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Global Governance and Policy Processes
Yooil Bae
其他書名
Global Networks, NGOs, and Environmental Movements in Korea
出版
Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy
, 2008
URL
http://books.google.com.hk/books?id=VLlKAQAACAAJ&hl=&source=gbs_api
註釋
Recent international social movement literatures argue that the emergence of transnational non-governmental actors as new stakeholders in governance is reshaping the map of states' political processes, and the growth of civil society in both domestic and international stages has made political dynamics and power relations more complicated. This paper, drawing on case studies of three environmental movements in a transitional society, Korea, attempts to test the contrasting perspectives on the activities and influence of transnational advocacy networks on domestic policy processes. This paper explores the conditions of the emergence of transnational cooperation in environmental governance issues in a nation. By suggesting a multilevel analysis of social movements, I argue that institutional arrangement and policy settings in a country such as the degree of democratization, the growth of non-profit sector, and the emergence of civilian government are the driving force of facilitating or restricting the intervention of transnational advocacy networks, although the activities of transnational advocacy networks are becoming more and more indispensable political resources for the movements. The analysis of global actors0́?participation in domestic policy processes requires a closer multilevel analysis highlighting the political dynamics in national and local as well as transnational level.