Synopses & Reviews
andlt;Pandgt;Regime theory has become an increasingly influential approach to the analysis of international relations, particularly in the areas of international political economy and international environmental politics. The conceptual appeal of the idea of "governance without government"--in which a combination of different organizations and institutions supply governance to address specific problems--reflects a world in which the demand for governance is great but the familiar mechanisms for supplying it are weak. Most research on international regimes employs qualitative methods, often using case studies to develop larger theoretical arguments; but a lack of standardization makes comparative analysis difficult. Analyzing International Environmental Regimes introduces the International Regimes Database (IRD), an important methodological innovation that allows scholars to adopt a quantitative approach to the study of international regimes.The IRD is a relational database that makes it possible to compare records on specific aspects of a number of international environmental regimes that are coded using a single, well-defined set of concepts, definitions, and scales. The book first describes the database and discusses a number of methodological, technical, and architectural issues. It then illustrates the use of the IRD as an analytic tool, drawing on the database for descriptive statistics to evaluate theoretical ideas about compliance, decision rules, and the role of knowledge. A CD containing the full IRD data protocol and all the data currently in the database accompanies the book.andlt;/Pandgt;
Review
"This book is a major contribution to the growing field of human-environment interaction. It uses a conceptual framework derived from a blend of international-relations and public-policy literatures to dissect the processes of assessing this interaction and its effects. In doing so, the authors move the field ahead in two ways, since the book charts a course for future research at the same time that it derives useful lessons for practitioners."--Edward Miles, School of Marine Affairs, University of Washington The MIT Press
Review
"*Analyzing International Environmental Regimes* works extremely well in its aim of introducing the IRD to a wider audience. It is an important methodological contribution to the literature in international environmental politics."--Kate O'Neill, Department of Environmental Science, Policy and Management, University of California, Berkeley The MIT Press
Review
"In building the International Regimes Database, the authors have succeeded beyond what I would have thought possible. This work is unique in the field. In fact, it is a quantum leap ahead of everything else that currently exists. As such, it is a magnificent contribution."--Edward Miles, School of Marine Affairs, University of Washington The MIT Press
Review
andlt;Pandgt;"This book is a major contribution to the growing field of human-environment interaction. It uses a conceptual framework derived from a blend of international-relations and public-policy literatures to dissect the processes of assessing this interaction and its effects. In doing so, the authors move the field ahead in two ways, since the book charts a course for future research at the same time that it derives useful lessons for practitioners."--Edward Miles, School of Marine Affairs, University of Washingtonandlt;/Pandgt; The MIT Press The MIT Press
Review
andlt;Pandgt;"*Analyzing International Environmental Regimes* works extremely well in its aim of introducing the IRD to a wider audience. It is an important methodological contribution to the literature in international environmental politics."--Kate O'Neill, Department of Environmental Science, Policy and Management, University of California, Berkeleyandlt;/Pandgt; The MIT Press
Review
andlt;Pandgt;"In building the International Regimes Database, the authors have succeeded beyond what I would have thought possible. This work is unique in the field. In fact, it is a quantum leap ahead of everything else that currently exists. As such, it is a magnificent contribution."--Edward Miles, School of Marine Affairs, University of Washingtonandlt;/Pandgt;
Synopsis
Regime theory has become an increasingly influential approach to the analysis of international relations, particularly in the areas of international political economy and international environmental politics. The conceptual appeal of the idea of "governance without government"--in which a combination of different organizations and institutions supply governance to address specific problems--reflects a world in which the demand for governance is great but the familiar mechanisms for supplying it are weak. Most research on international regimes employs qualitative methods, often using case studies to develop larger theoretical arguments; but a lack of standardization makes comparative analysis difficult. Analyzing International Environmental Regimes introduces the International Regimes Database (IRD), an important methodological innovation that allows scholars to adopt a quantitative approach to the study of international regimes.The IRD is a relational database that makes it possible to compare records on specific aspects of a number of international environmental regimes that are coded using a single, well-defined set of concepts, definitions, and scales. The book first describes the database and discusses a number of methodological, technical, and architectural issues. It then illustrates the use of the IRD as an analytic tool, drawing on the database for descriptive statistics to evaluate theoretical ideas about compliance, decision rules, and the role of knowledge. A CD containing the full IRD data protocol and all the data currently in the database accompanies the book.
Synopsis
Introduces the International Regimes Database (IRD), which enables scholars to study international regimes quantitatively; includes a description and demonstration of the database as well as a CD with the data protocol and current data.
Synopsis
Regime theory has become an increasingly influential approach to the analysis of international relations, particularly in the areas of international political economy and international environmental politics. The conceptual appeal of the idea of governance without government--in which a combination of different organizations and institutions supply governance to address specific problems--reflects a world in which the demand for governance is great but the familiar mechanisms for supplying it are weak. Most research on international regimes employs qualitative methods, often using case studies to develop larger theoretical arguments; but a lack of standardization makes comparative analysis difficult.
About the Author
Helmut Breitmeier teaches at the Institute for Political Science at Darmstadt University of Technology, Germany.Oran R. Young is Professor and Codirector of the Program on Governance for Sustainable Development at the Bren School of Environmental Science and Management, University of California, Santa Barbara, and Chair of the Scientific Committee of the International Human Dimensions Programme on Global Environmental Change, sponsored by the International Council Of Science (ICSU), the International Social Science Council (ISSC), and the United Nations University (UNU). He is the author of The Institutional Dimensions of Environmental Change: Fit, Interplay, and Scale (2002) and coeditor (with Leslie A. King and Heike Schroeder) of Institutions and Environmental Change: Principal Findings, Applications, and Research Frontiers (2008), both published by the MIT Press.Michael Zürn is Dean of the Hertie School of Governance and Director of the Transnational Conflicts and International Institutions program at the Social Science Research Center in Berlin.