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Nation states can talk to each ohter. Can serve as a united military force, some people think they are interested in the great powers only; closest think we come to a wolrd/ global government. 6 organs = security council, general assembly, ECOSCO, trusteeship council, ICJ, Secretarial
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5 great powers= US, great britian, china, France, Soviet Union. 10 rotating nations. Deals with threat to secure peace, does not intervene = organizations of nations states. People never fight under UN force,
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Pass resolutions= organized so that each states gets a vote (2/3) Tierney of majority- smaller states pick on the bigger ones. value sovereignty(each state gets a vote) not reflective of the power structure. can set guidelines for how states should act but people don't have to go along with them. Deal with peace and security issues.
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Economic and social council= one state, one vote. Economic development issues, cultural issues, social, health, education, procession, nutrition issues. improving quality of life for peole, deals with all issues through different organizations. Not states themselves, but welfar of individuals (human rights) coherent conflict- if states are sovereign and people go in and try to fix things (conflict with soveregin nations and individuals rights) spends 90% of UN profit.
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still exists but doesnt do anything- no more people are in this oversee deconolization of many parts of the world proposed new colonization of failed states trying to create sovereign states but determined on notion of self determination
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deals with conflict between states only no enforcement arm- cant punish state or force them to do something can sign on with reciprocity sets forth a body of how states should act
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established by UN for indicting and administering justice to people commiting war crimes. individuals bring other individuals for justice of human rights; not part of UN. US wont sign on |
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secretary general- have no indipendent power. from S. korea Ban Ki-Moon. role is very limited |
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Alter security council- no veto power weighted voting for general assembly financing corruption bureoatic overlap peacekeeping |
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no global consitisution regarding it treaties, customs, decisions of international court of justice, opinion of international scholars. Major principle= sovereignty of states public and private law. self-determination and human rights.
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state to state used to have more emphasis |
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commerce, relationships between business and government, how international aid is going to go, regulation of air space etc.
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- life and personal safety and safety of property
- health care
- equality
- food/water
- education
- freedom from oppression - no torture, free religion, freedom of press, cant be arrested w/o purpose
- work
- freedom from slavery
- property
- shelter
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leage doctrine that states have supreme authority to govern their internal affairs and manage their foreign relations with other states and nonstate actors, principle of nonintervention/ noninterference |
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a moral and legal right, that "all peoples have the right [to] freely determine their political status and freely pursue their economic, social and cultural development |
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those with the most power have the most say security council |
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5 great powers (victors of WWII) china rarely veots Great Britian generally goes with US in order for security council to pass resolution, all 5 have to agree |
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UNDP (United Nations development program) |
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largest multilateral source of development assistance in the world provides expert advice, training, and grant support to develoing countries, with increasin emphasis on assistance to the least developed countries.
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under new international economic order NIEO |
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17th century theory preaching that trading states should increase their wealth and power by expanding exports and protecting their domestic economy from imports, a competitive strategy which is still advocated by some today. |
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benign & Malevolent state control of economy nontariff bariers(replace tariffs) subsidies (agriculture is most prominent)-don't want to rely on other counties to feed you regulations(food and drug) environmental standardsvoluntary export restrictions= a producer of certain good limits the number you export to a certain country to maintain access to that market Regionalism (NAFTA etc. steps away from liberalism) limits access between blocks locks out other countries to free trade with certain areas.
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trade barriers that restrict imports but are not in usual tariff form ex. anti-dumping measures and countervailing duties, which although they are called non tariff barriers have the effect of tariffs but are only imposd under certain conditions (ways to get around tariffs) subsidies= farming, agriculture, production gov't regulations=FDA environmental standards= can be used to eliminate competition (Tuna US an mexico) |
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Some mert. Activity- it's a measure to adjust evonomy to liberlaism (move to a broader system) |
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it will lead to war and you need to new hegemon before you can get liberalism |
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Strong ties to free market capitalism, strong focus on inidivuals rights, progressive notion and radical ideas (states helps individuals and vice versa) politics (minimal role for state; stay out of free market, stay out of peoples lives) major actors are households and business firms goal of evonomic activity is to maximize global welfare economics determine politics
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Hegemonic stability theory |
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proposition that free trade and interstate peace depend on the existence of a prodominant great power willing and able to use economic and military strength to promote global stability international economic stability based on liberal principles can materialize to alleviate the fears of nationalistic mercantilists long-cycle theory liberal economic system cannot be self-sustaining but must be maintained over the long term through the actions of the dominant economy
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late 1800s to WWII new forms of colonization- biritain looked to control differenct areas of the globe to create competition emergence of new forms of mercantilism increase in tariffs manipulation of exchange rates by states- how much a currency is worth in comparison to other states values intense economic competition after the war new hegemon emerged (US)= US hegemony, liberalism, multilateral-sharing its decision power, regulates exchange rates, trading regime/monetary regime
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rule of a region by an external sovereign power hard to get out of this stage imperialism- economic imperialism people from west look at leaders control people through oppression (coruption)
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control of one state over another state |
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a policy of creating barriers to goreign trade, such as tariffs and quotas that protect local industries from competition. Generic term used to describe a number of mercantilist politices designed to keep foreign goods out of a country and to subsidize the export of goods to encourage foreigners to buy domestically produced goods. |
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set percentage of the value of the good that is being imported |
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tariff of a specific amount of money that does not vary with the price of the good |
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a protectionist measure popular in the 1980s and early 1990s in which exporting countries agree to restrict shipments of a particular product to a country to deter it from imposing an even more onerous import quota. |
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nontariff barriers to free trade that involve limits on the quantity of particular products that can be imported |
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barriers to free trade agreed to by two trading states to protect their domestic producers. |
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a form of financial assistance paid to a business or economic sector. This can be used to support businesses that might otherwise fail or to encourage activities that would otherwise not take place trade barrier by making domestic goods and sevices artificially competitive against imports. Subsidies often distort markets and can imose large economic costs. |
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liberalism is a positive movement model that best signified the triumph of economic liberalism TNC all benefit from the free market civil society- health care, shelter, etc. all gorups in society that aren't associated with government businesses and unions... who funds these groups?
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Neoliberal institutionalism |
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intense form of liberalism without states intervening post hegemonic management states in multilateral setup= regimine regimines manage entities don't need hegemon don't need a state just a perspective closely related to complex interdependence capacity to deal with issue of globalization of the free market
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developed off capitalism- liberalism is a negative movement triumph of liberalism what happens to a state as it moves toward liberalism class conflict continuing gap between rich and the poor- technology replaces people international division of labor
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international division of labor |
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labor intensive forms of production vs. capital intensive- the work of labor producing goods, usually unskilled. capital intensive makes more money (more investment). different cultures= agricultural, manifest, service sectors of labor production dont get much reward for your particiation, people at the high end do, further depends the divide between classes.
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historic evolution of capital can move up and down in terms of develoment core, semi peripheral, or peripheral divides the world into core, semi-peripheral, and periphery depends on historic evolution of capitalism economics cyclical phythms represent the short-term fluctuation of economy, while secular trends mean deeper long run tendencies, such as general economic growth or decline. contradiction means a general controversy in the sytem, usually concerning some short-run vs. long run trade-offs derived from neomarxist
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rich countries, developed, industrialized, demoratic part of the world, which economically exploits the poor raw materials |
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middle class countries, in-between core and poor in the global hierarchy, at which foreign investments are targeted when labor wages and production costs become too high in the prosperous core regions. |
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International trading regime |
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more real to use, security is tied into it promote liberalism in a multilateral way havana charter instead general agreement on tariffs and trade- conducted in rounds (irogwai last), bilateral agreements that become multilateral WTO- replaced GATT
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ITO (international trade organization) doesnt exist never ratified by the US because it opened US to be vulnerable. charter of the defunct international trade organization (ITO) it allowed for international cooperation and rules against anti-competitive business practices. The charter ultimately failed because the congress of the US rejected it. Elements of it became part of the GATT were to stabilize trade by encouraging nations to 'net zero' with trade surplus and trade deficit both discouraged. This negative feedback was to be accomplished by allowing nations overdraft equal to half the average value of the country's trade over the preceding five years, with interest charged on both surplus and deficit.
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international Monetary Regime |
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financial procedures governing the exchange and conversion of national currencies so that they can be bought and sold for one another to calculate the value of currencies and credits when capital is transferred across borders through trade, investment, foreign aid, and loans US wanted multilateral Bretton Woods system regulate exchange rate- exchange rate rules not followed, how much eople thought value on free market provide liquidity to state (give loans) when in trouble part of IMF and is managed by the market
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International monetary Fund (IMF) |
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Financial agency formed in UN in 1945 to promoted international monetary cooperation, free trade, exchange rate stability, and democratic rule by providing financial assistance and loans to countries facing financial crises.
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sought free trade, open markets and monetary stability. Based on the theoretical premises of commerical liberalism which advocates free markets with few barriers to private trade and capital flows. established international monetary fund and international bank of reconstruction and development (world bank) power was concentrated in the rich countries dominant states shared a preference for an open international economy with limited government intervention worked because the US assumed the burdens of hegemonic leadership ended in 1972 the IMF and WB was established to provide equitity to states
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integration of states through increasing contact, communication, and trade to create a holistic, single global system, which increasingly binds all people and all states together in a common fate. |
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IGOs (intergovernmental organizations) |
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institutions created and joined by states' governments which give them authority to make collective decisions to manage particular problems on the global agenda |
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MAD (mutual assured destruction) |
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a condition of mutual deterrence in which both sides possess the ability to survive a first strike with weapons of mass destruction and launch a devastating retaliatory attack |
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international bank for reconstruction and development, gloves major IGO for financing economic growth - aid recovery from war
- reconstruction projects and rebuild
- it provided loans to countries for development
- president of world bank must be US
- us was only one supporting
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also called constructionality... want loans from IMF you have to adjust economic policies so it is with neoliberalism. EX. Decrease tax enter substities etc. still have increase levels of cheating (substities) another form of capitalism worked for a little while we really don't have a liberal system-free global trade shifted from economic growth to what do we do about poverty jeffery Sax-shief person of Owens move charged with failure of Russia from communism (end of poverty- africa) governments have to increase amount of aid given to certain nations
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structural adjustment (bretton woods system) - if you want a loan from the IMF you have to adjust your economic policies to match neoliberal model
- decrease tariffs and get rid of subsidies
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GATT (general agreement on tariffs and trade) |
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an international organization affiliated with the UN that promotes international trade and tariff reductions now the World Trade Organization |
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Goal is democracy in the long run liberalism: strong tie to free market capitalism strong focus on individual rights, progressive notion and radical idea (state helps individual and vice versa) politics (minimal role for state, stay out of free market and peole's lives etc.) explain why first world developed but why third world isn't developing also seen as westernization-places need to follow the way of the west agriculture agricultural revolution-produce more food industrial revolution-move from small craft base industries to big businessesindustries modern: emerge as a post modern socity, society based on techonology and moved into a more technical society=probide mroe services traditional: held back from progressing in society (tribal, communal- community, extended families, more authoritarian, religious leaders, farming is more of a necessity, strong connections to ancestors, women) afraid to challenge new ideas. religion goes with it, over poulation, dualism someone needs to come in and force this to stop to get more modernization= break down religion etc.)
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conflicts to modernization |
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why didn't it all happen at the same time (colonization) dualism- because people hold onto their traditions in rural areas. symptom- over poulation (living in overty) authoritarian society sometimes resists change |
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separation of a country into two sectors, the first modern and prosperous centered in major cities, and the second at the margin neglected and poor. extreme separation between urban and rural communities authoritarian/traditional societies will not develop because of this early days= conflict between good and evil
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50-60s ander defrank lay out these ways a form of dependency develoing world didn't develop because of pressures from the core. they wanted control imprealism- give over control benefit people of core but not own people (buy them off) structural violence- extracted al the resources abailable for deelopment (poverty, malnutrition) isolate yourself- missing out on a great deal developing counttries need to develop tariffs economic growth is the key to development process of unequal exchange static model- sometimes countries thought of as not developed really are devendent development- development based on alliance foreign investors, state, local=dependent of alliances world system analysis- historic evolution of capital can move up and down in terms of development core etc.
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less than $1 a day, can't meet basic needs |
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barely beeting basic needs $2-$3 a day |
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basic needs are met but no access to cultural goods, recreation, limited access to quality health care and education, no ability to move up. |
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denotes a form of violence which corresponds with the sytematic ways in which a given social structure or social institution kills people slowly by preventing them from meeting their basic needs johan galtung elitism, ethnocentrism etc. structural violence inevitably produces conflict and often direct violence including family violence, racial violence hate crimes, terrorism, genocide and war hunger and poverty
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Millennium development goals |
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target date is 2015 extract poverty and hunger achieve universal primary education promote gender equality and empower women reduce child mortality (health care) improve maternal health combat HIV and AIDS ensure environmental sustainability develop a global partnership for development
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process by which the peole of the world are unified into a single society and function together. combination of economic, technological, sociocultural and political forces |
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each country specialized colonies are in what they produced and traded forced to specialize in certain things doesnt treat all products equally and people don't make as much
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community that embraces shared norms and ethical standards to collectively manage problems without coercion and through peaceful and democratic procedures for decision making aimed at improving human welfare organizations that function outside the government ex. labor union, nonprofit orgs.
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consumer based goods, want to get peole to buy things locally and not foreignly (short term strategy) people were cheating (didn't follow dependencia) people will have to use this eventually to develop doing this to long delays grwoth and equals problems higher prices people were paying higher captial prices (things you can't substitute) high level of ineffieciency because no competition quality of products may not be as high consumers were not interested in local products
becomes difficult to move away from this strategy- debt loans were ushed to get loans (1980) and couldn't ay for debt debt crisis decreased their ability to economically grow
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New imternational economic order 1974 policy resolution in the UN that called for a North-South dialogue to open the way for the less-developed countries of the Global South to participate more fully in the making of international economic policy global south wanted a redistribution of wealth-north didn't want that general assembly-equal votes buffer stock/common fund increase of wealth in developing countries to 1% of national GDP
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re-embracing this concept- limited role of government in economy (president Regan pushed this) embracing market allowing free trade, exporting IMF, WB = drastically reduces state influence in economy, allowing prices to fluctuate etc.
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US dollar earned by a country for the sale of petroleum money that middle eastern countries and members of OEC receive as revenue from western nations and then put back into those same nations' banks. For example if Libya were to receive money from the US for oil and then put the money into a US bank, that deposited money is referred to as petrodollars
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the philosophical principle of free markets and free trade to give free choices with little governmental regulations |
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Newly industrialized country socioeconomic classification applied to several countries around the world by political scientists and economists macroeconomic sense outpsed their develoing counterparts. Another characterization of NICS is that of nations undergoing rapid economic growth (usually export oriented asian countries were successful in making transition
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four asian NIEs- newly industrialized economies) that experienced far greater rates of economic grwoth during the 1980s than the more advanced industrial societies of the Global North S. Koreda, Singapore, Taiwan, and Hong Kong achievement lies in moving beyond the export of primary products to the export of manufactured goods and to providing service and expertise in the digital revolution of the information age.
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FDI- foreign direct investment |
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an investment in a country involving a long-term relationship and control of an enterprise by nonresidents and including equity capital reinvestment of earning other long-term caital and short-term capital as shown in balance of payment accounts a way for global south to escape destitution and stagnant economic growth increase countries export earnings to gain a greater share of global trade
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help, mostly economic, which may be provided to communities or countries in the event of a humanitarian crisis or to achieve a socioeconomic objective. |
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international political economy |
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analyzes international relations in combination with political economy ultimately concerned with the ways in which political forces (states, insititutions etc.) shape the systems through which economic interactions are expressed, and conversely the effects that economic interactions have upon political structures and outcomes
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rate at wich a states currency is exchanged for another state's currency in the global marketplace |
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measures the payments that flow between any individual country and all other countries used to summarize all international economic transactions for that country during a specific time period determined by country's exports, imports of goods, services and financial capital
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the norm that accepts the ethical prescription that actors should treat others as they themselves would wish to be treated so that the same standards of conduct apply all countries treat international trade according to the same rules that allow goods to be traded without interruption to promote trade, industrialized countries have greatly reduced tariffs
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economic growth that does not deplete the resources needed to maintain growth alternative to the quest for unrestrained growth conferences on a wide range of environmental topics have produced scores of treaties and new international agencies to promote cooperation and monitor environmental developments NGOS
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techonolgy advanced education info structure universal suffrage stable government independent judiciary trade economic growth equality life-expectancy human progress indicator happy planet index
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nongovernmental orgnizations transnational organizations of private citizens maintaining consultative satus with the UN they include professional associations foundations, multinational corporations and internationally active groups in different states joining together to work towards common interests sympathetic to peace plans that seek to reduce the capability of states to make wars
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intergovernmental organizations international organizations whose members are states such as the world trade organizations purposely created by states to solve shared problems more important than NGOs because their members are states
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in the general assembly the smaller states would pick on the bigger states US didn't like it |
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the process economic and political through which a country develops to increase its capacity to meet its citizens basic needs and raise their stadard of living (increase in income) |
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eurpean union regional orgnization created by the merger of the euroean coal and steel community and the eurpoean atomic energy community and the european economic has developed a single market through a standardized system of laws which apply in all member states, guaranteeing the freedom of movement of people, goods services and capital. It maintains a common trade policy, agricultural and fisheries policies and a regional development policy
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a coalition of the worlds poor countries fromed in 1964 to press for concessions from wealthy global north states |
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a metaphor wedly used to explain the impact of human behavior on ecological systems that exlain how rational self-interested behavior by individuals may have a destructive collective impact potential impact of human behavior on the planet's resources and its delicately balanced ecological system common property (green that all farmers could graze cattle) if people misuse this in the long run the green is destroyed while short run farmers have more cattle and therefore more money
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organization for economic co-operation and development international organization of thirty countries, that accept the princiles of representative democracy and a free market economy gov't can compare policy experience siik answers to common problems, identify good practice and co-ordinate domestic and international policies
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an explanation of population changes over time that highlights the causes of declines in birth and death rates so that a countries population achieves a stable level reduction in poulation equals a higher level of economic success
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argument that the growth of human population would overtake the growth of food supplies |
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view that the unevailability of resources required to sustain life such as food, energy or water can undermine security in degrees similar to military aggression rediects that future international conflict will likely be caused by resource scarcities rather than by overt miitary challenges
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