Beyond global governance : prospects for global government

Bibliographic Information

Beyond global governance : prospects for global government

James A. Yunker

University Press of America, c2014

  • : clothbound

Available at  / 1 libraries

Search this Book/Journal

Note

Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

In these ground-breaking essays, James A. Yunker issues a powerful challenge to conventional thinking on world government. Based on an innovative plan for a limited world government tentatively designated the "Federal Union of Democratic Nations," this book envisions a legitimate world government a quantum leap beyond the United Nations of today. The Federal Union proposed would operate under some key restraints, such as a dual voting system in the world legislature, and two key reserved rights of the member nations: to withdraw from the Federal Union at their own unilateral discretion, and to maintain independent control over whatever military forces they feel are necessary to their national security. Yunker demonstrates how these restraints would minimize the possibility that the world government would result in such adverse outcomes as global tyranny, bureaucratic overload, or cultural homogenization.

Table of Contents

Preface Abstracts and Acknowledgements 1 Beyond Global Governance: Prospects for Global Government Governance without Government A New Opportunity? "Traditional" World Government Proposals A New Approach to World Government The Chicken or the Egg? A Stable and Benign "New World Order"? 2 Recent Consideration of World Government in the IR Literature: A Critical Appraisal Introduction IR Theory and World Government The Inevitability Proposition Between the U.N. and the Omnipotent World State Conclusion 3 Evolutionary World Government Introduction A Brief History of World Government A Brief History of Socialism Recent Developments in World Federalist Thought Limited versus Unlimited World Government Prospects for Global Economic Equality The Case for (Limited) Federal World Government 4 From National Sovereignty to Global Government: Is There a Plausible Transition Path? A Pragmatic Plan toward World Government What Can World Federalists Do? Conclusion 5 Should the United States Champion World Government? The Omnipotent World State Limited World Government A Global Marshall Plan Hegemony versus Guidance Index About the Author

by "Nielsen BookData"

Details

Page Top