This thesis contributes to industrial policy by studying conditionality – the conditions attached to state aid – and linking this to the concepts of state capacity and political salience. First,...Show moreThis thesis contributes to industrial policy by studying conditionality – the conditions attached to state aid – and linking this to the concepts of state capacity and political salience. First, this thesis addresses conditionality issues in the context of climate change, as the literature to date has focused on other development challenges such as industrial upgrading. Second, this thesis contributes to the literature by focusing on the study of conditionality in relation to advanced industrialised economies, as the existing literature is mainly focused on developing countries. In particular, this thesis aims to highlight the types of conditions that are relevant in this case compared to those identified in the literature. Third, the thesis emphasises the importance of the politics of conditionality, or the political will to activate existing state capacity. The thesis shows that an advanced economy such as the Netherlands has the state capacity to impose a policy of strong conditionality on business. In the studied case, however, this capacity has been activated by political salience, which has created a social coalition in support of this policy to impose strong conditionality.Show less
Research master thesis | Literary Studies (research) (MA)
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2025-03-20T00:00:00Z, 2025-03-20T00:00:00Z
This thesis explores the conceptual mechanisms that underlie utopian world-making and rest on grammatical structures, identified as ‘grammars of utopia’. Examining case studies from modern and...Show moreThis thesis explores the conceptual mechanisms that underlie utopian world-making and rest on grammatical structures, identified as ‘grammars of utopia’. Examining case studies from modern and contemporary English and Greek literature, the thesis shows utopia to be both beyond and within grammatical limits: the conception of an ideal society, which a utopia is, is a gesture away from a given reality – its limitations, more precisely – as well as towards an alternative one, and this latter is the one drawing limits to the utopian thought anew. Herbert George Wells’ A Modern Utopia (1905), James Joyce’s Ulysses (1922), Aldous Huxley’s Island (1962), and Sotiris Dimitriou’s The Silence of the Dry Weed (2011) map five categories without which we cannot make sense of or construe utopian narratives: modality, polarity, conditionality, subjectivity, and mood. Therefore, close reading these works provides a first grammatical ‘study of Utopian fantasy mechanics’, as proposed by Fredric Jameson (2005, xiii). Αt the same time, all texts try (and more or less succeed) to remap these five configurations and invite possibilities of alternative grammars of utopia that are yet to come.Show less
This thesis examines the European Commission’s influence in Cyprus during the economic reforms in 2013. It aims to answer the question whether the EC influenced Cyprus and if yes, what mechanisms...Show moreThis thesis examines the European Commission’s influence in Cyprus during the economic reforms in 2013. It aims to answer the question whether the EC influenced Cyprus and if yes, what mechanisms did the EC use to achieve that. The theory of International Organizations’ influence was used as a guide of mechanisms that EC could use to influence a member state. Delegation of authority, conditionality, experts and information and rational-legal authority are the four mechanisms used in this qualitative study to explore the reforms in banking, tax, foreign direct investments and the real estate sectors. This qualitative case study uses the method of coding documents to make data-driven decisions based on the literature concepts and tries to find the relations between them. Twenty-seven official documents and newspaper articles are coded and linked to the four mechanisms. The collected data provides three major findings. Firstly, the EC used all four instruments; therefore, all the assumptions made in this research are correct. However, the extent of use regarding each mechanism differed. The second research result drives to effective use of tactics "delegation of authority" and "conditionality", by EC to influence Cyprus. That was an early assumption emanated from the theory and confirmed by the analysis. Last but not least, this study showed a limited use of domestic experts and information during this process and an even less exercise of the rational- legal authority as it founded very few times in all the documents. These findings suggest future research related to the EU influence in its member countries as well as the difference in influence between a small member country compared to a larger one.Show less
Whereas the rhetoric of democracy has entered ASEAN’s agenda through the ASEAN Charter, this thesis will argue that not much democratisation has taken place in ASEAN. The high level of...Show moreWhereas the rhetoric of democracy has entered ASEAN’s agenda through the ASEAN Charter, this thesis will argue that not much democratisation has taken place in ASEAN. The high level of authoritarian ASEAN member states obstructs the process of democratisation. The unbinding and unconditional nature of ASEAN’s way of operating, also known as the ASEAN way, allows a system unsusceptible to democratic change to persist within the organisation. ASEAN’s initiatives relating to democracy have left actors involved in democratic processes disappointed due to, amongst other reasons, the interference of ASEAN’s governments. ASEAN’s power processes reflect a shared reluctance to institutionalisation. The research suggests that a higher level of democratisation in ASEAN is only likely if the number of democratic member states increases.Show less
In Nicaragua, the field of development aid has undergone a considerable change over the last decades. The donor landscape has become more diverse, and the types and compositions of aid have changed...Show moreIn Nicaragua, the field of development aid has undergone a considerable change over the last decades. The donor landscape has become more diverse, and the types and compositions of aid have changed. As a result of a radical new direction that was taken by the latest Nicaraguan government in which country ownership became a more central focus to development, many traditional aid donors have scaled down their aid to Nicaragua, while emerging donors, mainly Venezuela, have become increasingly involved as providers of largely unconditional aid. This paper researches how effective project aid, budget support and Venezuelan aid to Nicaragua have been in lowering poverty levels, by testing these on the factors of conditionality, alignment with the recipient government’s objectives, harmonisation and country ownership. On the basis of these four factors, this research finds that both project aid and budget support have generally had limited effects in Nicaragua, whereas Venezuelan aid seems to have had more significant effects on reducing poverty levels.Show less
This thesis investigates the reasons for non-compliance with IMF conditionality in PRGF programmes. After describing the main arguements of constructivists and rationalists on the issue of...Show moreThis thesis investigates the reasons for non-compliance with IMF conditionality in PRGF programmes. After describing the main arguements of constructivists and rationalists on the issue of compliance it makes use of two case studies, Kenya and Tanzania, and uses the method of controlled comparison to identify factors that influence the extent of compliance. A comparison of these two case studies shows that ownership over the reform programme, influence of donors, and the lack of consequences in case of non-compliance are important factors in determining the extent of compliance.Regarding the theoretical framework, it concludes that constructivist arguments are better at explaining why countries do not comply with conditions, whereas rationalist arguments explain how this is possible.Show less
In the European Union (EU) accession process the EU tries to transfer EU rules to the candidate states through conditionality. The acquis legislation and laws are not hard to implement and...Show moreIn the European Union (EU) accession process the EU tries to transfer EU rules to the candidate states through conditionality. The acquis legislation and laws are not hard to implement and therefore almost all candidate states did comply with this part of the acquis. However, there is a second element of the acquis, the democratic conditionality, concerning the fundamental political principles of the EU, the norms of human rights and liberal democracy. According to the EU one of those fundamental political principles is the need to curb corruption. In what way is the EU capable of influencing the anti-corruption policy of the candidate states? Is the EU thereby affecting corruption in the candidate states? In this thesis the role of the EU on the candidate states’ anti-corruption policy is tested. Is there any relation between the role of the EU, compliance of the member states and the real level of corruption? Statistical analysis and five short case studies show that there is a difference between simple rules, laws on corruption on the one hand and perceived corruption in a state on the other. The two are not related per se and therefore the EU influence in fundamentally curbing corruption is limited. The only way corruption can be stopped is when EU efforts are back upped by national actors.Show less