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Chapter III: Process and context, LÓPEZ LUNA VALERIA ILEANA 4NV8 - Coggle…
Chapter III: Process and context
Six boundaries
geography
borders between states and state entities , the issue of sovereignty
distinguish nation-states
facilitate proper functioning of governments
Micro-borderbargaining
Macro-border bargaining
Implicate sovereignty and autonomy
Losing its significance in global governance
system
the strength of states and international organizations
Trust is essential but not assured
the more independency the more effective engotiation process
International regimes
important function in channelling bargain
inflexibility over bureaucracy
needs
the role of interests and positions
positions conected to their needs
radical or less-exagerated
cultural element
distributive bargaining
inflexible bargaining
concessions as tools
multi party and multi issue process
resources
capacity of people and their tools
power and influence
situational and structural
effective negotiators
tough in defending their interests
us of power
don't come to close
relationship-dominated bargaining
business-like bargaining
regulators
the significance of rules and regulations, norms and values
law
multilateralism or unilateralism
balance in world politics
procedures
channels for effective processes
belong to chairpersons, secretariats, facilitators and mediators
diplomatic norms and values
time
short-term versus long term perspectives and projections
impact of past events in the present time
impact over success of negotiation
You cannot solve a problem without changing its context
Not everything is negotiable at the beggining
Create the conditions needed
exploration
bargaining
deciding
Uncertainity is an asset for weakness
Order through organization
regimes
global negotiation
sets of formal and informal rules
international regimes
two dimensional negotiations
regime formation regimes
regime governance negotiations
regime adjustment negotiations
national level
acceptance negotiations
rule-making negotiations
monitoring reporting negotiations
shifts in multilaterlaism
US
dominance in international relations
multilateral order became a problem
institutions
include or exclude supreme power
integrative or distributive
BRIC
increasing mutual dependency
coping with challenges
first and second war
global political organizations
deal with problems effectively
possible future developments
evolution of international regimes
priorization of negotiation processes and bilateral bargaining
difference between national and international levels of negotiations
LÓPEZ LUNA VALERIA ILEANA
4NV8