International Politics of Norms (World Politics No. 33)
Competition among social forces over preface international norms
Chapter 1 A Study on the Formation and Spread Process of International Development Norms
I. Going in
II. Analysis of the Normative Life Cycle of MDGs
III. The role of major actors in the normative life cycle of MDGs
IV. Analysis of Internalization Process in Korea
V. closing remarks
Chapter 2 Internalization Cycle of Anti-Corruption Norms—Appearance, Growth, and Institutionalization
I. introduction
II. The Development of Anti-Corruption International Norms and the Role of Knowledge Networks
III. Institutionalization of Anti-Corruption International Norms and Global Anti-Corruption Network
IV. the acceptance of international anti-corruption norms in Korea
V. conclusion
Chapter 3 Life Cycle of Anti-Personnel Landmine Regulations
I. Going in
II. The ambivalence of anti-personnel landmines and the emergence of anti-personnel landmines discourse
III. Sex culture of anti-personnel landmine discourse
IV. Korean acceptance of anti-personnel landmine norms
V. closing remarks
Chapter 4 International Standardization of the Recognition of the Right to Refuse Conscientious Military Service
I. Going in
II. Conscientious objection to military service before international standardization
III. Discussion and recognition of the international community and each country’s right to conscientious objection since 1945
IV. Korea’s Acceptance of Conscientious Objection to Military Service
V. closing remarks
Chapter 5 Development Process of Migrant Worker Standards
I. introduction
II. The emergence of migrant worker norms
III. Diffusion of migrant worker norms
IV. Internalization of Migrant Labor Standards
V. conclusion
Chapter 6 Women’s Solidarity and Open Interpretation—Gender Mainstreaming as an International Norm
I. introduction
II. Characteristics of gender mainstreaming as an international norm
III. Formation of Gender Mainstreaming: Globalization of Women’s Solidarity and Domestic Norms
IV. Spread of gender mainstreaming: Discourse, institutionalization, and socialization
V. Internalization of Gender Mainstreaming: The Dynamics of Open Interpretation and Norms
VI. Acceptance of gender mainstreaming as an international norm in Korea
VII. Conclusion
Chapter 7 Life Cycle of the Rules of Implementation
I. introduction
II. The norms and life cycles of implementation
III. Standards and life cycles of implementation
IV. Analysis: Mainstream and non-mainstream interactions
V. conclusion
a free subject
Chapter 8 The Chinese Government’s Response to Microsoft’s Technology Succession—Focusing on Hong Chi Linux in the 2000s
I. introduction
II. MS Technical Rights in Operating Systems
III. The Chinese government’s strategy for recognizing and responding to MS technology hegemony
IV. The Chinese Government’s Response Strategy: Focusing on Hong Chi Linux
V. China’s ‘top-down centralized’ software industry model
VI. Conclusion