Fr. 69.00

Regionalizing Global Crises - The Financial Crisis and New Frontiers in Regional Governance

English · Paperback / Softback

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Description

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How are global crises responded and dealt with? Are there any links between regionalism and global crises in terms of stimuli, processes, and consequences? This edited volume brings together a range of examples illustrating the development and importance of regional actors in the global governance of the political economy.

List of contents

1. Regionalising 'Global' Crisis: Interventions, Actors and Why they Matter; Toni Haastrup and Yong-Soo Eun 2. Old/ 'New' Regionalisms before and after the 'Global Crisis': from rebalancing to reordering?; Timothy M. Shaw 3. Understanding Economic Crisis in the era of Regionalisation: The Enigma of Regionalism; Andreas Themistocleous 4. Risk or Opportunity? Institutional Change and Europe's Financial Crisis, 2008-2012; Nikolaos Zahariadis and Theofanis Exadaktylos 5. Regionalising Financial Development in East Asia; Lena Rethel 6. The Impact of the Global Financial 'Crisis' in SSA: An Agenda for Growth; Diery Seck and Amie Gaye 7. Regional Financing Arrangements Post-Crisis: An Emerging Role in the Global Financial Architecture?; Marieke Zwartjes 8. Crises and Regional Governance Attempts: The Curious Case of Turkey; Pinar Emine Donmez 9. Regionalism in Retreat? Evidence from the European Neighbourhood; Panagiota Manoli Conclusion; Yong-Soo Eun, Toni Haastrup, and Marieke Zwartjes

About the author

Pinar E. Dönmez, Koc University, Istanbul
Theofanis Exadaktylos, University of Surrey, UK
Amie Gaye, Centre for Research on Political Economy (CREPOL), Senegal
Panagiota Manoli, University of the Aegean, Greece
Lena Rethel, University of Warwick, UK
Diery Seck, Center for Research on Political Economy (CREPOL), Senegal
Timothy M Shaw, University of Massachusetts, USA
Andreas Themistocleous, Independent Scholar, The Republic of Cyprus
Nikolaos Zahariadis, University of Alabama at Birmingham, USA
Marieke Zwartjes, United Nations University Institute on Comparative Regional Integration Studies (UNU-CRIS), Belgium

Summary

How are global crises responded and dealt with? Are there any links between regionalism and global crises in terms of stimuli, processes, and consequences? This edited volume brings together a range of examples illustrating the development and importance of regional actors in the global governance of the political economy.

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