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Introduces the idea of modes of governance to compare the causes and consequences of changes in global institutions.
Sommario
Introduction: the modes of global governance Michael Barnett, Jon Pevehouse and Kal Raustiala; 1. Governance shifts in security: military and security services and small arms compared Deborah Avant; 2. The Bretton woods moment: hierarchies, networks, and markets in the long twentieth century Miles Kahler; 3. Climate change governance: past, present and (hopefully) future Jessica Green; 4. A shadow of its former self: hierarchy and global trade Susanne Mueller and Jon Pevehouse; 5. The humanitarian club: hierarchy, networks, and exclusion Michael Barnett; 6. The supply of informal international governance: hierarchy plus networks in global governance Michael Manulak and Duncan Snidal; 7. Global governance, expert networks, and 'Fragile States' Leonard Seabrooke and Ole Jacob Sending; 8. Global health: a centralized network in search of hierarchy Surie Moon; 9. The governance of International Humanitarian Law: a century-old hybrid model Anne Quintin and Vincent Bernard; 10. Clean energy and the hybridization of global governance Lilliana Andonova; 11. Legitimacy and modes of global governance Jonas Tallberg; Conclusion: global governance and institutional diversity Orfeo Fioretos.
Info autore
Michael N. Barnett is University Professor of International Affairs and Political Science at the George Washington University. His previously published books include Rules for the World: International Organizations in World Politics (co-authored with Martha Finnemore, 2004) which won several prizes, and Power in Global Governance (co-edited with Raymond Duvall, Cambridge University Press, 2004).Jon Pevehouse is the Vilas Distinguished Achievement Professor in Political Science and Public Policy. His research interests are in the field of international relations and political methodology. He is the recipient of the Karl Deutsch Award and multiple teaching awards. He served as the editor of International Organization.Kal Raustiala is the Promise Institute Professor of Comparative and International Law at UCLA School of Law and Director of the UCLA Burkle Center for International Relations. His previously books include Does the Constitution Follow the Flag? (2009) and The Implementation and Effectiveness of International Environmental Commitments (co-edited with David G. Victor and Eugene B. Skolnikoff, 1998).
Riassunto
Global governance is changing, yet many disagree about how. This book introduces the idea of modes of governance, examining three different kinds – markets, hierarchies, and networks – and their evolution in contemporary world politics. This framework offers a fundamentally different way to analyse changes in global governance.
Testo aggiuntivo
'Never has Global Governance been more fractured and less effective. And never has it been more important as the world emerges from COVID at a dramatically unequal pace that is testimony to the failure of Global Governance. Global Governance in a World of Change is an uncompromising look at challenges and solutions to global governance across hierarchies, networks, and markets. Never has a book been more timely and more important.' Janice Gross Stein, Belzberg Professor of Conflict Management, Department of Political Science, University of Toronto