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. |
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... Sector Table 4.5 Democratic Assistance by Sector and Region or Country Table 4.6 International NGOs in Nicaragua: Distribution by Financial Contributions and Number of Organizations (1990-1996) Table 5.1 Human and Economic Costs of the ...
... sector, and monitoring elections. Rather than having an intermittent participation, most of these actors aimed to create and build democratic institutions in order to provide roots for a new political culture. International. Norms.
... Kumar, “a general category to refer to multilateral and bilateral agencies, governments, intergovernmental organizations, international non-governmental organizations, philanthropic organizations, private sector firms”(Kumar 1997,
... sector firms”(Kumar 1997, 3). In speaking of international community, I also agree with Rosenau (1997, 180) that sometimes “reference is made with the United Nations in mind, but frequently it is voiced in the context of a less ...
... sector of international civil society is diasporic or exile movements. As Yossi Shain (1995, 812) contends, “the third wave of democratic transitions have awakened older diasporas in the United States and energized the more recently ...
內容
The Emergence of an International Norm | |
from | |
Negotiating Peace and Holding Elections | |
Limitations of the International Mobilization | |
Bibliography | |
Index | |