Conflict and change in the 1990s : ethics, laws and institutions
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Bibliographic Information
Conflict and change in the 1990s : ethics, laws and institutions
Macmillan Press, 1993
Available at / 14 libraries
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Library, Institute of Developing Economies, Japan External Trade Organization遡
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Note
Includes index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
In this text economists, lawyers, political philosophers and social theorists examine the borderline between traditional economic theory and the particular problems of developing countries. The ethics of redistribution, and the impact on the development process of the interaction between national state bureaucracy and international institutions are thus considered in an interdisciplinary approach. This gives new insights on topical issues for the 1990s such as problems of financing international environmental control and the hazards of deregulation. Anthony Carty is the editor of "Law and Development" and "Post-Modern Law".
Table of Contents
- A challenge to researchers willing to be activists, Richard Jolly
- Adam Smith - forebear of development studies, H.W. Singer
- equity, equality and appropriate distribution, Des Gasper
- are government aid and private charity morally on a par?, Nigel Dower
- some aspects of the present discussion of lawyers on the place of law in development, Anthony Carty
- the aid and trade provision as strategic policy, Oliver Morrissey
- multilateral development banks and Canadian foreign aid, Jean-Philippe Therien and Maryse Robert
- economic nationalism and the regulation of multinational enterprises, P.T. Muchlinski
- perestroika and the strategies for Third World development, Vaman Rao
- the role of the south in a chaotic world, Frances Stewart
- liberalization of agricultural markets - an institutional approach, Anne M. Thompson and Lawrence D. Smith
- north-south co-operation in tackling threats to the global environment - a legal perspective on current trends and prospects, John Woodliffe
- transfers versus licences as incentives to governments for environmental correctives, Anthony Clunies Ross.
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