Introducing Government Chapter 1 Government Definition: Institutions (Executive, Legislative, Judicial, Bureaucratic) that make U.S. policy. Definition: Introducing Government in America Chapter 1. Government Definition: The institutions and processes through which public policies are ma...
philippine political science journal local institutions at the crossroads of environmental regionalism in southeast asia: state-civil society interplays and tensionsstate-civil society relationsASEANMekong Regionillegal wildlife tradeenvironmental regionalism...
“[She said,] the EU was a regional organization of sovereign states, not a sovereign state itself – relations between [non-EU] countries and EU institutions or EU member states developed parallel, the two were not contradictory.” And: “This is an objective reality.’” She then also ...
Halting the stagnation-accumulation treadmill will require planned degrowth that promotes rational utilization of economic surplus alongside dis-accumulation and redistribution of wealth. This approach differs from Klitgaard’s (2023) definition of a recession, which he calls “unplanned degrowth.” Planned...
after public institutions. According to the data of the Ministry of Finance, NGOs have been given ~5 billion Turkish Lira in the period of the JDP government. Being regarded as NGOs, FBOs received their share through their public benefit status, their legal position and grants, and grew in...
In recent history, powerful modern institutions and individuals ([e.g.,] environmental ministries, multinational corporations, corrupt foresters) have gained undue and disproportionate power by explicitly attempting to divide and police the boundaries between human and non-human nature, even while allying...
These two types of common-pool distortions arise from the lack of a proper definition of property rights to tax revenues. The common-pool distortions worsen when the number of spending ministers in- creases. More claims on the common budget worsen the biases to spend too much and too soon ...
On the other hand, the order has been built on the liberal principles of governance supported by a wide array of multilateral rules and institutions. In general, the order is “relatively open, rule-based, and progressive” [9: 2]. More specifically, it has been “organized around economic...
In recent history, powerful modern institutions and individuals ([e.g.,] environmental ministries, multinational corporations, corrupt foresters) have gained undue and disproportionate power by explicitly attempting to divide and police the boundaries between human and non-human nature, even while allying...