Essays

Theories and Interpretations of Environmental Policy

Edward Cheng • Jul 6 2011 • Essays

Two distinct approaches are central in environmental policy: one which emphasizes restricting man’s impact on the environment because of limited resources, and the other which seeks to use the market to compensate environmental costs but which also seeks to develop ways of continuing development whilst reducing environmental impacts through technology.

Protecting Civilians in Conflict: Human Rights and Humanitarian Law

Hyginus Okechukwu Iwuh • Jul 6 2011 • Essays

The principle of distinction and discrimination of combatants and non-combatants is the cornerstone of international humanitarian law. Humanitarian and human rights law build on two very distinct perspectives of protection of civilians during armed conflicts; and therefore, present two independent legal regimes, which were not necessarily designed to coexist.

Disempowered “Heroes”: Political Agency of Foreign Domestic Workers in East and Southeast Asia

Annelies Cooper • Jul 6 2011 • Essays

Migrants have come to fill an essential role in the global economy, yet at the same time states are problematizing immigration as a challenge to its security, sovereignty, economy, and social fabric. States with high levels of outward migration celebrate their emigrants as new heroes for the profits they send to their home state.

Conquering Nature: the implications of assigning monetary values to global commons

Luke Godfrey • Jul 6 2011 • Essays

The atmosphere, forests and other forms of ‘natural capital’ come under the concept of the commons and increasingly these are being ‘managed’, through enclosure, carbon markets and other economic methods. This stance is, in many ways, at fault for the ecological issues faced today.

Putting the Democratic Peace Theory to the Test

Wei He • Jul 6 2011 • Essays

Although democratic peace has gained various statistical and theoretical support, it can not escape from criticism. The theory should not be used as an excuse for adopting a foreign policy of forcibly conducting democratization, as the chances of success for this kind of action are highly questionable, as demonstrated in the cases of Iraq and Afghanistan.

Are We Doomed by the Legacy of the Enlightenment?

Ozal Hopi • Jul 5 2011 • Essays

The Enlightenment refers to when man started utilizing logic to make discoveries, such as natural laws in the political, scientific, and social realms. The legacy of the Enlightenment is that things have changed for the better, but in recent times it seems as though the world is headed for tougher struggles.

Colonialism, Lebanon and the Middle East

Evan Ritli • Jul 5 2011 • Essays

Many of the recent uprisings in the Middle East have been in reaction to political systems and traditions which can be traced back to the colonial period. This is very much the case with the protests against Confessionalism in Lebanon. Although colonial rule has ended, its legacy continues in contemporary Middle Eastern politics.

“Hopenhagen” to “Nopenhagen”? The Role of Public Expectation at the Copenhagen Summit.

Martin Mark Jones • Jul 3 2011 • Essays

It can be said that the expectations at COP15 were not so high that they were unattainable. However, domestic pressures in key countries, procedural difficulties, insufficient pre-cooking and the “ClimateGate” scandal certainly played a role in why a comprehensive agreement was not reached.

Was the European student movement of the 1960s a global phenomenon?

Angeliki Mitropoulou • Jul 2 2011 • Essays

The anti-conformist student movement was indeed a global phenomenon, even though there are still some sociologists that support the idea that the protests were only movements of university students, and small minorities of young people that had little to do with higher education.

Realism and Liberalism in International Relations

Bea Kylene Jumarang • Jul 2 2011 • Essays

The debate continues as to which school of International Relations remains the most relevant and timely with regards to the interpretation of the international system. Some will always say realism is politics as it is while liberalism is an example of politics idealized. Perhaps the true path lies in combination.

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