Global Ordering: Institutions and Autonomy in a Changing World

Capa
William Donald Coleman, Louis W. Pauly
UBC Press, 2008 - 331 páginas

This innovative, interdisciplinary work explores key institutional fault lines between the tectonic plates of globalization and the insistent demands for individual and collective autonomy.

Despite myriad global forces influencing the lives of individuals, societies, and polities, people continue to value their personal and communal independence. They insist on shaping the conditions of their existence to the fullest extent possible. At the same time, many formal and informal institutions - from transnational legal and financial regimes to new governance arrangements for aboriginal communities in environmentally sensitive regions - are evolving, adapting to meet new challenges, or failing to adjust rapidly enough.

Global Ordering examines the key institutions and organizations that mediate the ever-more complex relationship between globalization and autonomy. Bringing together an outstanding group of scholars, this ground-breaking book contributes significantly to the work of re-imagining the circumstances under which integrative systemic forces can be brought into alignment with irreducible commitments to individual and collective autonomy. It is important work that maps the new frontier of globalization studies.

Louis W. Pauly is Canada Research Chair in Globalization and Governance at the University of Toronto. William D. Coleman is Canada Research Chair in Global Governance and Public Policy at McMaster University.

Contributors: Diana Brydon, Guy Gensey, Stephen Clarkson, Ian Cooper, A. Claire Cutler, Sarah Eaton, Ulf Hedetoft, Caren Irr, Natalia Loukacheva, Tony Porter, Petra Rethmann, Emily Sinclair, Michael Webb, Gilbert R. Winham

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Acerca do autor (2008)

Louis W. Pauly is Canada Research Chair in Globalization and Governance at the University of Toronto. William D. Coleman is CIGI Chair in Globalization and Public Policy at the Balsillie School of International Affairs and professor in the Department of Political Science at the University of Waterloo.

Contributors: Diana Brydon, Guy Gensey, Stephen Clarkson, Ian Cooper, A. Claire Cutler, Sarah Eaton, Ulf Hedetoft, Caren Irr, Natalia Loukacheva, Tony Porter, Petra Rethmann, Emily Sinclair, Michael Webb, and Gilbert R. Winham

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