Abstract The voting record of states of the global South at the United Nations General Assembly indicates they are dissatisfied with the US-led liberal international order. Against existing interpretations, this article challenges the notion that states belonging to the Group of 77 (G77) express discontent because they are illiberal and undemocratic. Instead, the article argues that the G77 is composed of a diverse group of states influenced by a common South–South ideology. This foreign policy ideology has a distinct intellectual history and conceptual morphology, grounded in common experience of colonial domination and international peripheralisation. These arguments are tested using a series of multiple regression models, controlling ...
After 1994, South Africa became the sine qua non of an internationalist state, willing to promote co...
On 20 July 2014, the Group of 77 countries (G77) and China commemorated the fiftieth anniversary of ...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Urban Studies and Planning, 2001.In...
This article argues that the countries of the global South have defined themselves in a globally-pos...
The rise of non-Western powers has led to competing claims about how these states act amongst each o...
This article sets out to study the voting pattern of the Visegrád countries in the United Nations Ge...
The New International Economic Order (NIEO) was a political campaign brought to the United Nations b...
International politics as who gets what, when and how is now at its peak. Emerging powers are compet...
South–South relations have regained widespread interest in recent years, together with increasingly ...
In this thesis, UNCTAD (United Nations Conference of Trade and Development) is used as a case to she...
The conflict between exclusivity and universalism is a consistent theme in international relations. ...
This study focuses on how neocolonial dependence impacts the decision-making of states and their rep...
The meta-hypothesis that international organizations behave as great power directorates is examined ...
The standard measure of voting convergence in the United Nations (UN) General Assembly has been the ...
The Group of Seventy-Seven (G77) plus China is positioned in global multilateralism as a platform fo...
After 1994, South Africa became the sine qua non of an internationalist state, willing to promote co...
On 20 July 2014, the Group of 77 countries (G77) and China commemorated the fiftieth anniversary of ...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Urban Studies and Planning, 2001.In...
This article argues that the countries of the global South have defined themselves in a globally-pos...
The rise of non-Western powers has led to competing claims about how these states act amongst each o...
This article sets out to study the voting pattern of the Visegrád countries in the United Nations Ge...
The New International Economic Order (NIEO) was a political campaign brought to the United Nations b...
International politics as who gets what, when and how is now at its peak. Emerging powers are compet...
South–South relations have regained widespread interest in recent years, together with increasingly ...
In this thesis, UNCTAD (United Nations Conference of Trade and Development) is used as a case to she...
The conflict between exclusivity and universalism is a consistent theme in international relations. ...
This study focuses on how neocolonial dependence impacts the decision-making of states and their rep...
The meta-hypothesis that international organizations behave as great power directorates is examined ...
The standard measure of voting convergence in the United Nations (UN) General Assembly has been the ...
The Group of Seventy-Seven (G77) plus China is positioned in global multilateralism as a platform fo...
After 1994, South Africa became the sine qua non of an internationalist state, willing to promote co...
On 20 July 2014, the Group of 77 countries (G77) and China commemorated the fiftieth anniversary of ...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Urban Studies and Planning, 2001.In...