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INTERNATIONAL–DOMESTIC NEXUS (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   165284


Development cooperation, the international–domestic nexus and the graduation dilemma: comparing South Africa and Brazil / Van der Westhuizen, Janis   Journal Article
Van der Westhuizen, Janis Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract Development cooperation is a foreign policy tool marked by deep-seated conflicts of interest and dilemmas of particular relevance to second-tier and non-nuclear countries that aim to change their international status and role. Building on the concept of ‘graduation dilemma’, this article compares specific dilemmas that Brazil and South Africa face in their foreign policies concerning the development cooperation agenda at three levels: the domestic, the regional and the global level. The research question guiding this analysis is: how does the graduation dilemma manifest in relation to Brazil and South Africa’s role in development cooperation?
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2
ID:   144193


International–domestic nexus in anti-corruption policy making: the case of Caspian oil and gas states / Pleines, Heiko; Wöstheinrich, Ronja   Article
Pleines, Heiko Article
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Summary/Abstract This article looks at the application, in the anti-corruption realm, of the analytical framework developed for transnational human rights advocacy by Risse, Ropp, and Sikkink. Focusing on Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan, and Turkmenistan, this article shows that the level of integration with Western actors on the state and corporate levels determined the degree to which the transnational anti-corruption regime has been accepted in the Caspian region. As the transnational regime does ultimately lack coercive powers, the tension between transnational demands and national political elites does not translate into serious conflict, as a broader formal acceptance of the transnational anti-corruption regime offers national actors only limited opportunities to genuinely promote the issue.
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