Results 101 to 110 of about 48,566 (225)
Specialized Committees of International Organizations an Important Source of Organizational Autonomy
ABSTRACT Assigning the preparation of decisions to specialized committees composed of member state representatives is a widespread response to the ‘governor's dilemma’, that is, the tension between competence and control, in international organizations (IOs). We theorize a causal mechanism referring to self‐selection and agenda‐setting effects and show
Michael Giesen +3 more
wiley +1 more source
Regulating via Conditionality: The Instruments of the New Industrial Policy
ABSTRACT Conditionality was a central concern in the development literature of the 1990s. With the significant expansion of targeted public support to private firms since the Great Financial Crisis, the issue of conditionality has once again become a focal point in industrial policy debates.
Fabio Bulfone, Timur Ergen, Erez Maggor
wiley +1 more source
ABSTRACT The regulation of business is increasingly characterized by “soft” governance regimes that blur the boundaries of public and private authority, as signaled by the rapid proliferation of multistakeholder initiatives in global governance. This article explores how the spread of multistakeholderism creates opportunities for new forms of strategic
Rob Ralston, Ben Hawkins
wiley +1 more source
Persistence of power: Repeated multilateral bargaining with endogenous agenda setting authority [PDF]
We extend a simple repeated, multilateral bargaining model to allow successful agenda setters to hold on to power as long as they maintain the support of a majority of other committee members.
Agranov, Marina +2 more
core
On the asymptotic uniqueness of bargaining equilibria [PDF]
The paper studies the model of multilateral bargaining over the alternatives representedby points in the mâdimensional Euclidean space. Proposers are chosen randomly and the acceptance of a proposal requires the unanimous approval of it by all the ...
Predtetchinski Arkadi
core +1 more source
Does the European Union ‘Rule the World’? Competition Law Diffusion to Singapore and Hong Kong
ABSTRACT This article examines why Singapore and Hong Kong adopted competition law by testing four diffusion mechanisms: coercion, competition, learning, and the Brussels Effect. Using structured process tracing and extensive archival evidence, it evaluates the distinct observable implications of each mechanism.
Yannis Karagiannis
wiley +1 more source
Conflict Leads to Cooperation in Nash Bargaining [PDF]
We consider a multilateral Nash demand game where short-sighted players come to the bargaining table with requests for both coalition partners and the potentially generated resource.
Kareen Rozen
core
Health Diplomacy in Africa: Prospects, Obstacles, and the Way Ahead
ABSTRACT Introduction Africa faces a complex and evolving health landscape marked by endemic diseases, emerging infectious threats, fragile health systems, climate change, and geopolitical pressures. In this context, health diplomacy has become an important mechanism for fostering collaboration, mobilizing resources, and advancing collective health ...
Majani Edward
wiley +1 more source
Alternative Liberalization Strategies [PDF]
This paper examines various strategies that have been proposed for halting the recent drift toward protectionism and restoring a more liberal trading regime. A number of groups and individuals propose a multilateral approach aimed at immediately reducing
Robert E. Baldwin
core
Abstract Motivation The persistence of hunger and poverty amid deepening global inequality and declining multilateral cooperation underscores the need for new models of international solidarity. The Global Alliance Against Hunger and Poverty, launched during Brazil's presidency of the G20 in 2024, represents a significant innovation in global ...
Thiago Lima, Adriana Erthal Abdenur
wiley +1 more source

