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This clustering approach is of particular interest because it is able to sum up
thousands of statements, speeches, and resolutions in order to produce an artificial
map of political regions. The map does not necessarily signify that two member
states in the same group always behave in the same way or share common views on
the vast range of topics examined in the UNGA. However, it does provide an initial
delineation that should be kept in mind for in-depth study.
Other approaches appear valuable and can provide relevant results, such as
investigating resolutions’ sponsors by topic or similarities among resolutions to see
whether or not the same type of resolution (on human rights or economic develop-
ment) tends to produce highly interconnected graphs. However, studying voting
behavior provides only a partial picture of relational patterns in the UNGA because
only one third of resolutions are included.
Whereas studying voting behavior is a traditional way to view relations in the
UNGA, the study of speeches remains less developed even though the General
Assembly can be considered an arena of words rather than decision-making. Each
year, representatives from nearly all countries (Taiwan excepted) issue statements
on a broad range of issues, and these speeches can be considered the official posi-
tion of those states’ governments. But states are not the only speakers, and the study
of speeches supports multiscalar analysis.
Speech Dynamics in the UNGA: A Network Approach
Various individuals make statements in the UNGA: representatives of states (nearly
80 % of all statements during a session for the period under consideration), repre-
sentatives of groups, of institutions from the UN system, and, less often, representa-
tives from NGOs (e.g., the Red Cross) or institutions external to the UN system
(e.g., the European Commission). In the last two decades, a change in speech
dynamics has occurred. Groups issued more and more statements on a growing
range of topics, and states’ representatives have supported their statements more
and more often, two patterns that could be a relevant indicator confirming the politi-
cal world regionalization hypothesis. Minutes of meetings from 1990 to 2010 were
reviewed to collect all speeches that affirmed “state A supports group a,” and these
data were studied as bipartite graphs. Occurrences of such speeches were trans-
formed into a state-group matrix in which each case indicates the number of times
a state A supported a statement made by a group a. The poor quality of documents
from older sessions prevents automatic word-searching, and data-gathering was
therefore manual and time consuming. L. Beauguitte
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Buch Knowledge and Networks"
Knowledge and Networks
- Titel
- Knowledge and Networks
- Autoren
- Johannes Glückler
- Emmanuel Lazega
- Ingmar Hammer
- Verlag
- Springer Open
- Ort
- Cham
- Datum
- 2017
- Sprache
- deutsch
- Lizenz
- CC BY 4.0
- ISBN
- 978-3-319-45023-0
- Abmessungen
- 15.5 x 24.1 cm
- Seiten
- 390
- Schlagwörter
- Human Geography, Innovation/Technology Management, Economic Geography, Knowledge, Discourse
- Kategorie
- Technik