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INSTITUTIONAL AUTHORITY (3) answer(s).
 
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1
ID:   050241


Ideology / Decker, James M 2004  Book
Decker, James M Book
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Publication Hampshire, Palgrave Macmillan, 2004.
Description ix, 195p.Pbk
Series Transitions
Standard Number 0333775384
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Copies: C:1/I:0,R:0,Q:0
Circulation
Accession#Call#Current LocationStatusPolicyLocation
047574813.50938/DEC 047574MainOn ShelfGeneral 
2
ID:   154844


Institutional authority and security cooperation within regional economic organizations / Haftel, Yoram Z; Hofmann, Stephanie C   Journal Article
Haftel, Yoram Z Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract The proliferation of regional economic organizations (REOs) is a prominent feature of the contemporary international environment. Many of these organizations aspire to promote regional peace and stability. Some strive to promote these goals only through economic cooperation, while others have expanded their mandate to include mechanisms that address security concerns more directly. A glance at the security components of such organizations indicates that their purpose and design are very diverse. This article sheds light on the sources of this poorly understood phenomenon. Specifically, it argues that organizations that enjoy greater delegated authority are in a better position to expand their mandate into the security realm and to have more far-reaching agreements in this issue area. It then develops a metric that gauges the degree of security cooperation within REOs and presents a new dataset of numerous organizations on this institutional aspect. Employing this dataset in a rigorous statistical analysis and controlling for a host of alternative explanations, it demonstrates that, indeed, REOs with greater delegated authority develop deeper security cooperation.
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3
ID:   106389


Tokyo's transformation: how Japan is changing-and what it means for the United States / Heginbotham, Eric; Ratner, Ely; Samuels, Richard J   Journal Article
Heginbotham, Eric Journal Article
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Publication 2011.
Summary/Abstract Japan is undergoing profound changes that are empowering its political leadership at the expense of its bureaucracy. But rather than bringing about a clean transfer of institutional authority, the reforms have created gridlock. The U.S.-Japanese alliance isn't dead, but it is getting more complicated.
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