03516 am 22007573u 450 99620715010331620230621140308.01-280-73403-597866107340301-84779-096-8(CKB)1000000000244816(EBL)589295(OCoLC)209683344(SSID)ssj0000283675(PQKBManifestationID)11242304(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000283675(PQKBWorkID)10248018(PQKB)10038401(OCoLC)ocm56465582(MiAaPQ)EBC589295(oapen)https://directory.doabooks.org/handle/20.500.12854/35693(EXLCZ)99100000000024481620050124e20182004 uy 0engur|n#---uuuuutxtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierRethinking European Union foreign policy /Ben Tonra and Thomas Christiansen, editorsManchester University Press2004Manchester, England :Manchester University Press,2018, 2004.©20041 online resource (175 pages) digital file(s)Europe in changeDescription based upon print version of record.First published: 2004.0-7190-6001-X Includes bibliographical references and index.1. The study of EU foreign policy : between international relations and European studies /Ben Tonra, Thomas Christiansen --2. Theorizing the European Union's foreign policy /Knud Erik Jørgensen --3. International relations or European integration : is the CFSP sui generis? /Jakob C. Øhrgaard --4. Foreign policy analysis and European foreign policy /Brian Whit --5. Discourse analysis in the study of European foreign policy /Henrk Larsen --6. Role identity and the Europeanisation of foreign policy : a political-cultural approach /Lisbeth Aggestann --7. Interests, institutions and identities in the study of European foreign policy /Adrien Hyde-Price --8. Theory and practice of multi-level foreign policy : the European Union's policy in the field of arms export controls /Sibylle Bauer, Eric Remacle --9. Justifying EU foreign policy : the logics underpinning EU enlargement /Helen Sjursen, Karen E. Smith.This book debates the nature of the EU and its international relationships, enabling students of EU foreign policy to review a broad range of theoretical templates from which the EU's foreign policy can be studied.Europe in change.International relationsbicsscEuropean Union countriesForeign relationsdiplomacy+g29politicseueuropeCommon Foreign and Security PolicyDecision-makingForeign policyForeign relations of the European UnionInternational relationsMember state of the European UnionInternational relations327.4Tonra Benedt800707Tonra Ben800707Christiansen Thomas466824MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQUkMaJRUBOOK996207150103316Rethinking European Union foreign policy1801987UNISA02054nam 2200361 450 991016072870332120230706134736.03-8452-7673-8(CKB)3710000000957426(NjHacI)993710000000957426(EXLCZ)99371000000095742620230706d2016 uy 0gerur|||||||||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierArbeitnehmerbeteiligung an Investitionsentscheidungen /Sarah TarantinoBaden-Baden :Nomos Verlagsgesellschaft mbH & Co. KG,2016.1 online resource (237 pages)Studien zum Arbeitsrecht, ;193-8487-3333-1 In Zeiten der Globalisierung und der wirtschaftlichen Instabilitat mussen Arbeitnehmer stets um die Sicherheit ihrer Arbeitsplatze bangen. Neben tarifvertraglichen Ansatzen versuchen Arbeitnehmervertreter daher auch auf der betrieblichen Ebene vermehrt, auf Investitionsentscheidungen der Arbeitgeber Einfluss zu nehmen, um Arbeitsstandorte und -bedingungen zu sichern. Dabei ist ungeklart, in welchem Umfang den Arbeitnehmern eine solche Entscheidungsbeteiligung durch das deutsche Recht uberhaupt zugestanden wird. Auf der Grundlage von betrieblichen Investitionsvereinbarungen aus der unternehmerischen Praxis untersucht Sarah Tarantino die Moglichkeiten der Einflussnahme von Arbeitnehmern auf wirtschaftliche Investitionsentscheidungen von Arbeitgebern. Neben der betrieblichen Ebene betrachtet sie dabei auch die Unternehmensebene. Dadurch werden der rechtliche Rahmen der moglichen Arbeitnehmerbeteiligung aufgezeigt und die diesbezuglichen Fragestellungen umfassend beleuchtet.Labor disputesLabor disputes.331.89Tarantino Sarah1370045NjHacINjHaclBOOK9910160728703321Arbeitnehmerbeteiligung an Investitionsentscheidungen3397439UNINA08878oam 2200601 c 450 991096162140332120260102090118.0978383827057938382705769783838270579(CKB)4340000000252645(Au-PeEL)EBL5782693(OCoLC)1111968152(MiAaPQ)EBC5782693(Perlego)773146(ibidem)9783838270579(EXLCZ)99434000000025264520260102d2017 uy 0engurcnu||||||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierConflict Resolution Beyond the International Relations Paradigm Evolving Design as Transformative Practice in Nagorno-Karabakh and Syria /Philip Gamaghelyan, Andreas Umland, Susan Allen1st ed.Hannoveribidem20171 online resource (293 pages)Soviet and Post-Soviet Politics and Society9783838210575 3838210573 Includes bibliographical references and index.Intro -- Table of Contents -- Abstract -- Acknowledgments -- Foreword -- Abbreviations -- Introduction -- Questions I am aiming to address -- The organization of the text -- Part I -- Chapter 1 Critical review of conflict resolution theories -- Binary frames in conflict resolution -- Realist theories of international relations -- Liberal theories of international relations -- In the shadow of Track 1: interactive problem solving -- Alternative to binary frames in conflict resolution -- Multitrack models of conflict resolution -- Network theory -- The third side -- Constructivist trends in conflict analysis -- Reflective and elicitive practice -- Theories of ethnicity and nationalism -- Critical theory -- Structuration theory: segue into participatory research design -- Chapter 2 Methodology -- Participatory action research -- Case selection -- Auto-ethnography -- First-person action research and collective auto-ethnography -- Second-person action research -- Ethical considerations and limitations -- Chapter 3 Auto-ethnographic sketch -- My background, the resulting perspective and subjectivity, and their role in this research -- Part II -- Chapter 4 On ethical and methodological challenges of leading a Syrian dialogue program in the middle of a civil war: from exclusion to inclusion -- The program design and implementation -- Program design vs. program reality -- Intermission -- Back to dialogue -- Methodological agony -- Reframing -- Getting real -- Closure -- Implications of the Syrian dialogue for this research: toward inclusive frames that do not privilege the violent extremes -- Chapter 5 On methodological challenges of leading an analytic initiative in the context of the long-lasting Nagorno-Karabakh conflict: from inclusion to exclusion -- The Nagorno-Karabakh Analytic Initiative -- The first meeting -- The first full symposium.The second full symposium -- Working group -- Implications of the Nagorno-Karabakh Analytic Initiative for recognizing power dynamics and resulting exclusion, and marginalization -- Part II postscript -- Part III -- Chapter 6 Influence of macro-frames on conflict resolution practice. Addressing exclusion perpetuated by binary conflict discourses of international relations -- In the shadow of the international relations discourse -- Practical implications of naming initiatives "Track 2": impact on selection -- Practical implications of naming initiatives "Track 2": impact on dialogue -- Leaving the shadow: addressing patterns of marginalization influenced by the international relations discourse -- Conceptual alternatives -- Evolving Designs: rethinking the language of mediation -- Evolving Designs: rethinking dialogue and PSW -- Evolving Designs in practice: transforming the Analytic Initiative -- Chapter 6 postscript: gender and other binaries that affect conflict resolution practice -- Chapter conclusions -- Chapter 7 Marginalization specific to conflict resolution initiatives. Addressing the formation of dominant factions -- Formation of a single dominant faction within initiatives -- Cultural intelligibility to the organizers -- Reliance on a dominant discourse external to the initiative -- Competition for domination and shifting marginalization -- Recognizing and addressing domination and resulting marginalization -- Chapter conclusions -- Chapter 8 Addressing marginalization patterns within the conflict resolution community -- Competition among organizations -- Walking the talk: the case for the organizations preaching cooperation to lead by example -- Power struggles within teams -- Addressing marginalization within teams -- Chapter conclusions -- Chapter 9 Lessons learned -- Reflection: the learning and the key findings.Action: Evolving Designs in Imagine Center's recent initiatives -- Questions for further research -- Postscript -- Bibliography -- Index.Conflict Resolution holds the promise of freeing approaches and policies with regard to politics of identity from the fatalistic grip of realism. While the conceptual literature on identity and conflicts has moved in this alternative direction, conflict resolution practice continues to rely on realist frames and acts as an unwanted auxiliary to traditional International Relations (IR). Perpetuation of conflict discourses, marginalization, and exclusion of affected populations are widespread. They are caused by the over-reliance of conflict resolution practice on the binary frames of classic IR paradigms and also by the competitive and hierarchical relationships within the field itself. Philip Gamaghelyan relies on participatory action research (PAR) and collective auto-ethnography to expose patterns of exclusion and marginalization as well as the paradoxical reproduction of conflict-promoting frames in current conflict-resolution practice applied to the Nagorno-Karabakh and Syrian crises. He builds on the work of post-modernist scholars, on reflective practice, and on discourse analysis to explore alternative and inclusive strategies with a transformative potential through reflections and actions customary for PAR. The IR discipline, that has dominated policy-making, is only one possible lens, and often a deficient one, for defining, preventing, or resolving contemporary conflicts wrapped in identity politics. Other conceptual frameworks can help to rethink our understanding of identity and conflicts and reconstruct them as performative and not static phenomena. These transformative frameworks are increasingly influential in the conflict resolution field and can be applied to policy-making.Philip Gamaghelyan is an experienced scholar-practitioner whose authentic quest to transform international conflicts has resulted in discoveries that ought to occasion a fundamental paradigm shift in the field of conflict resolution. Gamaghelyan exposes and thoroughly documents how the field of international conflict resolution unwittingly perpetuates and reifies conflicts, rather than transforming them, as a consequence of the near-universal conceptual and/or practical assumption of conflict 'sides'. The very presumption that conflicts are characterized by 'sides' generates and maintains polarized and rigid oppositions while marginalizing any voices and constituencies that do not fit this oppositional framing. The author then documents how standard practices of international conflict resolution unintentionally create counter-productive marginalization across a range of additional dimensions, as well as how an emerging 'business' of conflict resolution profits from the maintenance of conflict. Through the sensitively and humbly narrated story of his own individual and collective learning through real-life cases of international conflict transformation processes, Gamaghelyan also provides insights and guidance for stepping into a new paradigm of international conflict transformation that, when authentically and self-critically engaged, creates new capabilities for genuinely resolving entrenched conflict. Dr. Jessica Srikantia, Rhodes Scholar and an Associate Professor at George Mason University’s Schar School of Policy and Government.SyriaconflictresolutionSyriaconflictresolution327.17Gamaghelyan Philipaut1702944Umland AndreasDr.edtAllen SusanauiMiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910961621403321Conflict resolution beyond the international relations paradigm4087834UNINA