Transnational Organizations in World Politics
- 1 April 1973
- journal article
- Published by Project MUSE in World Politics
- Vol. 25 (3) , 334-368
- https://doi.org/10.2307/2010115
Abstract
These twelve organizations appear to have little in common. They are public and private, national and international, profit-making and charitable, religious and secular, civil and military, and, depending on one's perspective, benign and nefarious. Yet they do share three characteristics. First, each is a relatively large, hierarchically organized, centrally directed bureaucracy. Second, each performs a set of relatively limited, specialized, and, in some sense, technical functions: gathering intelligence, investing money, transmitting messages, promoting sales, producing copper, delivering bombs, saving souls. Third, each organization performs its functions across one or more international boundaries and, insofar as is possible, in relative disregard of those boundaries.Keywords
This publication has 2 references indexed in Scilit:
- The Roman Catholic Church: A Transnational ActorInternational Organization, 1971
- Group Representation in Britain and the United StatesThe Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, 1958