Essays about: "Policy Conditionality"

Showing result 1 - 5 of 28 essays containing the words Policy Conditionality.

  1. 1. The Impact of Chinese Foreign Aid on OFAC Sanctions Effectiveness: Non-conditionality, Non-interference, and the Reality of Chinese Foreign Policy

    University essay from Stockholms universitet/Institutionen för ekonomisk historia och internationella relationer

    Author : Anastasiia Trehubova; [2023]
    Keywords : ;

    Abstract : The analysis examines the impact of Chinese developmental and military aid on the effectiveness of the OFAC sanctions enforcement. Despite the official claims of China’s adherence to the principles of non-conditionality and non-interference, Chinese foreign policy in proactive reveals a pattern of using its aid as political and economic weapon to widen its sphere of influence by undermining the efficacy of US sanctions. READ MORE

  2. 2. The Compatibility of Citizenship Re-conceptualization and Civic Integration Mechanisms with John Rawls’ Political Liberalism in a Scandinavian Context

    University essay from Malmö universitet/Institutionen för globala politiska studier (GPS)

    Author : Florentine Elise Urbach; [2023]
    Keywords : Citizenship; Political Liberalism; John Rawls; Civic Integration; Scandinavia;

    Abstract : The thesis revolves around the transformation of liberal citizenship to a higher degree of conditionality in the face of pluralist challenges revolving around achieving a shared common good. John Rawls’ Political Liberalism serves as the theoretical foundation for the argumentative analysis conducted, utilizing specific civic integration policies of Sweden and Denmark. READ MORE

  3. 3. Help, Need and Cooperation as Portrayed in the Austrian Press

    University essay from Lunds universitet/Sociologi

    Author : Marianne Eva Schinnerl; [2022]
    Keywords : Development Aid and Cooperation; Development Discourse; Critical Discourse Analysis CDA ; World Society Theory; White Saviourism; Social Sciences;

    Abstract : Investigating the discourse around development aid and cooperation yields insights into development policy choices and their public legitimisation and justification because of the recognised opinion-forming effect that public information, especially media, has on the public. Hence, public development discourse informs and shapes how ordinary people make sense of development issues and the perceived necessity of development aid and cooperation. READ MORE

  4. 4. Of Funds and Values: The Rule of Law conditionality: A politicization of the European Union Cohesion Policy?

    University essay from Lunds universitet/Europastudier

    Author : Erlend Malmer; [2019]
    Keywords : European Union; EU budget; Cohesion Policy; European Structural and Investment fund; Politicization; Conditionality; Rule of Law; Illiberalism; European Studies; Social Sciences; Law and Political Science;

    Abstract : This research looks at if the Cohesion Policy is politicized, by looking at the newly proposed Rule of Law conditionality attached to funding, and what this signifies for European Integration. As the conditionality adds to the fold of an ever-increasing amount of internal EU conditionality attached to EU funding since 2014, this paper re-tools Schimmelfennig and Sedelmeier’s external incentive model, and finds that there is a politicization of the Cohesion Policy. READ MORE

  5. 5. The (In)visible Hand of the EU : How the EU has affected changes in Turkey's Asylum and Refugee Policy?

    University essay from Uppsala universitet/Statsvetenskapliga institutionen

    Author : Ugur Amber Deniz; [2019]
    Keywords : European Union; Turkey; Europeanization; asylum and refugee policies; conditionality; misfit; socialization; external incentives; social learning; logic of consequences; logic of appropriateness;

    Abstract : Previous literature on the Europeanization of candidate countries has lacked careful empirical investigations into how the process drives domestic policies to change in line with the EU acquis. Selecting on the least-likely case of Turkey and its refugee and asylum policy, I identify that previous work has assumed that Turkey’s policy shifts have been driven by rationalist cost- benefit calculations of its government. READ MORE