Description
Book SynopsisMapping the New World Order is a ground-breaking new study mapping the growth and development of the web of intergovernmental organizations. The book systematically traces similarities and differences between the institutional architecture of the Cold War and post-Cold War eras.
Table of ContentsPreface.
1. In Search of the Post-Cold War World Order: Questions, Issues, and Perspectives (Thomas J. Volgy, Zlatko Šabič, Petra Roter, Elizabeth Fausett, and Stuart Rodgers).
2. Mapping the Architecture of the New World Order: Continuity and Change in the Constellation of Post-Cold War Formal Intergovernmental Organizations (Thomas J. Volgy, Keith A. Grant, Elizabeth Fausett, and Stuart Rodgers).
3. Accounting for the New World Order of FIGO Architecture and Its Effectiveness (Keith A. Grant, Thomas J. Volgy, Elizabeth Fausett, and Stuart Rodgers).
4. Intergovernmental Organizations and Interstate Conflict: Parsing Out IGO Effects for Conflict in Post-Communist Space (Elizabeth Fausett and Thomas J. Volgy).
5. The Correlates of Cooperative Institutions for International Rivers (Andrea K. Gerlak and Keith A. Grant).
6. Substituting for Democratization: A Comparative Analysis of Involvement in Regional Intergovernmental Organizations (Stuart Rogers and Thomas J. Volgy).
7. State Support for Human Rights Treaties (Petra Roter, Anuška Ferligoj and Andrej Mrvar).
8. The Mediterranean As A Region in the Making (Ana Bojinović).
9. Conclusions (Thomas J. Volgy, Zlatko Šabič, Petra Roter, Andrea Gerlak, Elizabeth Fausett, Keith A. Grant, and Stuart Rodgers).
Index.