Global governance in crisis

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Global governance in crisis

edited by André Broome, Liam Clegg and Lena Rethel

Routledge, 2015

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Includes index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

New practices and institutions of global governance are often one of the most enduring consequences of global crises. The contemporary architecture of global governance has been widely criticized for failing to prevent the global financial crisis and Eurozone debt crises, for failing to provide robust international crisis management and leadership, and for failing to generate a consensus around new ideas for regulating markets in the broader public interest. Global Governance in Crisis explores the impact of the global financial crisis of 2008-2009 on the architecture and practice of contemporary global governance, and traces the long-term implications of the crisis for the future of the global order. Combining innovative theoretical approaches with rich empirical cases, the book examines how the impact of the global financial crisis has played out across a range of global governance domains, including development, finance and debt, trade, and security. This book was published as a special issue of Global Society.

Table of Contents

1. Global Governance and the Politics of Crisis 2. Crisis is Governance: Sub-prime, the Traumatic Event, and Bare Life 3. IMF Surveillance in Crisis: The Past, Present and Future of the Reform Process 4. Post-crisis Reform at the IMF: Learning to be (Seen to be) a Long-term Development Partner 5. Global Trade Governance and the Challenges of African Activism in the Doha Development Agenda Negotiations 6. Multilateralism in Crisis? The Character of US International Engagement under Obama 7. Each Time is Different! The Shifting Boundaries of Emerging Market Debt

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