Handbook of OPEC and the Global Energy Order -

Handbook of OPEC and the Global Energy Order

Past, Present and Future Challenges
Buch | Hardcover
376 Seiten
2020
Routledge (Verlag)
978-0-367-19565-6 (ISBN)
236,90 inkl. MwSt
This handbook discusses and analyzes the history and development of OPEC, its global importance, and the role it has played, and still plays, in the global energy market.
The Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC), celebrating its 60th anniversary in 2020, is one of the most recognizable acronyms in international politics. The organization has undergone decades of changing importance, from political irrelevance to the spotlight of world attention and back; and from economic boom for its members to deep political and financial crisis.

This handbook, with chapters provided by scholars and analysts from different backgrounds and specializations, discusses and analyzes the history and development of OPEC, its global importance, and the role it has played, and still plays, in the global energy market. Part I focuses on the relationship between OPEC and its member states. Part II examines the relationship between OPEC and its customers, the consuming countries and their governments, while Part III addresses the relationship between OPEC and its competitors and potential partners, the non-OPEC producers, and the international oil companies. The final section, Part IV, looks at OPEC and the governance of international energy.

Chapter 20 of this book is freely available as a downloadable Open Access PDF at http://www.taylorfrancis.com under a Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial-No Derivatives (CC-BY-NC-ND) 4.0 license.

Dag Harald Claes is Professor in the Department of Political Science at the University of Oslo. He is a former Research Fellow of the Fridtjof Nansen Institute and Senior Research Fellow in the ARENA program at the University of Oslo. Professor Claes has published studies of oil-producer cooperation, conflict and cooperation in oil and gas markets, Arctic oil and gas, the energy relations between Norway and the European Union, and the role of oil in Middle East conflicts. Giuliano Garavini teaches international history at Roma Tre University in Rome. He has taught and received fellowships at various institutions including NYU Abu Dhabi, the European University Institute (EUI), the Graduate Institute in Geneva, the University of Bologna and the University of Padua. He has mainly written about European integration, decolonization and the Global South, the history of energy and petroleum.

OPEC and the Global Energy Order, Past, Present and Future Challenges
Dag Harald Claes and Giuliano Garavini



Part I: OPEC and the Member Countries






Oilmen, Petroleum Arabism and OPEC: New Political and Public Cultures of Oil in the Arab World, 1959-64
Nelida Fuccaro




Saudi Arabia’s Role in OPEC’s Evolution: OPEC and the Global Energy Order from its Origins to the Present Time
Majid Al-Moneef




Trade not Aid: OPEC and its Contribution towards Restructuring the Iranian Economy in the 1960s
Touraj Atabaki




Algeria and OPEC
Hocine Malti




From Norm Entrepreneur to a Reluctant Overachiever: Venezuela in the History of OPEC
Antulio Rosales




Nigeria and the Uncertain Future of the Oil Market
Michael Olorunfemi





Part II: OPEC and Consuming Countries




Be Prepared! Emergency Stockpiles of Oil Among Western Consumer Countries prior to the International Energy Agency System
Hans Otto Frøland, Mats Ingulstad




Talking about OPEC without Talking to OPEC? The (Non-)Relationship between the International Energy Agency and OPEC from 1974-90
Henning Türk




How OPEC Made the G-7: Western Coordination in the Wake of the ‘Oil Shock’
Federico Romero




The US Response to OPEC
Victor McFarland




OPEC and China: From Ideological Support to Economic Cooperation
Bao Maohong




The European Communities and OPEC: from Entangled International Organizations to Liberalism (1960s-80s)
Yves Bouvier, Alain Beltran





Part III: OPEC, non-OPEC and the International Oil Companies




The Changing Relationship Between OPEC Countries and International Oil Companies: The Dynamics of Bargaining Power in an Evolving Market
Carole Nakhle, Francesco Petrini




Ignoring, Countering and Undercutting OPEC: Britain, BP, Shell and the Shifting Global Energy Order (1960-86)
Jonathan R. Kuiken




Consumer Countries, Producer Countries and the International Oil Industry: Italy’s Role in the Evolution of Oil Contracts (1955-75)
Elisabetta Bini, Marta Musso




Between the Superpower and Third-Worldism: Mexico and OPEC (1974-82)
Claudia Jezabel Piña Navarro




From Foes to Friends: The Relationship Between OPEC and Norway
Dag Harald Claes




Taking a Leaf out of OPEC's Book? The Significance of Developing Producer Country Models for State Involvement in North Sea Oil Production
Eivind Thomassen




OPEC and Russia: A Happy Pro Forma Marriage
Mikhail Krutikhin and Indra Overland



Part IV: OPEC and International Energy Governance




Beyond the Texas Railroad Commission: Thirty Years of American Precedent for OPEC
Ellen R. Wald




The Road Not Taken: Frank Hendryx and the Proposal to Restructure Petroleum Concessions in the Middle East after the Venezuelan Pattern
Juan Carlos Boué




OPEC’s Struggle for International Recognition (1960-65): How a Denied Seat Agreement in Switzerland Influenced the Early Development of OPEC
Fabian Trinkler




When Modern Terrorism Began: the OPEC Hostage Taking of 1975
Thomas Riegler




OPEC and the Financialization of the Oil Market
Dag Harald Claes and John H. Moe




OPEC as a Political Club
Jeff D. Colgan




OPEC – From Peak to Peak: The History of 'Peak Oil' and its Relevance for OPEC
Øystein Noreng




What Role for OPEC in the Last Generation of Oil?

Greg Muttitt

Erscheinungsdatum
Reihe/Serie Routledge International Handbooks
Zusatzinfo 13 Tables, black and white; 14 Line drawings, black and white
Verlagsort London
Sprache englisch
Maße 189 x 246 mm
Gewicht 780 g
Themenwelt Sozialwissenschaften Politik / Verwaltung Europäische / Internationale Politik
ISBN-10 0-367-19565-8 / 0367195658
ISBN-13 978-0-367-19565-6 / 9780367195656
Zustand Neuware
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