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Dive into the research topics where Katja Weber is active.

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Featured researches published by Katja Weber.


Journal of European Integration | 2013

Recalibrating Sovereignty-Related Norms: Europe, Asia and Non-Traditional Security Challenges

Katja Weber

Abstract This paper investigates how to address non-traditional security (NTS) challenges where the principal concern is to safeguard individuals. Since unilateral action cannot effectively deal with piracy, terrorism, cross-border conflicts, etc, there is a need for multilateral responses. Yet, time and again, the insistence on non-interference in the domestic affairs of countries has proven a major obstacle. European Union members, conceptualizing sovereignty in terms of ‘constitutional independence’, have made some progress addressing these challenges. Although, recently, some progress has also been made in Asia Pacific, there sovereignty often is still being used as a semantic weapon. Since states not only have rights but obligations, I argue, there is a need for a careful recalibration of sovereignty-related norms that stand in the way of improved human rights. Focusing on a specific issue area within NTS challenges, the Responsibility to Protect, I illustrate how a recalibration of sovereignty-related norms might take place.


Journal of European Integration | 2002

German Unification 1815-1871 and Its Relevance for Integration Theory

Mark Hallerberg; Katja Weber

This paper reconsiders German unification during the period 1815-1871. First, it makes explicit the comparison between the German Empire and the European Union. Actors faced remarkably similar institution-building problems in both organisations. The second part of the paper evaluates the usefulness of three arguments from two theoretical traditions in European Union integration studies to explain the course of German unification. Following an analytic narrative approach, it considers the relevant actors and the relevant decision points to evaluate two versions of intergovernmentalism, one focused on the security concerns of actors and one focused on economic concerns, as well as neo-functionalism. Economic interests did play a role even in the geopolitically heavy 19th century. Neo-functionalism was less useful, although some structures like pan-German interest groups in support of further integration did develop as neo-functionalists would predict.


International Studies Quarterly | 1997

Hierarchy Amidst Anarchy: A Transaction Costs Approach to International Security Cooperation

Katja Weber


Archive | 2000

Hierarchy Amidst Anarchy: Transaction Costs and Institutional Choice

Katja Weber


Archive | 2007

Governing Europe's Neighbourhood: Partners or Periphery?

Katja Weber; Michael Smith; Michael Baun


Journal of European Public Policy | 2001

Explaining variation in institutional integration in the European Union: why firms may prefer European solutions

Katja Weber; Mark Hallerberg


Archive | 2007

Governance Theories, Regional Integration, and EU Foreign Policy

Michael Smith; Katja Weber


Archive | 2007

Cultures of Order: Leadership, Language, and Social Reconstruction in Germany and Japan

Katja Weber; Paul A. Kowert


Issues & Studies | 2010

East Asian Security Revisited in Light of the European Experience

Katja Weber; Jonathan Huang


Archive | 2007

Cultures of order

Katja Weber; Paul A. Kowert

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