Publication | Closed Access
Transgovernmental Relations and International Organizations
570
Citations
15
References
1974
Year
Cooperation TheoryInternational CooperationTrans-governmental RelationsSocial SciencesInternational OrganizationsTransgovernmental RelationsGeopoliticsTransnational NetworkInternational ManagementPublic PolicyInternational InstitutionsPolitical ChangeInternational RelationsInternational Relation TheoryWorld PoliticsBusinessGlobal PoliticsAfrican Foreign PolicymakingInternational OrganizationPolitical ScienceGovernmental Subunits
Students of world politics have tended to assume that states act as units. Yet trans-governmental relations—direct interactions among sub-units not controlled or closely guided by the policies of cabinets or chief executives—are frequently important. Trans-governmental relations are facilitated by extensive personal contacts among officials and by conflicts of interest between departments or agencies within modern governments. International organizations can play important roles in transgovernmental networks by (i) affecting the definition of issues; (2) promoting coalitions among governmental subunits with similar interests; and (3) serving as points of policy intervention in trans-national systems. As policy interdependence among developed-country governments becomes more extensive and complex, these roles of international organizations are likely to become increasingly important. Internationalism of this relatively informal, non-institutionalized type is not a “dead end.”
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
1974 | 333 | |
1967 | 264 | |
1971 | 210 | |
1973 | 207 | |
1970 | 190 | |
1969 | 146 | |
1966 | 128 | |
1969 | 48 | |
1974 | 37 | |
1971 | 37 |
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