631 research outputs found

    Appendix - Rivalry and Overlap: Why Regional Economic Organizations Encroach on Security Organizations

    No full text
    Appendix for Rivalry and Overlap: Why Regional Economic Organizations Encroach on Security Organizations by Yoram Z. Haftel, and Stephanie C. Hofmann in Journal of Conflict Resolution</p

    Supplemental Material, Master_JCR_Jan_2019 - Rivalry and Overlap: Why Regional Economic Organizations Encroach on Security Organizations

    No full text
    Supplemental Material, Master_JCR_Jan_2019 for Rivalry and Overlap: Why Regional Economic Organizations Encroach on Security Organizations by Yoram Z. Haftel, and Stephanie C. Hofmann in Journal of Conflict Resolution</p

    Supplemental Material, Information_Sheet_on_variables - Rivalry and Overlap: Why Regional Economic Organizations Encroach on Security Organizations

    No full text
    Supplemental Material, Information_Sheet_on_variables for Rivalry and Overlap: Why Regional Economic Organizations Encroach on Security Organizations by Yoram Z. Haftel, and Stephanie C. Hofmann in Journal of Conflict Resolution</p

    Supplemental Material, Results_CJR_Final_Jan_2019 - Rivalry and Overlap: Why Regional Economic Organizations Encroach on Security Organizations

    No full text
    Supplemental Material, Results_CJR_Final_Jan_2019 for Rivalry and Overlap: Why Regional Economic Organizations Encroach on Security Organizations by Yoram Z. Haftel, and Stephanie C. Hofmann in Journal of Conflict Resolution</p

    Supplemental Material, Information_Sheet_on_variables - Rivalry and Overlap: Why Regional Economic Organizations Encroach on Security Organizations

    No full text
    Supplemental Material, Information_Sheet_on_variables for Rivalry and Overlap: Why Regional Economic Organizations Encroach on Security Organizations by Yoram Z. Haftel, and Stephanie C. Hofmann in Journal of Conflict Resolution</p

    Is the liberal international order in a state of terminal decline?

    No full text
    The disengagement of the United States from multilateral cooperation and a rise in ‘illiberal’ politics across the globe have led many observers to conclude the liberal international order is in a state of decline. Drawing on a new study, Mette Eilstrup-Sangiovanni and Stephanie C. Hofmann argue that what we may be witnessing is not necessarily the breakdown of the existing order, but rather its transformation into a broader, more inclusive system of global governance, reflecting the need to accommodate new actors and problems

    Global governance by the EU

    No full text
    Published online: 13 May 2025This chapter addresses how the EU engages with various global governance actors and navigates these relational webs. We draw attention to the EU's competencies, its structuring powers, and how it navigates its organizational environment. First, we highlight the expanding EU's issue scope and membership over time. Second, we discuss the EU's variable competencies and actorness in external affairs. These two sections set the stage for examining the formal powers that the EU has in speaking and acting on behalf of its membership, but also its structural powers that can shape global governance arrangements through issue linkages and regulations. Third, we assess EU strategies that navigate global governance arrangements and examine how the EU exploits densely institutionalized governance spaces and overlaps in membership and mandates with other organizations to pursue its preferences. Overall, this analytical lens decenters the EU and questions EU narratives about its liberal aspirations and vision for global governance

    sj-docx-3-eup-10.1177_14651165241236777 - Supplemental material for Crumbling in the face of cost? How cost considerations affect public support for European security and defence cooperation

    No full text
    Supplemental material, sj-docx-3-eup-10.1177_14651165241236777 for Crumbling in the face of cost? How cost considerations affect public support for European security and defence cooperation by Matthias Mader, Moritz Neubert, Felix Münchow, Stephanie C Hofmann, Harald Schoen and Konstantin Gavras in European Union Politics</p

    sj-zip-2-eup-10.1177_14651165241236777 - Supplemental material for Crumbling in the face of cost? How cost considerations affect public support for European security and defence cooperation

    No full text
    Supplemental material, sj-zip-2-eup-10.1177_14651165241236777 for Crumbling in the face of cost? How cost considerations affect public support for European security and defence cooperation by Matthias Mader, Moritz Neubert, Felix Münchow, Stephanie C Hofmann, Harald Schoen and Konstantin Gavras in European Union Politics</p

    The Law of Attraction: Bilateral Search and Horizontal Heterogeneity

    No full text
    We study a matching model with heterogeneous agents, nontransferable utility and search frictions. Agents differ along a horizontal dimension (e.g. taste) and a vertical dimension (e.g. income). Agents’ preferences coincide only in the vertical dimension. This approach introduces individual preferences in this literature as seems suitable in applications like labor markets (e.g. regional preferences). We analyze how the notion of assortativeness generalizes to integration or segregation outcomes depending on search frictions. Contrary to results from the purely vertical analysis, here, agents continuously adjust their reservation utility strategies to changing search frictions. The model is easily generalizable in the utility specification, the distribution of taste-related payoffs and the number of vertical types. Extreme utility specifications can be treated as a case of horizontal heterogeneity only.Matching, Horizontal Differentiation , Marriage Markets
    corecore