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Section: International Organization
Subject
International Studies
DOI: 10.1111/b.9781444336597.2010.00037.x
Extract
Section editors: Kendall Stiles and Melissa Labonte, Brigham Young University and Fordham University The Evolution of International Organization as Institutional Forms and Historical Processes to 1945 The Evolution of International Organizations as Institutional Forms and Historical Processes since 1945 International Organization and Cybergovernance International Organization and Ending Conflicts International Organization and Environmental Governance International Organization and Health/Disease International Organization and Human Development International Organization and Terrorism International Organizations and Criminal Justice International Organizations and Respect for International Law Theoretical Approaches to International Organization Transnational Actors Kendall Stiles and Melissa Labonte, Brigham Young University and Fordham University To speak of the study of international organization compels one to clarify the object being studied: is it formal institutions or rather the processes of endowing greater order and certainty to global relations? The fact is, and is amply demonstrated in the compendium essays on international organization, that much of the work in this subfield considers both how institutions emerge and operate, and also how they relate to and help structure the international system more generally. It is useful ... log in or subscribe to read full text
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