216 research outputs found
North Meets North: Navigation and the Future of the Arctic
This is a report of a working group of the Icelandic Ministry for Foreign Affairs.
There is every indication that changes are likely to take place in the North in the future as a result of rapidly growing demand for natural resources and export of oil and gas from the Arctic regions of Russia surrounding the Arctic Ocean, coupled with improved conditions for navigation due to a change of climate in the area. In view of the great interests at stake for Iceland, the Minister for Foreign Affairs established a working group, under the auspices of the Ministry for Foreign Affairs, to examine the opening of the Northern Sea Route and its significance for Iceland. This is the working group's report and it has thereby fulfilled its tas
Icelandic Chamber of Commerce: The Icelandic Economic Situation: Status Report - 24th October 2008
Rights-based Approaches and Bilateral Aid Agencies: More Than a Metaphor?
It could be argued that the rights based approach ⊠is no more than ametaphor; a concept that catalyses a set of values into a phrase that many people can adopt and adapt. It is a general statement in favour of equitable development, involving widespread participation of those with no direct control of, or access to, the power of the state ⊠If we still take rights as a legal concept then much of what passes as rights based is unlikely to be successful because there are often no state bodies committed to meeting the obligations implied. There is also a sense in that the âemperor has no clothes â as there are too many people arguing about the details of what a rights approach should be and how it should be operationalised.Meanwhile, this is happening in the absence of any clear idea of what it is they are engaging with. (Pratt 2003: 2)
The West against the rest? Democracy versus autocracy promotion in Venezuela
Venezuela provides a strong test case for the weakening of democracy and the strengthening of autocracy promotion. External actors are a key part of the domestic political game: the European Union and the United States (EUUS) promote âdemocracy by coercionâ and recognised Juan GuaidĂł as president, whereas China, Cuba and Russia (CCR) bolster the regime of NicolĂĄs Maduro. A comparative foreign policy analysis argues that, firstly, EUUS sanctions have resulted in strengthening CCR's autocratic leverage and linkage; and secondly, the division âbetween the West and the Restâ has posed an additional obstacle for a transition to democracy and national reconstructio
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