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1. | Lopes, Dawisson Belém; Oliveira, João Paulo Ferraz: Latin American Secretaries-General of International Organizations: A Typical Case of “Diplomacy of Prestige” or Just Another Side Effect of Growing Cosmopolitanism? . In: Global Summitry, 3 (1), pp. 68-85, 2017, ISSN: 2058-7449, (Article). (Type: Journal Article | Abstract | Links | BibTeX | Tags: Brazil, Chair Power, International Organizations, International Relations, IO BIO, Latin America, Policy of Prestige, Prestige, Prosopography, Secretaries-General, Transnational Cosmopolitanism) @article{Lopes2017, title = {Latin American Secretaries-General of International Organizations: A Typical Case of “Diplomacy of Prestige” or Just Another Side Effect of Growing Cosmopolitanism? }, author = { Dawisson Belém Lopes and João Paulo Ferraz Oliveira}, url = {http://globalsummitry.wpengine.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/GSP-3.1.4.pdf}, doi = {https://doi.org/10.1093/global/guy004}, issn = { 2058-7449}, year = {2017}, date = {2017-00-00}, journal = {Global Summitry}, volume = {3}, number = {1}, pages = {68-85}, abstract = {The article discusses the hypothesis of there being a “diplomacy of prestige” in Latin America, i.e., if states from the region have consistently used formal leadership positions at international organizations as a means to pursue national interests. A second hypothesis posits that Latin American secretaries-general (SGs) are rather a collateral effect of transnational cosmopolitanism than a deliberate prestige-seeking strategy. This research comprises two stages: an assessment on data about eighty-six Latin American SGs from 1948 to 2015, condensing their personal and professional trajectories, and a prosopographical approach to ten case studies as a way of observing their relationship with the respective countries of origin. }, note = {Article}, keywords = {Brazil, Chair Power, International Organizations, International Relations, IO BIO, Latin America, Policy of Prestige, Prestige, Prosopography, Secretaries-General, Transnational Cosmopolitanism}, pubstate = {published}, tppubtype = {article} } The article discusses the hypothesis of there being a “diplomacy of prestige” in Latin America, i.e., if states from the region have consistently used formal leadership positions at international organizations as a means to pursue national interests. A second hypothesis posits that Latin American secretaries-general (SGs) are rather a collateral effect of transnational cosmopolitanism than a deliberate prestige-seeking strategy. This research comprises two stages: an assessment on data about eighty-six Latin American SGs from 1948 to 2015, condensing their personal and professional trajectories, and a prosopographical approach to ten case studies as a way of observing their relationship with the respective countries of origin. |
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2017 |
Lopes, Dawisson Belém; Oliveira, João Paulo Ferraz Global Summitry, 3 (1), pp. 68-85, 2017, ISSN: 2058-7449, (Article). @article{Lopes2017, title = {Latin American Secretaries-General of International Organizations: A Typical Case of “Diplomacy of Prestige” or Just Another Side Effect of Growing Cosmopolitanism? }, author = { Dawisson Belém Lopes and João Paulo Ferraz Oliveira}, url = {http://globalsummitry.wpengine.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/GSP-3.1.4.pdf}, doi = {https://doi.org/10.1093/global/guy004}, issn = { 2058-7449}, year = {2017}, date = {2017-00-00}, journal = {Global Summitry}, volume = {3}, number = {1}, pages = {68-85}, abstract = {The article discusses the hypothesis of there being a “diplomacy of prestige” in Latin America, i.e., if states from the region have consistently used formal leadership positions at international organizations as a means to pursue national interests. A second hypothesis posits that Latin American secretaries-general (SGs) are rather a collateral effect of transnational cosmopolitanism than a deliberate prestige-seeking strategy. This research comprises two stages: an assessment on data about eighty-six Latin American SGs from 1948 to 2015, condensing their personal and professional trajectories, and a prosopographical approach to ten case studies as a way of observing their relationship with the respective countries of origin. }, note = {Article}, keywords = {}, pubstate = {published}, tppubtype = {article} } The article discusses the hypothesis of there being a “diplomacy of prestige” in Latin America, i.e., if states from the region have consistently used formal leadership positions at international organizations as a means to pursue national interests. A second hypothesis posits that Latin American secretaries-general (SGs) are rather a collateral effect of transnational cosmopolitanism than a deliberate prestige-seeking strategy. This research comprises two stages: an assessment on data about eighty-six Latin American SGs from 1948 to 2015, condensing their personal and professional trajectories, and a prosopographical approach to ten case studies as a way of observing their relationship with the respective countries of origin. |
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