Reglobalization
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Reglobalization
(Rethinking globalizations / edited by Barry Gills)
Routledge, 2021
- : hbk
Available at / 2 libraries
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Library, Institute of Developing Economies, Japan External Trade Organization図
: hbkG||327||R191989723
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Note
Includes bibliographical references and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
This book charts the way towards a better, repurposed globalization, which it calls 'reglobalization', and shows how this can be built, incrementally but realistically, via reforms to the partial and fragile existing structures of global governance.
In making this argument, the book firmly rejects the new fashion for a politics of deglobalization, which has appeared of late in both left-wing and right-wing variants. Instead, it suggests that a reformed Group of 20 (G20), for all its current inadequacies, can still provide the critical coordinating function that the management of a process of reglobalization requires. The book argues that globalization is too important to be lost; rather, it needs to be saved from its capture by neoliberalism and rebuilt around different values for a post-neoliberal era. The emergence of global pandemic as an issue only goes to emphasise the necessity, importance and urgency of the reglobalization project.
Reglobalization is essential reading for everybody living in the era of globalization, which is all of us, and worried about its many economic, social and political problems, which is a growing number of us.
The chapters in this book were originally published in the journal Globalizations.
Table of Contents
Foreword
Matthew Louis Bishop and Anthony Payne
1. The political economies of different globalizations: theorizing reglobalization
Matthew Louis Bishop and Anthony Payne
2. Creating a race to the top in global tax governance: the political case for tax spillover assessments
Andrew Baker and Richard Murphy
3. The IMF, tackling inequality, and post-neoliberal 'reglobalization': the paradoxes of political legitimation within economistic parameters
Ben Clift and Te-Anne Robles
4. Reglobalizing trade: progressive global governance in an age of uncertainty
James Scott and Rorden Wilkinson
5. Towards a feminist global trade politics
Erin Hannah, Adrienne Roberts and Silke Trommer
6. Reforming global climate governance in an age of bullshit
Hayley Stevenson
7. Philosophies of migration governance in a globalizing world
Antoine Pecoud
8. Steering towards reglobalization: can a reformed G20 rise to the occasion?
Matthew Louis Bishop and Anthony Payne
by "Nielsen BookData"