Ghent University, Belgium
The Weak Architecture of International Crime Fighting?
By Frank G. Madsen, University of Cambridge, UK
The Architecture of International Justice: A World of Tribunals and Courts
By Anna-Karin Lindblom, Ministry of Integration and Gender Equality, Stockholm, Sweden
The Architecture of Global and Regional Security Institutions
By Patricia A. Weitsman, Ohio University, US, and Rodrigo Tavares, University of Gothenburg, Sweden
The Architecture of Global South Institutions: Weak but Essential?
By Jacqueline Anne Braveboy-Wagner, The City College, US
The Expanding Architecture of Intellectual Property Protection and Promotion
By Jean-Frédéric Morin, Free University Brussels, Belgium
The Architecture of Business and IGO Cooperation: Commitment and Partnership?
By Geoffrey Allen Pigman, Bennington College, US