International Norms and Mobilization for Democracy: Nicaragua in the WorldRoutledge, 2018年2月6日 - 156 頁 This title was first published in 2002: This volume demonstrates that international action for democracy does not solely rest on American democracy promotion strategies, but that it actually depends on a variety of global actors and interactions. It is suitable for policy experts, non-governmental organizations, international aid agencies and courses on international relations theory, comparative politics, and Latin American politics. The book: introduces a theoretical framework about the effect of international norms on democracy promotion; connects the role of international institutions and norms with advocacy movements in shaping the mobilization to promote democracy; analyses the relationship between the international dimension of democracy promotion and democratization; explains the effect of international democracy promotion in the political transition of Nicaragua from 1979 to 2001; and brings into analysis the various modalities of democracy promotion and their effects. |
搜尋書籍內容
第 1 到 5 筆結果,共 29 筆
... external mobilization. This involvement has reflected the view that democracy and freedom in only one or one's own country is no longer sufficient to support democracy as a principle and a practice. As a result democracy promotion has ...
... external involvement was a critical variable in the third wave of democratization that started in the seventies. In Huntington's (1991, 86-87) opinion, by the late 1980s the major sources of power and influence in the world–the Vatican ...
... external forces to support and invest resources in democracy, to exert pressures on antidemocratic regimes and to assist newly established democracies has become a key practice and policy in international relations. Moreover, internal ...
... external forces (international NGOs, states, diasporas) act in close connection with local opposition forces in the non-democratic regime. The greater the international connection of local opposition forces, the greater the ...
... democracy. International pressures often occur in situations in which external actors perceive the severity of the political crisis as intolerable, or when domestic forces appeal for international support to bring about democratic change.
內容
The Emergence of an International Norm | |
from | |
Negotiating Peace and Holding Elections | |
Limitations of the International Mobilization | |
Bibliography | |
Index | |