Global Liberalism and Political Order: Toward a New Grand Compromise?Steven Bernstein, Louis W. Pauly State University of New York Press, 1 feb. 2012 - 246 pagini Many years ago, John Gerard Ruggie coined the phrase "embedded liberalism" to describe the grand post-1945 political compromise between free-market liberalism and domestic political interventionism that stabilized the multilateral economic order. In Global Liberalism and Political Order, leading scholars of political economy and international relations assess the challenges facing today's increasingly interdependent world as globalization redefines the old political order. They address the unraveling and/or reinvention of a grand compromise in global governance from a variety of theoretical perspectives and issue areas, including trade, finance, networked governance, North-South relations, and the environment. Focusing on the foundations of political authority at the global level, the contributors imagine the implications of success or failure for international economic order and political stability. Ruggie, whose work inspired many of this book's scholars, contributes a chapter on the prospects for a new global—as opposed to international—grand bargain. |
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Pagina 4
... capacity of globalization began to crystallize in the collec- tive consciousness of world leaders and ordinary people alike, the strains on institutions designed for another age became more and more obvious. To paraphrase John Ruggie in ...
... capacity of globalization began to crystallize in the collec- tive consciousness of world leaders and ordinary people alike, the strains on institutions designed for another age became more and more obvious. To paraphrase John Ruggie in ...
Pagina 6
... capacities effectively to address social and environmental dilemmas unanticipated in 1945. Looking back, the United States employed enormous resources in the negotiation of the postwar economic order to entrench the principle of mul ...
... capacities effectively to address social and environmental dilemmas unanticipated in 1945. Looking back, the United States employed enormous resources in the negotiation of the postwar economic order to entrench the principle of mul ...
Pagina 11
... capacity beyond the state, legitimacy increases, not diminishes, in importance at the global level just as the mechanisms to produce it are much more difficult to create and sustain. Moreover, such mechanisms are not likely directly ...
... capacity beyond the state, legitimacy increases, not diminishes, in importance at the global level just as the mechanisms to produce it are much more difficult to create and sustain. Moreover, such mechanisms are not likely directly ...
Pagina 13
... capacity and technical knowledge, for developing countries meaningfully to participate in the governance of globalization (Sandbrook 2003). The continuing debate in the WTO over demands by developing coun- tries for “policy space” to ...
... capacity and technical knowledge, for developing countries meaningfully to participate in the governance of globalization (Sandbrook 2003). The continuing debate in the WTO over demands by developing coun- tries for “policy space” to ...
Pagina 14
... capacity to bear it. The record of operationalizing “special and differential treatment” for developing countries as a way to create policy space has proven double-edged, as it often comes at the expense of market access or other ...
... capacity to bear it. The record of operationalizing “special and differential treatment” for developing countries as a way to create policy space has proven double-edged, as it often comes at the expense of market access or other ...
Cuprins
PART II Power and Authority in Global Governance | 49 |
PART III Integration and Fragmentation in Global Governance | 133 |
Works Cited | 187 |
Contributors | 213 |
Index | 215 |
Alte ediții - Afișează-le pe toate
Global Liberalism and Political Order: Toward a New Grand Compromise? Steven Bernstein,Steven F. Bernstein,Louis W. Pauly Previzualizare limitată - 2008 |
Global Liberalism and Political Order: Toward a New Grand Compromise? Steven Bernstein,Louis W. Pauly Nu există previzualizare disponibilă - 2007 |
Termeni și expresii frecvente
activities actors agencies agreements American areas argued authority Bank become Bretton Woods institutions Canadians capacity challenge chapter citizens civil compromise concerns context continuing corporate debate developing countries discussions dollarization domestic economic effects efforts embedded liberalism emerging engagement environment environmental especially European example existing firms forces foreign fragmentation Fund global governance goals greater human rights idea important increased individuals industry initiative integration interests involved issues labor Latin Left legitimacy less limited major means meeting ment monetary multilateral negotiations networks norms noted officials organizations percent political possible practices principles problems production promoting question reform regional relations remain response role Ruggie sector shared shift social society standards structure sustainable tion trade transnational United Nations University values York
Pasaje populare
Pagina 47 - Constitution, the principles concerning the fundamental rights which are the subject of those conventions, namely: a. freedom of association and the effective recognition of the right to collective bargaining; b.
Pagina 178 - Trade policy measures for environmental purposes should not constitute a means of arbitrary or unjustifiable discrimination or a disguised restriction on international trade.
Pagina 116 - In modern social life, the notion of lifestyle takes on a particular significance. The more tradition loses its hold, and the more daily life is reconstituted in terms of the dialectical interplay of the local and the global, the more individuals are forced to negotiate lifestyle choices among a diversity of options.
Pagina 116 - The ethic of individual self-fulfilment and achievement is the most powerful current in modern society. The choosing, deciding, shaping human being who aspires to be the author of his or her own life, the creator of an individual identity, is the central character of our time. It is the fundamental cause behind changes in the family and the global gender revolution in relation to work and politics. Any attempt to create a new sense of social cohesion has to start from the recognition that individualism,...
Pagina 111 - is one of the best-documented facts in the sociological study of business" (ibid., p. 495). And, in a more recent presentation of his theory of embeddedness, he states that "economic institutions do not emerge automatically in response to economic needs. Rather, they are constructed by individuals whose action is both facilitated and constrained by the structure and resources available in social networks in which they are embedded
Pagina 112 - ... changes in the monetary and trade regimes against some ideal of orthodox liberalism, then we are bound to be disappointed if not shocked by recent trends. But we are also bound to be misled. For orthodox liberalism has not governed international economic relations at any time during the postwar period. My starting point, of course, is the institutional nexus of embedded liberalism. Within this framework, it will be recalled, multilateralism and domestic stability are linked to and conditioned...
Pagina 101 - ... contained in the Millennium Declaration, demands a new partnership between developed and developing countries. We commit ourselves to sound policies, good governance at all levels and the rule of law. We also commit ourselves to mobilizing domestic resources, attracting international flows, promoting international trade as an engine for development...