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Table of Contents
Part I. Context
Chapter1. International Policy Partnerships with Civil Society: Risks and Opportunities; Raffaele Marchetti
Chapter 2. The Limits of Global Governance: Transnational Neopluralism in a Complex World; Philip Cerny
Part II. Global
Chapter 3. How participatory is global governance of trade and environment? The cases of WTO and UN Climate Summits; Marcel Hanegraaff and Arlo Poletti
Chapter 4. Civil society-public institution relations in global food policy: the case of FAO and the CFS; Nora McKeon
Chapter 5. IFAD Policy engagement and civil society: The case of IFAD; Lauren Phillips
Chapter 6. Can Human Rights NGOs be Trusted in the Corridors of the United Nations and International Criminal Justice Institutions?; Lyal S. Sunga
Chapter 7. Civil Society and the UN Security Council: Advocacy on the Rwandan Genocide; Kseniya Oksamytna
Part III. EU
Chapter 8. Asymmetric patterns in the Civil Society's access to the European Commission: The cases of DG FISMA and Dg TRADE; Giuseppe Montalbano
Chapter 9. European Commission's sing-along: civil society as a last resort in the European Union Emissions Trading Scheme debate: The case DG CLIMA; Pawel P. Pustelnik
Chapter 10. Civil Society in the EU development and human rights agenda: The case of DG DEVCO-EIDHR; Chiara Pierobon
Chapter 11. From Window-dressing to Windows of Opportunity: Civil Society Actors in the EU DG HOME Security Regime; Georgios Kolliarakis
Chapter 12. NGOs and the EU's responses to emergencies and crises. An analysis of ECHO's and member states' support; Daniela Irrera
Part IV. Controversies
Chapter 13. Foreign Government Support for Threatened Civil Societies: Helpful or Harmful?; Clifford Bob
Chapter 14. Foreign Policy by Proxy: Democracy and Human Rights Promotion Through the Engagement with Civil Society; Raffaele Marchetti
Chapter 15. "Feeding the Trojan Horse" Public International Aid to NGOs as a political tool of international relations; Igor Pellicciari.
Chapter1. International Policy Partnerships with Civil Society: Risks and Opportunities; Raffaele Marchetti
Chapter 2. The Limits of Global Governance: Transnational Neopluralism in a Complex World; Philip Cerny
Part II. Global
Chapter 3. How participatory is global governance of trade and environment? The cases of WTO and UN Climate Summits; Marcel Hanegraaff and Arlo Poletti
Chapter 4. Civil society-public institution relations in global food policy: the case of FAO and the CFS; Nora McKeon
Chapter 5. IFAD Policy engagement and civil society: The case of IFAD; Lauren Phillips
Chapter 6. Can Human Rights NGOs be Trusted in the Corridors of the United Nations and International Criminal Justice Institutions?; Lyal S. Sunga
Chapter 7. Civil Society and the UN Security Council: Advocacy on the Rwandan Genocide; Kseniya Oksamytna
Part III. EU
Chapter 8. Asymmetric patterns in the Civil Society's access to the European Commission: The cases of DG FISMA and Dg TRADE; Giuseppe Montalbano
Chapter 9. European Commission's sing-along: civil society as a last resort in the European Union Emissions Trading Scheme debate: The case DG CLIMA; Pawel P. Pustelnik
Chapter 10. Civil Society in the EU development and human rights agenda: The case of DG DEVCO-EIDHR; Chiara Pierobon
Chapter 11. From Window-dressing to Windows of Opportunity: Civil Society Actors in the EU DG HOME Security Regime; Georgios Kolliarakis
Chapter 12. NGOs and the EU's responses to emergencies and crises. An analysis of ECHO's and member states' support; Daniela Irrera
Part IV. Controversies
Chapter 13. Foreign Government Support for Threatened Civil Societies: Helpful or Harmful?; Clifford Bob
Chapter 14. Foreign Policy by Proxy: Democracy and Human Rights Promotion Through the Engagement with Civil Society; Raffaele Marchetti
Chapter 15. "Feeding the Trojan Horse" Public International Aid to NGOs as a political tool of international relations; Igor Pellicciari.