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INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT POLICIES (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   093723


Europeanisation of international development policies: the case of central and eastern European states / Lightfoot, Simon   Journal Article
Lightfoot, Simon Journal Article
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Publication 2010.
Summary/Abstract This article examines the EU's role in the emergence of international development policy in the 10 member states from Central and Eastern Europe (CEE). Development policy provides useful insights into policy making as it is a key way that states operationalise their foreign policy. Thus, development policy gives us insights into the foreign policy priorities of the new member states. This article reviews the emergence and elaboration of policy relating to international development in the new member states and explores how far we have witnessed the Europeanisation of development cooperation in CEE states.
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2
ID:   121767


Social media and global development rituals: a content analysis of blogs and tweets on the 2010 mdg Summit / Denskus, Tobias; Esser, Daniel E   Journal Article
Esser, Daniel E Journal Article
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Publication 2013.
Summary/Abstract Social media content generated by web logs ('blogs') and Twitter messages ('tweets') constitute new types of data that can help us better understand the reproduction of global rituals in the context of international development policies and practice. Investigating the United Nations High-level Plenary Meeting of the General Assembly on the Millennium Development Goals (mdgs), a three-day event held at UN Headquarters in New York in 2010, as a case study, we examine a sample of 108 blog entries discussing the meeting, as well as 3007 related tweets. We find that topics receiving the densest coverage mirrored existing priorities as defined by the mdgs. Although most blog entries created content which, in contrast to tweets, went beyond spreading mere factual or referential information on the event and even included some critical commentary, sustained debates did not emerge. Our findings suggest that social media content accompanying the Summit reproduced global development rituals and thus failed to catalyse alternative priorities for and approaches to international development.
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