OAR@UM Collection:
/library/oar/handle/123456789/44415
2025-12-28T03:08:34ZBook review : Weaving intellectual property policy in small island developing states
/library/oar/handle/123456789/45088
Title: Book review : Weaving intellectual property policy in small island developing states
Abstract: This book tackles the area of intellectual property and intellectual property policy as it
relates to the smaller independent Pacific Island countries. It starts with a basic definition of
intellectual property and intellectual property rights, and goes on to illustrate how these relate
to the customs, culture, education, business and the general development of these islands. In
particular, it looks at how the global intellectual property regimes that are often imposed on
these countries not only effect their economic and political development framework, but also
have strong implications on the norms, realities, and intrinsic knowledge and beliefs of the
populations of these islands. Arguments and criticisms made in the text are supported by
empirical case studies specifically relating the patent regime to issues of health and medicine,
and the copyright regime to education and access to educational material.2018-11-01T00:00:00ZBook review : The influence of small states on superpowers : Jamaica and U.S. foreign policy
/library/oar/handle/123456789/44922
Title: Book review : The influence of small states on superpowers : Jamaica and U.S. foreign policy
Abstract: For scholars of small states and their foreign policies, this book is a must read. The text
is theoretically, empirically and bibliographically rich. Bernal’s primary aim is to challenge the
received wisdom of international relations theory that small states cannot effectively influence
the foreign policies of superpowers like the United States. To mount this challenge, Bernal
provides an in-depth examination of what he claims were successful attempts by Jamaica to
influencing US foreign policy in the areas of foreign aid, debt relief, narcotics cooperation, and
trade related to expanding the Caribbean Basin Initiative (CBI).2018-11-01T00:00:00ZBook review : Democracy in small states : persisting against all odds
/library/oar/handle/123456789/44918
Title: Book review : Democracy in small states : persisting against all odds
Abstract: The book provides a thorough analysis of a neglected field in political science, small
state studies and international relations. I purposefully include international relations due to the
wide scope of this research encompassing all parts of the world.
This book is theoretically rich. The authors provide a comprehensive overview of the
established literature and use it to examine their cases. At the same time, they engage in theory-building.
I would also argue that the book is radical. It offers a powerful challenge to the existing
precepts of democratisation theory. The authors do so by arguing that small states are
exceptional and that is not enough to study or collect information about formal institutional
setups and rules. They challenge the standard theoretical explanations that economic growth,
cultural diversity, colonial legacy and institutional design, the presence of an institutionalized
party system and geographic location have explanatory power when it comes to explaining why
small states are more democratic than large states. These variables, according to the authors,
explain neither the democratic successes nor failures, according to the findings.
Description: The three reviews of this book appearing here were presented at its
launch, held at the Centre for Small State Studies, Queen Mary’s University of London,
UK, on 18th October 2018.2018-11-01T00:00:00ZBook review : Corse et Sardaigne : îles autonomes? Un regard croisé
/library/oar/handle/123456789/44912
Title: Book review : Corse et Sardaigne : îles autonomes? Un regard croisé
Abstract: In this short book, Jean-François Ferrandi, an economist in the employ of the European
Commission, sets out both to compare Corsica and Sardinia and to analyze the relationship
between them.
At its narrowest point, the Strait of Bonifacio that separates the two islands is only
eleven kilometres wide, exactly half the shortest distance between New Zealand’s South Island
and North Island on the two sides of Cook Strait. And yet, Corsica and Sardinia are never
imagined as the archipelago they objectively constitute (together with a few smaller islands
that surround them.) Any map of Italy that included Corsica would conjure up suspicions of
Italian irredentism (and justifiably so, for Mussolini did occupy the island during World War
II), while maps of metropolitan France typically put Corsica in an inset because of its distance
from the Hexagon (p. 16), rendering its propinquity to Sardinia irrelevant. Straits may separate
islands, but they connect populations, and the Strait of Bonifacio is no exception (pp. 18-20).2018-11-01T00:00:00Z