Views from insiders
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Köp båda 2 för 937 krPatrick Weller and Xu Yi-chong are professors in the School of Government and International Relations at Griffith University. Patrick Weller has been writing about political executives for the past 40 years. Among his books on Australian politics are: Can Ministers Cope? (1981, co-author), Malcolm Fraser Prime Minister (1989), Dodging raindrops: John Button A Labor Life (1999), Australias Mandarins (2001), Dont tell the prime minister (2002), Cabinet Government in Australia (2007), Learning to be a Minister (2010, co-author) and From Post box to Powerhouse: a Centenary History of the Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet (2011, co-author). His comparative books include First among Equals: prime ministers in Westminster systems (1985), The Hollow Crown (co-edited 1997), The changing world of top officials (co-edited 2001), Westminster Legacies (co-edited, 2005) and Westminster Compared (co-authored 2009). He has acted as a consultant for state and federal governments. In 2009-10 he was a member of the Prime Ministers Advisory Group on Reform of Australian Government Administration. Xu Yi-chong is the author of Powering China, Reforming the electric power industry in China (2002), Electricity reform in China, India and Russia: The World Bank Template and the Politics of Power (2004) and The Politics of Nuclear Energy in China (2010). She is (co) editor of The Politics of Sovereign Wealth Funds (2010), Nuclear Development in Asia (2011) and The Political Economy of State-owned Enterprises in China and India, (2012). She is currently undertaking research on state-owned enterprises in China
Introduction: Understanding the governance of international organizations Xu Yi-chong and Patrick Weller 1. The World Trade Organization as an institution Stuart Harbison Comment: Weak organization, strong institution John Ravenhill 2. Reform at the World Bank Jim Adams Comment 1: The World Bank Chrik Poortman Comment 2: Reform at the World Bankplus a change? Susan Park 3. Governance at work at the International Monetary Fund Luc Hubloue and Orasa Vongthieres Comment 1: IMF governance and decision-making processes Mike Callaghan Comment 2: The IMFs governance of economic policy knowledge Andr Broome and Leonard Seabrooke 4. The World Intellectual Property Organization Naresh Prasad Comment 1: The World Intellectual Property Organization Geoffrey Yu Comment 2: The problems of over-representation and fragmented subject areas in reaching agreement at WIPO Charles Lawson 5. Turbulence and reform at the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization David Hallam Comment: The relevance, competence, and prospects of the Food and Agriculture Organization Robin Davies 6. The World Health Organization: Some views from inside Patrick Weller and Xu Yi-chong Comment: In reform we trustthe challenge before the World Health Organization Sara E. Davies and Jeremy R. Youde 8. Afterthoughts Patrick Weller and Xu Yi-Chong