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General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (Organization) --- IMF --- World Bank --- China --- Foreign economic relations.
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International agencies. --- Decision making. --- International agencies --- Decision making --- #SBIB:327.7H120 --- #SBIB:327.7H125 --- Deciding --- Decision (Psychology) --- Decision analysis --- Decision processes --- Making decisions --- Management --- Management decisions --- Associations, International --- IGOs (Intergovernmental organizations) --- Institutions, International --- Intergovernmental organizations --- International administration --- International associations --- International governmental organizations --- International institutions --- International organizations --- International unions --- Organizations, International --- Specialized agencies of the United Nations --- Verenigde Naties: algemeen --- Verenigde Naties: bijzondere vraagstukken --- Sociology of organization --- Law of international organizations --- Choice (Psychology) --- Problem solving --- International cooperation --- Interorganizational relations --- Non-state actors (International relations) --- International organization --- Prise de décision --- Organisations internationales --- Inter-governmental organizations
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When should the United States cooperate with others in confronting global problems? Why is the U.S. often ambivalent about multilateral cooperation? What are the costs of acting alone? These are some of the timely questions addressed in this examination of the role of multilateralism in U.S. foreign policy. The authors isolate a number of factors that help to explain U.S. reluctance to commit to multilateral cooperation. They then analyze recent policy in specific areas—e.g., the use of force, peacekeeping, arms control, human rights, the United Nations, sanctions, international trade, environmental protection—probing the causes and consequences of U.S. decisions to act alone or opt out of multilateral initiatives. A concluding chapter underscores the point that increasingly pressing transnational problems may require the U.S. to reform its policymaking structures and to reconsider longstanding assumptions about national sovereignty and freedom of action.
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