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A publicação pode ser exportada nos seguintes formatos: referência da APA (American Psychological Association), referência do IEEE (Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers), BibTeX e RIS.

Exportar Referência (APA)
Keith Goldstein, Bruna Rodrigues, Jörgens, H. & Kolleck, N. (2025). The Ontology of The Global Administrative Space Within  Transnational Climate Policy. ECPR General Conference 2025.
Exportar Referência (IEEE)
K. Goldstein et al.,  "The Ontology of The Global Administrative Space Within  Transnational Climate Policy", in ECPR General Conf. 2025, Salónica, 2025
Exportar BibTeX
@misc{goldstein2025_1768787283203,
	author = "Keith Goldstein and Bruna Rodrigues and Jörgens, H. and Kolleck, N.",
	title = "The Ontology of The Global Administrative Space Within  Transnational Climate Policy",
	year = "2025",
	howpublished = "Digital",
	url = "https://ecpr.eu/Events/269"
}
Exportar RIS
TY  - CPAPER
TI  - The Ontology of The Global Administrative Space Within  Transnational Climate Policy
T2  - ECPR General Conference 2025
AU  - Keith Goldstein
AU  - Bruna Rodrigues
AU  - Jörgens, H.
AU  - Kolleck, N.
PY  - 2025
CY  - Salónica
UR  - https://ecpr.eu/Events/269
AB  - As the climate crisis intensifies, there is a pressing need to illuminate the conceptual underpinnings of global policy networks. Central to our inquiry is the concept of a Global Administrative Space (GAS), a transnational realm where diverse actors converge to shape global policies. This paper examines the philosophical basis for different GAS network models, hypothetical methods to evaluate them, and empirical studies that at least partially utilized a similar model. Drawing on ten distinct theoretical perspectives, we examine distinct dimensions of policy formation: from the prominence of hierarchical hubs that concentrate resources and decision-making authority (Centralized Network Hypothesis) to the fracturing into clusters (Decentralized Network Hypothesis). Additionally, we highlight cross-cutting factors such as Actor Network Theory, subcultural affiliations, informal “sublime” interactions, and embedded social norms, which mediate the impact of network ties on concrete policy outcomes. Methodologically, our framework lends itself to a variety of approaches, including Qualitative Comparative Analysis, Social Network Analysis, and Path Analysis. We also propose utilizing bibliometrics, ethnography, web scraping, and additional data collection methods for capturing global policy dynamics specific to each hypothetical model. While the examples that we present focus specifically on climate policy, we highlight how the rubric could be utilized towards other topics of global policy research. The aim of the paper is to provide scholars of global administration from a variety of disciplines a versatile toolkit of hypotheses and methods to evaluate global policy development.
ER  -