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Global governance

What are the key questions related to global governance?
Publications
Publications
Report

The European Council and Defence:The State of our Ambition

  • Security policy
  • The EU
  • Security policy
  • The EU
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Publications
Report

The EEA and Norway Grants - Source of Norwegian influence or soft power?

  • Foreign policy
  • The EU
  • Foreign policy
  • The EU
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  • United Nations
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Publications
Report

NATO in the ‘New’ MENA Region

  • The Middle East and North Africa
  • International organizations
  • The Middle East and North Africa
  • International organizations
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Publications
Report

Weapons of Mass Destruction: How to set up an Inspection Regime

  • Security policy
  • United Nations
  • Security policy
  • United Nations
Publications
  • Africa
  • Peace operations
  • United Nations
Publications
Publications
Report

Whither the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership?

Failures in the World Trade Organisation’s Doha Round have prompted countries to turn to preferential trade agreements. Every country with a stake in world trade is now negotiating bilateral free trade agreements – with occasional infusions of regional attempts to forge greater trade ties by reducing barriers to trade and investments, e.g. the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP). Some claims Free Trade Agreements to be second-best alternatives to a dysfunctional multilateral system; others see them through the eyes of Jacob Viner and consider them to be termites of the trading system, diverting trade and causing bureaucratic obstacles to trade through Rules of Origin regulations. Yet regardless the side of the argument, the most outstanding feature of many FTAs is that they do not have impressive effects on growth in trade and Gross Domestic Product (GDP). The EU, for instance, considers its FTA with South Korea to be a first-of-a-kind, “deep and comprehensive” bilateral agreement with a medium-sized growth market – and at the time when it was ratified, EU representatives hailed it as an important trade agreement for the European post-crisis recovery. The estimates of the European Commission, however, suggested this FTA to boost GDP in Europe by no more than 0.08 percent.

  • International economics
  • Trade
  • Globalisation
  • Regional integration
  • The EU
  • International economics
  • Trade
  • Globalisation
  • Regional integration
  • The EU
Publications
Publications
Report

EU-Asia Relations: A New Start?

  • Asia
  • The EU
  • Asia
  • The EU
Publications
Publications
Report

Norms and Conditionality: The EU and Ukraine

  • Europe
  • The EU
  • Europe
  • The EU
Publications
  • Peace operations
  • United Nations
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