1. Why do bureaucrats cooperate? International inter-agency networks in the Global South; 2. Bureaucrats across borders; 3. Skill formation, economic crisis, and expert networks in the nuclear sectors of Argentina and Brazil; 4. International inter-agency cooperation in nuclear energy, science, and technology (NEST); 5. Explaining international inter-agency cooperation in nuclear energy, science, and technology (NEST); 6. International inter-agency cooperation in the protection of the global environment; 7. Explaining international inter-agency cooperation in the protection of the environment; 8. After austerity; 9. Conclusion: the hidden costs of low skills.
The first comprehensive study to explain the workings of transgovernmental environmental and nuclear cooperation across the so-called 'Global South'.
Isabella Alcañiz is Assistant Professor and the Harrison Distinguished Professor in Environmental Politics at the Department of Government and Politics, University of Maryland, College Park. Professor Alcañiz grew up in South America and has carried out extensive field research in Latin America and Africa. She has taught at the University of Pennsylvania, the University of Houston, and universities in Argentina and Europe. Her research is published in World Politics, the British Journal of Political Science, the Latin American Research Review, Latin American Perspectives, and Environmental Science and Policy. She received her Ph.D. in Political Science from Northwestern University, Illinois.
'Environmental and Nuclear Networks in the Global South: How Skills
Shape International Cooperation is an indispensable book for
furthering our understanding of technocratic bureaucracies and
transnational policy networks. It provides important contributions
to comparative political economy, while reshaping the study of
environmental and NEST cooperation in the Global South. Moreover,
its research design offers an excellent example of scholarly work
based on mixed methods by combining the qualitative evidence
gathered in numerous in-depth elite interviews with the
quantitative results generated by complex social network analysis.'
Maria Victoria Murillo, Columbia University, New York
'Alcañiz goes behind the scenes of global policy-making and finds a
vibrant space where bureaucrats cooperate to creatively solve
problems. She argues persuasively - using sophisticated network
analysis and well-chosen case studies - that this process also
deepens global inequalities, as the bureaucrats are most closely
networked with those with similar skills and resources levels.'
Kathryn Hochstetler, London School of Economics and Political
Science
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