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1 |
ID:
093668
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Publication |
2010.
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Summary/Abstract |
Brazilian foreign policy under Lula has emphasized not only traditional multilateralism but also membership in the new formal and informal groupings that have emerged at the heart of a new world order.
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2 |
ID:
173625
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Summary/Abstract |
The current power politics and paranoid instincts for hegemony are distablizing factors for the global peace, security and prosperity. In this context we can find Gandhian visions as practice- worthy. Gandhi had showed his entrenched faith in the notion of decentralisation of power as he believed concentration of power an evil which corrupts the motives of welfare state.
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3 |
ID:
122799
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Publication |
2012.
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Summary/Abstract |
Working as both lecturers and researchers within the theory and practice of international law, we are regularly confronted with materials and issues that raise the question of the relationship between this form of legal regulation and the political exercise of sovereign power. In turn, this persistent confrontation raises the question of which type (or types) of analytical perspective is most likely to illuminate how this relationship appears within the East Asian and other geopolitical contexts? For example, have we, as the German law professor Carl Schmitt suggested in the mid-20th century, been entering a new global order comprising multiple and co-existing regional hegemonic bodies, each possessing its own spheres of influence and located at an intermediary level between the United Nations and the traditional individual nation State? In this order of large political spaces, will China's growing status as a regional superpower, projecting its sovereign power and influence well beyond its own national borders, require legal recognition by a modified and realist form of international law and, if so, then in which particular ways?
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4 |
ID:
110458
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Publication |
2011.
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Summary/Abstract |
Illusory hopes that new technological possibilities will help create unlimited wealth have never come true. No invention can ensure a life of ease for decades. Of course, the world has changed - but, as the developments of recent years have shown, not to an extent that the established economic patterns should be discarded as worthless. The 21st-century world is a renewed yet still industrial world.
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5 |
ID:
110941
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6 |
ID:
112338
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Publication |
2012.
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Summary/Abstract |
The Obama administration's foreign policy has tried to reconcile the president's lofty vision with his innate realism and political caution. And given the domestic and global situations Obama has faced, pragmatism has dominated. Judged by the standard of protecting U.S. interests, things have worked out quite well; judged by the standard of midwifing a new global order, they remain a work in progress.
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