Routledge history of international organizations: from 1815 to the present day
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Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
London [u.a.]
Routledge
2013
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Ausgabe: | 1. issued in paperback |
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Beschreibung: | Literaturverz. S. 768 -781 |
Beschreibung: | XXX, 846 S. graph. Darst. |
ISBN: | 9780415476249 9780415850445 |
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Datensatz im Suchindex
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adam_text | Contents
List of figures XV
Abbreviations xviii
Introduction 1
Part 1:1815- British hegemony and the invention of the multilateral
conference plus follow-up conference: The Concert of Europe and the
Central Commission for the Navigation of the Rhine 3
1 Emergence and evolution of international organizations 5
1.1 Do international organizations matter? 5
1.2 Political science views on the emergence and evolution of international
organizations 10
2 1815: the British postwar institutional strategy and the Concert of Europe 17
2.1 The Congress of Vienna in 1814-15 and the transformation of European
politics 17
2.2 The British postwar institutional strategy and multilateral diplomacy 20
2.3 The Concert of Europe as a collective security regime 24
3 The Central Commission for the Navigation of the Rhine and
burgeoning free trade 28
3.1 The Central Commission for the Navigation of the Rhine (1815): freedom of
navigation 28
3.2 The transition from mercantilism to free trade 30
3.3 The Zollverein (1834—71): concerted (free) trade policies and German
unification 32
CONTENTS
Part II: Transnational networks of citizens: From the anti-slavery movement
in 1815 to the International Committee of the Red Cross of 1863 35
4 Citizens organizing transnationally in support of slavery abolition and peace 37
4.1 The international movement advocating the abolition of slavery 3 7
4.2 The peace movement, its international congresses and the idea of arbitration 43
4.3 Democracy, women’s equality and workers’ rights as national themes 47
5 The International Red Cross made responsible for the Geneva Convention
on Wounded Soldiers (1864) 51
5A The private International Red Cross initiative (Î863) 51
5.2 Responsibility for monitoring the Geneva Convention on Wounded Soldiers
(1864) 54
Part III: The creation of the Hague system: The arbitration movement and
the 1899 and 1907 Peace Conferences in The Hague 57
6 Arbitration and international law as normative powers in international
relations 59
6.1 The Alabama case and the Treaty of Washington on arbitration (1871) 59
6.2 The creation of two private institutes for international law in 1873 60
6.3 The Inter-Parliamentary Union (1889) favouring arbitration 62
6.4 The Washington conference on trade and arbitration in 1889 63
1 The 1899 and 1907 Peace Conferences in The Hague and the Hague system 65
7.1 The Hague Peace Conference on the law of war and arbitration (1899) 65
7.2 The establishment of the Permanent Court of Arbitration (1899) 68
7.3 The awarding of the Nobel Peace Prize since 1901 72
7.4 The Latin American states decide to join the Hague system (1901) 75
7.5 The second Hague Peace Conference of 1907 78
Part IV: Public International Unions 1865-1914: Institutionalization of
conferences and the creation of continental markets in Europe and the
Americas 83
8 Creadon of. the International Telegraph Union (1865) and the Universal
Postal Union (1874) 85
8.1 The invention of the telegraph and the creation of the International Telegraph
Union (1865) 85
8.2 The Universal Postal Union (1874) as an example for other international
organizations 89
8.3 The relevance of the nineteenth-century public international unions 90
9 Standardization and intellectual property regulated internationally 96
9.1 Measurement of the Earth, the standard time and the international map of
the world 96
9.2 Identical weights and measures all over the world 101
9.3 Protection of industrial intellectual property and copyright 102
VI
CONTENTS
10 Regulation of international shipping, railway and road traffic 107
10.1 The relevance of international river commissions: the Danube Commission
of 1856 107
10.2 Sea-shipping regulations by governments 112
10.3 Sea-shipping regulations on a private basis 116
10.4 Cooperation in the fields of international railway and road connections 117
11 Public international unions and the creation of continental markets in Europe
and the Americas 1860—1910 120
11.1 Free trade, customs tariffs, migration and capital export 120
11.2 The gold standard and monetary unions 124
11.3 Agricultural regulations 126
11.4 Public international unions and the creation of the European
continental market 129
11.5 The Union of American Republics and the creation of the American
continental market 131
Part V: The international foundation for the welfare state 1880-1914:
How governments became involved in international labour legislation 137
12 International business around the end of the nineteenth century 139
12.1 International trusts, cartels and federations 139
12.2 Advocating an international chamber of commerce 1905—19 144
13 Rising international emancipation movements of workers and women 147
13.1 The socialist First International of 1864 as a spectre 147
13.2 The liberal International League for Peace and Freedom (1867) 149
13.3 Women joining forces internationally and actions against trafficking
in women 150
13.4 International campaigning for women’s suffrage 153
13.5 The national orientation of the Second International and international
trade unions 156
14 International labour conventions (1906) and the foundation for the
welfare state 162
14.1 How governments became involved in international labour regulation 162
14.2 An NGO for international labour legislation (1900) and the 1906
labour conventions 166
14.3 Social protection against the consequences of free trade: the welfare state 169
14.4 International efforts to improve health and uplift morality 171
Part VI: Laying down the path of collective security: The First World War,
the League of Nations founded (1919) and the interwar period 177
15 The First World War and the creation of the League of Nations (1919) 179
15.1 Liberal debates on a postwar League of Nations in the UK 179
15.2 The US involved in the war (1917) and Wilson’s Fourteen Points (1918) 183
vii
CONTENTS
15.3 The postwar institutional strategy as a result of power negotiations (1919) 186
15.4 The League of Nations’ Secretariat: an international organ rather than a
principal’s agent 190
15.5 Women gain access to the League of Nations: Article 7.3 193
15.6 The League of Nations as a universal organization 1919-46 196
15.7 The Permanent Court of International Justice 1920-46 200
16 The major powers and collective security in the interwar period 203
16.1 Temporary administration conflict settlement and refugee support by the
League of Nations 203
16.2 Disarmament efforts by the major powers and the League of Nations 208
16.3 Japan and Germany leave the League of Nations (1933) 214
16.4 The League of Nations imposes sanctions on Italy (1935) 217
16.5 Collective security paralysed 218
Part VII: Laying down the path of common economic endeavours: The
International Labour Organization (1919) and the economic and social
activities of the League of Nations 221
17 The normative workings of the international Labour Organization (1919) 223
17.1 The creation of the first specialized international agency 223
17.2 Albert Thomas’s leadership of the ILO 228
17.3 The international labour code: ILO conventions and recommendations 232
17.4 7he divided international trade union movement 236
18 The League of Nations’ ongoing economic and social activities 243
18.1 The League of Nations’ structures for economic and social activities 243
18.2 A faltering international economy and German reparation payments
1920-32 253
18.3 Regional cooperation as a protectionist solution to the crisis of the 1930s 259
18.4 The League’s World Economic Conference (1933) and the Bruce
Committee (1939) 264
Part VIII: American hegemony and the genesis and evolution of the United
Nations system 269
19 Multilateral cooperation during the Second World War 271
19.1 The ILO flees to Montreal, the League of Nations’ staff to
Princeton (1940) 271
19.2 The Atlantic Charter (1941) and the first signs of the United Nations 273
19.3 The Bretton Woods conference on international monetary policy (1944) 2 78
19.4 The establishment of the United Nations as managed by the US
(1943-45) 281
20 The United Nations: an improved security organization with economic
coordination 289
20.1 Charter, member states and budget of the United Nations 289
viii
CONTENTS
20.2 The General Assembly as the primary organ of the United Nations 294
20.3 The Security Council and its permanent members 303
20.4 The Trusteeship Council as a continuation of the League of Nations
mandate system 306
20.5 The coordinating function of the Economic and Social Council
(ECOSOC) 308
20.6 The consultative status of non-governmental organizations at ECOSOC 316
20.7 The UN Secretariat and the secretary-general 319
21 The workings of the United Nations system 327
21.1 The International Court of Justice and the development of international law 321
21.2 Specialized international organizations as part of the UN system 333
21.3 The International Labour Organization and the transition to
technical assistance 338
21.4 Freedom of association as a normative force in the East-West conflict 341
21.5 The observer status of intergovernmental organizations at the UN 344
Part IX: Collective security in a bipolar world 1945-80 347
22 Refugees, peacekeeping and Cold War at the United Nations 349
22.1 The UN refugee regime since 1943 349
22.2 How the UN developed to become a respected peacekeeper 353
22.3 The Cold War at the UN: East, West and non-aligned 356
23 Regional alliances in the 1940s and 1950s 361
23.1 US policy on Western European cooperation 361
23.2 From North Atlantic Treaty (1949) to NATO (1952) 364
23.3 The Warsaw Pact in Eastern Europe (1955) 368
23.4 Cooperation on security in the Western Hemisphere and Asia 370
24 Peaceful coexistence and nuclear weapons control at the United Nations 373
24.1 Nuclear weapons control: the IAEA (1957) and the Non-Proliferation
Treaty (1968) 373
24.2 Continuing nuclear weapons control and the UN Biological Weapons
Convention (1972) 380
24.3 Limitation of arsenals and numbers of military personnel: SALT, MBFR
and CSCE 383
24.4 Measures against aircraft hijackings and terrorism in the 1960s and 1970s 386
Part X: Economic cooperation in a bipolar world 1945-70 389
25 The troubled start of the Bretton Woods institutions IBRD and IMF and the
GATT regime 391
25.1 The troubled start of the International Bank for Reconstruction and
Development 391
25.2 The International Monetary Fund and unilateral US management 395
25.3 1947—48: no International Trade Organization, but GATT instead 399
IX
CONTENTS
26 Marshall Aid, Eastern European integration, Western European integration
and the workings of the OECD 406
26. 1 Marshall Aid and the Organization for European Economic
Cooperation (1948) 406
26.2 Eastern European integration: the Council for Mutual Economic
Assistance (1949) 412
26.3 Western European integration: ECSC (1951), Treaties of Rome (1957)
and EFT A (1960) 416
26.4 From OEEC to the Organization for Economic Cooperation and
Development (1961) 423
26.5 Ongoing and stagnating Western European integration 1960—80 427
27 The weakening of the Bretton Woods system and the emergence of
the G7 (1975) 435
27.1 The weakening of the Bretton Woods system during the 1960s 435
27.2 The Trilateral Commission (1973) and its reflection on American
hegemony 438
27.3 The emergence of the G7 (1975) and its consequences for the
UN system 439
Part XI: Decolonization, the North-South divide and Third World
experiences with global and regional international organizations 1960-80 443
28 Decolonization, anti-apartheid and the consequences of the Vietnam War 445
28.1 Decolonization and anti-apartheid as normative forces in international
relations 445
28.2 The Vietnam War not a UN but a UNHCR concern 453
29 The United Nations Development Decade: North versus South during
the 1960s 457
29.1 Multilateral development aid, the UNDP (1965) and regional
development banks 457
29.2 The Third World view: dependency, UNCTAD (1964) and the G77 463
29.3 Alternative strategies: collective self-reliance and the Asian Tigers 469
30 The creation of regional economic organizations in the Third World in
the 1960s 473
30.1 Regional economic cooperation outside Europe 473
30.2 Regional economic organizations in Latin and Central America 474
30.3 The emergence of A SEA N (1967) 478
30.4 Regional organizations in Africa and the Arab world 480
31 The Third World struggle for a New international Economic Order (1974) 484
31.1 The UN Declaration on the New International Economic Order (1974) 484
31.2 The basic needs strategy of the IBRD and ILO as an alternative 488
31.3 Weak international codes of conduct for transnational corporations 491
CONTENTS
Part XII: Development aid, environmental protection and human rights as
normative powers: NGO pressure on governments through
intergovernmental organizations 1960-80
32 NGOs and development aid, the UN International Women’s Year (1975)
and environmental protection
32. 1 NGO contributions to multilateral development aid 499
32.2 The international women s movement and the UN International Women s
Year (1975) 503
32.3 Consciousness-raising on environmental problems 512
32.4 The UN Conference on the Human Environment and the creation of
UNEP (1972) 515
32.5 Protection of the natural and human environment through international
conventions 517
33 Human rights as a normative power and the Amnesty International model
33.1 The realization of international human rights conventions at the UN 521
33.2 Monitoring the implementation of UN human rights conventions
through reports 525
33.3 The UN Human Rights Conference in Tehran (1968) and the Amnesty
International model 527
33.4 Reporting with a monitoring commission and a complaints procedure 528
33.5 Regional human rights conventions in Europe, the Americas and Africa 532
Part XIII: International organizations in the 1980s: The Cold War intensifies
and neoliberalism replaces Keynesianism
34 US President Reagan intensifies the Cold War
34.1 The end of the 1970s, the end of the UN peacekeeping regime? 541
34.2 The US and the politicization of the United Nations 1977—85 545
34.3 US President Reagan intensifies the Cold War and puts financial pressure
on the UN 547
35 Reagonomics, the debt crisis in the South and the structural adjustment
programmes of the IMF
35.1 Reagonomics and the new relationship between the G7, IMF and OECD 551
35.2 The Brandt Reports and the debt crisis in the South from 1982 553
35.3 The structural adjustment programmes of the IMF and IBRD and
their consequences 555
35.4 From, combating poverty to adjustment policy: the IBRD in trouble 559
35.5 Strengthening of the G7 and the surveillance role of the IMF (1985) 561
36 The fall of the Berlin wall (1989) and the end of the Cold War
36.1 The fall of the Berlin wall (1989) and the significance of the
CSCE/OSCE 564
36.2 Abolition of the Warsaw Pact (1991) and the continued existence
of NATO 569
497
499
521
539
541
551
564
xi
CONTENTS
36.3 Arms control, the OPCW (1997) and the comprehensive nuclear test ban 572
36.4 International financial institutions and the transformation of
communist states 575
Part XIV: The 1990s and new challenges for the United Nations as
peacekeeper 583
37 A new world order and an agenda for peace? Hope and bitter failure for
UN peacekeeping missions 585
37.1 Afghanistan (1988) and the Gulf War (1990-91): the return of the UN
as peacekeeper 585
37.2 Towards a new world order? Ethnic wars and failing states 587
37.3 The disintegration of Yugoslavia and the Balkan Wars 1991—95: the
UN sidelined 590
37.4 Humanitarian assistance and the failure of the US and UN in
Somalia (1993) 592
37.5 Greater success in Mozambique, Cambodia and Haiti, but failure in
Rwanda 1992—94 594
37.6 An agenda for peace (1992) and new generations of UN peacekeeping 597
37. 7 Violence in Sierra Leone, Kosovo, East Timor and Congo 1998—2000 599
38 Efforts to maintain collective security: sanctions, NGOs and UN tribunals 604
38.1 UN sanctions policies in the 1990s 604
38.2 The increased role of NGOs in security after the end of the Cold War 608
38.3 War crimes, crimes against humanity and UN tribunals 615
38.4 The issue of humanitarian intervention and the responsibility to
protect (R2P) 619
Part XV: Globalization in the 1990s: New challenges for the United Nations
system as promoter of economic and social stability 623
39 Boosting free trade again: from GATT to World Trade Organization (1995) 625
39.1 Reagan s intervention in the deadlocked GATT: the Uruguay Round
1986-94 625
39.2 The World Trade Organization as the successor of GATT (1995) 630
39.3 The North—South divide within the WTO 636
39.4 WTO impact on the functioning of UNCTAD 639
39.5 Diminished importance and criticisms of UNDP: a matter of survival 641
39.6 The International Telecommunication Union s involvement with
the Internet 643
40 The dominant free trade regime: environment and welfare state under
pressure 646
40.1 Free trade versus environmental and social clauses: GA TT and NAFTA 646
40.2 Protection of the ozone layer and the establishment of the IPCC (1988) 650
40.3 The UNCED Conference in Rio de faneiro (1992) and its international
conventions 653
xii
CONTENTS
40.4 Full employment and the welfare state under pressure by Reagonomics 662
40.5 European unemployment: the ‘American solution (OECD, G7 and IMF)
or the European? 665
40.6 The ILO in a comer: core labour standards as the way out 668
41 IMF, IBRD and WTO criticized by states and the anti-globalization
movement 672
41. i The Asian financial crisis (1997—98) and the clash between ASEAN
and IMF 672
41.2 Washington Consensus, Good Governance and IMF mistakes during the
Argentine crisis (2000) 676
41.3 Wolfensohn reorganizes the criticized IBRD (1997) 679
41.4 The Battle of Seattle (1999) and the criticisms by the ‘anti*-and
‘alter*-globalization movements 682
41.5 Consumer actions against transnational corporations 689
41.6 Principles for business: the UN Global Compact (1999) 692
Part XVI: Regional international organizations from the 198Gs onwards 695
42 The Third World answer to globalization: continued and new regionalism 697
42.1 Continued and new regionalism in the Third World during the 1980s
and 1990s 697
42.2 The creation of MERCOSUR (1991) and the A ndean Community of
Nations (1996) 700
42.3 Central American and Caribbean cooperation 704
42.4 The significance of SAARC, ASEAN and APEC for Asian development 706
42.5 Continued and new regionalism in Africa 712
42.6 Economic cooperation in the Arab world and West Asia 719
43 From European Community to European Union (1993): deepening and
enlargement 722
43.1 Continued European integration: the creation of the single market (1993) 722
43.2 The Maastricht Treaty on European Union (1992) 726
43.3 The establishment of the European Central Bank (1998) and the euro 728
43.4 Amending the Treaties and enlargement in Central Europe 730
Part XVII: Security and the international economy on the threshold of the
twenty-first century 735 44
44 International organizations under pressure 737
44.1 Emergence of terrorism, 11 September 2001 and the invasion
of Afghanistan 73 7
44.2 The US war in Iraq (2003) 740
44.3 The UN human rights regime after the end of the Cold War 744
44.4 Dilution of the nuclear non-proliferation regime 74 7
44.5 Weakening of the OSCE and cooling US—Russia relations 749
xiii
CONTENTS
44.6 Lack of global economic coordination at the beginning of the twenty-first
century 752
44.7 What happens to international organizations under pressure? 756
Appendix l: Nation-states in the international system since 1815 (by continent,
in chronologic order) and League of Nations and United Nations
membership 759
Appendix 2: Groups of states (First, Second and Third World, G3—G77) 765
Literature 768
Index 782
xiv
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id | DE-604.BV041110138 |
illustrated | Illustrated |
indexdate | 2024-07-10T00:39:51Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 9780415476249 9780415850445 |
language | English |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-026086358 |
oclc_num | 1048383212 |
open_access_boolean | |
owner | DE-706 DE-19 DE-BY-UBM DE-473 DE-BY-UBG DE-739 |
owner_facet | DE-706 DE-19 DE-BY-UBM DE-473 DE-BY-UBG DE-739 |
physical | XXX, 846 S. graph. Darst. |
publishDate | 2013 |
publishDateSearch | 2013 |
publishDateSort | 2013 |
publisher | Routledge |
record_format | marc |
spelling | Reinalda, Bob 1947- Verfasser (DE-588)139153756 aut Routledge history of international organizations from 1815 to the present day Bob Reinalda 1. issued in paperback London [u.a.] Routledge 2013 XXX, 846 S. graph. Darst. txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Literaturverz. S. 768 -781 Geschichte 1815-2008 gnd rswk-swf Geschichte 1815-2009 gnd rswk-swf Internationales politisches System (DE-588)4125488-0 gnd rswk-swf Internationale Organisation (DE-588)4027366-0 gnd rswk-swf Internationales Regime (DE-588)4197453-0 gnd rswk-swf Internationale Organisation (DE-588)4027366-0 s Geschichte 1815-2009 z DE-604 Internationales Regime (DE-588)4197453-0 s Internationales politisches System (DE-588)4125488-0 s Geschichte 1815-2008 z 1\p DE-604 Erscheint auch als Online-Ausgabe 978-0-203-87657-2 Digitalisierung UB Passau - ADAM Catalogue Enrichment application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=026086358&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis 1\p cgwrk 20201028 DE-101 https://d-nb.info/provenance/plan#cgwrk |
spellingShingle | Reinalda, Bob 1947- Routledge history of international organizations from 1815 to the present day Internationales politisches System (DE-588)4125488-0 gnd Internationale Organisation (DE-588)4027366-0 gnd Internationales Regime (DE-588)4197453-0 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4125488-0 (DE-588)4027366-0 (DE-588)4197453-0 |
title | Routledge history of international organizations from 1815 to the present day |
title_auth | Routledge history of international organizations from 1815 to the present day |
title_exact_search | Routledge history of international organizations from 1815 to the present day |
title_full | Routledge history of international organizations from 1815 to the present day Bob Reinalda |
title_fullStr | Routledge history of international organizations from 1815 to the present day Bob Reinalda |
title_full_unstemmed | Routledge history of international organizations from 1815 to the present day Bob Reinalda |
title_short | Routledge history of international organizations |
title_sort | routledge history of international organizations from 1815 to the present day |
title_sub | from 1815 to the present day |
topic | Internationales politisches System (DE-588)4125488-0 gnd Internationale Organisation (DE-588)4027366-0 gnd Internationales Regime (DE-588)4197453-0 gnd |
topic_facet | Internationales politisches System Internationale Organisation Internationales Regime |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=026086358&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
work_keys_str_mv | AT reinaldabob routledgehistoryofinternationalorganizationsfrom1815tothepresentday |