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Neo-liberalism, state power and global governance
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Neo-liberalism, state power and global governance
Abstract
The volume explores the relationship between neo-liberalism, state power and global governance. It seeks to show how neo-liberalism has failed to deliver a framework for state power and global governance capable of delivering stability and enduring prosperity. It also contends that the role of politics in general, and the state and global governance in particular, should be defined more broadly than the simple neo-liberal construction of institutions for the market. Part One explores the pattern of national differences in the exercise of state power in a variety of industrialized and developing economies, despite the pressure to converge towards the dominant neo-liberal paradigm. Part Two analyses a variety of trans-national policy prescriptions for neo-liberalism and state power. Part Three explores whether the governance of labour markets is a special case in the global economy. Part Four sets out the need for institutional reform of the neo-liberal order in trade and finance. The volume concludes that there is the prospect of a more plural approach to state power and global governance, and one that recognizes the importance of the public domain of citizenship for delivering the global public goods of security, prosperity and environmental sustainability in the twenty-first century. © 2007 Springer. All rights reserved.
Authors
Lee S; McBride S
Pagination
pp. 1-270
Publication Date
December 1, 2007
DOI
10.1007/978-1-4020-6220-9
Associated Experts
Stephen Mcbride
Professor Emeritus, Faculty of Social Sciences
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