Beschreibung:
This book explores how norms-based international organizations, namely the Council of Europe and the OSCE, are still able to win in world politics. Fawn uses the concept of internal conditionality to explain how these organizations have been able to respond to members with a lack of material incentives or instruments of coercion.
1. International Organizations, Internal Conditionality 2. The Birth of Internal Conditionality: The Conception and Evolution of the Council of Europe and the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe 3. International Election Observation Missions: The Deepest Objections and Greatest Resilience of Internal Conditionality? 4. The Council of Europe and the Abolition of the Death Penalty: From External to Internal Conditionality and the Success of Norms over Interests 5. Success in the Toughest of Cases: The Normative Surprise over Chechnya from Internal Conditionality 6. Tajikistan and the OSCE: The Subtlest Victory of Internal Conditionality 7: The Kazakhstani Chairmanship of the OSCE: Internal Conditionality and the Risks of Political Appeasement 8. Making Norms Matter