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INTERNATIONAL FRAMEWORK (3) answer(s).
 
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ID:   141420


Ethically right: an international framework on the use of drones during conflicts should be worked out / Mekala, Dilip Kumar   Article
Mekala, Dilip Kumar Article
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Summary/Abstract Pilotless combat aircrafts will certainly be the future of aerial warfare. Western militaries, particularly the United States and United Kingdom, had already committed their vast resources to the development of armed combat drones. Other developing countries are catching up too. So, whether one likes it or not, use of drones is going to be a real thing in future military conflict.
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2
ID:   133956


International society and China: the power of norms and the norms of power / Clark, Ian   Journal Article
Clark, Ian Journal Article
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Publication 2014.
Summary/Abstract The core suggestion of this article is that we make best sense of the concepts of power, legitimacy, and responsibility within a framework of international society. This framework is illustrated by, and applied to, the specific case of China's rise. In the light of its historical background, a rising China faces a major paradox. Seemingly, the prerequisite for it to exercise greater influence on the norms of international society is yet further assimilation into them: in order to become a respected norm maker, China must first be seen to be fully integrated as an appropriate norm taker. To be in a position to influence the norms of international society, China must seemingly firstly resolve any lingering ambiguities about its membership. In short, should the debates about China's status be understood as an expression of the power of norms (where China is assessed relative to some universal standard of responsibility), or are they better viewed as the deployment of the norms of power in such a way as to impact its social distribution to China's disadvantage (by imposing the self-interested standards of the liberal states)?
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3
ID:   133847


New orientation of the economic order / Mengzi, Fu   Journal Article
Mengzi, Fu Journal Article
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Publication 2014.
Summary/Abstract In general, any regional order or international order depends on the strategies of major powers. The order arises because power have chosen it while it is passively accepted by other parties. International orders are relatively stable. The current international order under the UN framework as the principal axis was formed after the Second World War. Our principles of peace and development have been set within it, and the behavior and legal norms of sovereign nations within international relations are meant to comply with it.
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