
International Cooperation When Mistrust Deepens
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Content
- Cover
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Preface and Acknowledgements
- Contents
- About the companion website
- 1 Introduction: deepening cooperation, deepening mistrust
- A large and urgent puzzle
- Case selection rationale: Britain and the international regime for telegraphy
- Data and method
- Structure of the argument
- 2 A neo-Durkheimian institutional theory of buffering
- Domestic forces for international commitment
- Cooperation during mistrust as an organizational challenge of coordination in executive government
- Buffering
- Durkheim and international relations: social organization
- From `how?' to `why?'
- Institutions and thought
- Varieties of buffering
- Status-seeking in international relations
- Trends over decades, in three sub-periods
- 3 From fragmentation to negotiation, 1851-1875
- Fragmented buffering, 1851-1868
- Social organization among ministers
- Organization among offices of state
- Britain and international telegraphy, 1851-1868: the first international approach
- First steps towards more integrated and more negotiated buffering in government, 1868-1875
- Social organization among ministers
- Organization among offices of state
- International telegraphy policy, 1868-1875
- Towards domestic nationalization as the basis for international engagement: the status dilemma
- Joining the International Telegraph Union 1871: the first adherence decision
- Grudging commitment: 1871 Rome Conference, 1875 St. Petersburg conference
- 4 The zenith of negotiation, 1875-1898
- Badly negotiated: Fenians, the `state's interest' clause, and `too many cooks'-early 1880s
- Joining the Submarine Cable Convention 1884: the second adherence decision
- Struggling to negotiate a national interest: the Pacific cable debate
- Britain and the ITU `technical' conferences, 1879-1890
- Hosting the world of telegraphy: the 1879 ITU conference in London
- Entrenched British opposition to a uniform tariff: the 1885 Conference in Berlin
- `A funeral with full honours' for the German proposal of a uniform tariff: the 1890 Paris Conference
- 5 The emergence of parallel integration, 1898-1911
- Towards parallel zones of regulated integration in government
- Social organization among ministers
- Changing social organization among offices of state: emerging interdepartmentalism in defence
- Changing social organization among offices of state: emerging parallel interdepartmentalism in `civilian' policy
- Britain and international telegraphy, 1898-1914
- Protecting the route to India
- Slowly towards `all red'
- International telegraphy as high military strategy: Britain learns from the Spanish-American war
- Finally an imperial geostrategy: the first cable-cutting plan, 1898
- Defending the consumer interest: Britain and the 1896 ITU conference
- Not withdrawing from the ITU after all: the Balfour of Burleigh Interdepartmental Committee
- 6 The zenith of parallel integration, 1903-1914
- Social and institutional organization in the Liberal government, 1906-1914
- International telegraphy policy at the zenith of parallel buffering
- The final cable-cutting plan, 1911
- Britain and the ITU conferences, 1903-1914: tariffs and the Official Vocabulary
- Hosting the telegraphy world once more: the 1903 ITU conference in London
- Another failed attempt at tariff unification: the 1908 Lisbon conference
- 1913: submarine cable conference
- Closer cooperation with Germany, while preparing for war
- 7 Difficult transition to parallel integration: radiotelegraphy
- Radiotelegraphy between civilian and military zones
- 1896-1903: initial skirmishes
- The 1903 Preliminary International Conference
- 1904: agreement with Marconi and the licensing scheme
- The 1906 conference and convention
- 1907-1911: dnouement
- The 1912 international convention
- Aftermath: British commitment to the international regime after the Great War
- 8 Comparing the explanatory power of alternative theories
- Alternative explanations from state development scholarship
- Assessing the explanatory power of theories of international regulatory governance
- Exploring social science theories in the case of British decision-making on international telegraphy policy
- Neoclassical realism
- Integrative bargaining: a liberal institutionalist explanation
- Ideational theory: a constructivist explanation
- Regulatory capture: an interest-based explanation
- Bureaucratic politics theory: a public administration interest-based explanation
- Trade-offs among methodological virtues: comparing explanations
- Neo-Durkheimian institutional theory
- 9 The neo-Durkheimian institutional explanation
- Buffering and interdepartmental coordination in British government by sub-period
- Explaining the International Telegraph Union's offer to its major power members
- Why just these kinds of buffering?
- Significance for recent and contemporary cases
- Significance of the argument for international relations and state development
- References
- Index
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