Notes on contributors, Preface, 1 Autonomous policy making by international organizations: purpose, outline and results, PART I Theoretical perspectives, PART II Security and human rights, PART III Economics, PART IV Conclusion, Index and abbreviations
`This is a very important collective volume of interest for
scholars on international relations, but also of public policy,
which could be a starting point for many new research projects' -
Stella Ladi, University of York
`There are distinguished empirical theoretical contributions in
this volume that break new ground. Michael Nicholson's piece on
rational choice theory is the best thing I have ever read
justifying such an approach to International Organizations' -
Andrew Williams, University of Kent at Canterbury
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