Rowman & Littlefield Publishers / ECPR Press
Pages: 584
978-0-9552488-7-0 • Paperback • June 2008 • $58.00 • (£36.00) - Currently out of stock. Copies will arrive soon.
Ernst Bernard Haas was born in Frankfurt, Germany, in 1924. Haas and his family immigrated to the United States in 1938 where he attended the University of Chicago prior to working in the US Army Military Intelligence Service from 1943-1946. He received his PhD in public law and government in 1952 from Columbia University, where he had also received his BS and MA. Haas began his academic career in 1951 at UC Berkeley, where he remained until his death in 2003. He was director of the UC Berkeley Institute for International Studies from 1969-1973 and Robson Professor of Government. A leading authority on international relations theory, Haas was concerned with the concepts and process of international integration and is the founder of neofunctionalism as an approach to the study of integration. Haas was a fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and he served as a consultant to many bodies in academia, publishing, government and international organizations, including the US Department of State, the United Nations and the Commission on Global Governance.
contents
New introduction
Preface
Part one: Functionalism and the theory of integration
Chapter one Functionalism
Chapter two Functionalism refined
Chapter three Functionalism and international systems
Chapter four Functionalism and organizations
Chapter five Functionalism and the international labor organization:
a paradigm
Part two: Functionalism and the international labor organization
Chapter six Organizational ideology, 1919–48
Chapter seven Organizational ideology, 1948–63
Chapter eight The organizational clients
Chapter nine International labor standards
Chapter ten International collective bargaining
Chapter eleven Human rights
Chapter twelve Freedom of association
Part three: The utility of functionalism
Chapter thirteen World integration and international organization
Chapter fourteen Functionalism, nationalism, and historical sociology
Appendix The Constitution of the International Labor Organization
Notes
Index