TY - BOOK AU - Caporaso,James A. AU - Cohen,Benjamin J. AU - Elkins,Zachary AU - Garrett,Geoffrey AU - Gourevitch,Peter AU - Hiscox,Michael J. AU - Kahler,Miles AU - Keohane,Robert O. AU - Lake,David A. AU - Martin,Lisa L. AU - Mattli,Walter AU - Mcnamara,Kathleen R. AU - Nye Jr,Joseph S. AU - Rodden,Jonathan AU - Rogowski,Ronald AU - Simmons,Beth A. AU - Van Houten,Pieter TI - Governance in a Global Economy: Political Authority in Transition SN - 9780691234687 U1 - 327.1 22 PY - 2021///] CY - Princeton, NJ : PB - Princeton University Press, KW - Corporate governance KW - Globalization KW - Political aspects KW - International business enterprises KW - Government policy KW - Management KW - POLITICAL SCIENCE / International Relations / General KW - bisacsh KW - Accountability KW - Bank for International Settlements KW - Business economics KW - Capital control KW - Capital cost KW - Capital gain KW - Capital market KW - Capitalism KW - Central bank KW - Competition (economics) KW - Consumer organization KW - Consumption (economics) KW - Corporate capitalism KW - Corporate social responsibility KW - Currency KW - Decentralization KW - Developed country KW - Economic Life KW - Economic cost KW - Economic development KW - Economic geography KW - Economic globalization KW - Economic history KW - Economic integration KW - Economic interventionism KW - Economic liberalization KW - Economic model KW - Economic planning KW - Economic policy KW - Economic problem KW - Economics KW - Economy and Society KW - Economy KW - Environmental economics KW - Euromarket KW - Externality KW - Financial World KW - Financial capital KW - Financial market participants KW - Fiscal policy KW - Foreign direct investment KW - Free trade debate KW - Global Exchange KW - Global Finance (magazine) KW - Global Policy KW - Global financial system KW - Global governance KW - Global production network KW - Global warming KW - Globalism KW - Governance KW - Hedge fund KW - Index Of Economic Freedom KW - Industrialisation KW - Industry self-regulation KW - Institute of International Finance KW - Institution KW - Institutional economics KW - International Financial Reporting Standards KW - International Monetary Fund KW - International financial institutions KW - International monetary systems KW - International organization KW - International political economy KW - International relations KW - International trade KW - Internationalism (politics) KW - Journal of Economic Perspectives KW - Liberalization KW - Long-Term Capital Management KW - Macroeconomics KW - Market economy KW - Market integration KW - Market portfolio KW - Monetary policy KW - Money market KW - Neoclassical Growth Theory KW - New International Economic Order KW - OECD Development Centre KW - Political economy KW - Political entrepreneur KW - Prospectus (finance) KW - Public finance KW - Regulatory competition KW - Shareholder KW - Tourism KW - Trade and development KW - Transition economy KW - Transnational governance KW - United Nations Environment Programme KW - Working Group on Financial Markets KW - World Bank KW - World Business Council for Sustainable Development KW - World Development Indicators KW - World Politics KW - World Trade Organization KW - World Wide Web Consortium KW - World economy N1 - Frontmatter --; CHAPTER FOUR Myth and Folktale --; CONTRIBUTORS --; ACKNOWLEDGMENTS --; Chapter 1 GLOBALIZATION AND GOVERNANCE --; PART 1 Globalization and Changing Locations of Governance --; Chapter 2 THE LEVERAGE OF ECONOMIC THEORIES Explaining Governance in an Internationalized Industry --; Chapter 3 POLITICAL INTEGRATION AND DISINTEGRATION IN THE GLOBAL ECONOMY --; Chapter 4 GLOBALIZATION AND FISCAL DECENTRALIZATION --; Chapter 5 GLOBALIZATION AND DEMANDS FOR REGIONAL AUTONOMY IN EUROPE --; Chapter 6 MONETARY GOVERNANCE IN A WORLD OF REGIONAL CURRENCIES --; Chapter 7 GOVERNING GLOBAL FINANCIAL MARKETS International Responses to the Hedge-Fund Problem --; Chapter 8 PUBLIC AND PRIVATE GOVERNANCE IN SETTING INTERNATIONAL STANDARDS --; Chapter 9 GLOBALIZATION AND INDUSTRY SELF-REGULATION --; PART 2 Convergence in National Governance --; Chapter 10 INTERNATIONAL CAPITAL MOBILITY AND NATIONAL POLICY DIVERGENCE --; Chapter 11 GLOBALIZATION AND POLICY DIFFUSION Explaining Three Decades of Liberalization --; Chapter 12 CORPORATE GOVERNANCE Global Markets, National Politics --; Chapter 13 GLOBALIZATION, INSTITUTIONS, AND CONVERGENCE Fiscal Adjustment in Europe --; PART 3 Democratic Deficits and the Problem of Accountability --; Chapter 14 DEMOCRACY, ACCOUNTABILITY, AND RIGHTS IN SUPRANATIONAL GOVERNANCE --; Chapter 15 REDEFINING ACCOUNTABILITY FOR GLOBAL GOVERNANCE --; GLOBALIZATION AND CHANGING PATTERNS OF POLITICAL AUTHORITY --; REFERENCES --; INDEX; restricted access N2 - Critics of globalization claim that economic integration drains political authority from states: devolving authority to newly empowered regions, delegating it to supranational organizations, and transferring it to multinational firms and nongovernmental organizations. Globalization is also attacked for forcing convergence of state institutions and policies and threatening the ability of societies to chart their own democratically determined courses. In Governance in a Global Economy, Miles Kahler and David Lake assemble the contributions of seventeen leading scholars who have systematically investigated how global economic integration produces changes of governance. These authors conclude that globalization has created a new and intricate fabric of governance, but one that fails to match the stark portrait of beleaguered states. Exploring changes in governance across several policy areas (such as tourism, trade, finance, and fiscal and monetary policy), the authors demonstrate that globalization changes the policy preferences of some actors, increases the bargaining power of others, and opens new institutional options for yet others. By reintroducing agency and choice into our understanding of globalization, this book provides important new insights into the complex and contingent effects of globalization on political authority and governance. The introduction and the conclusion are by the editors; the contributors are James A. Caporaso, Benjamin J. Cohen, Barry Eichengreen, Zachary Elkins, Geoffrey Garrett, Peter Gourevitch, Virginia Haufler, Michael J. Hiscox, Robert O. Keohane, Lisa L. Martin, Walter Mattli, Kathleen R. McNamara, Joseph S. Nye, Jr., Jonathan Rodden, Ronald Rogowski, Beth A. Simmons, and Peter Van Houten UR - https://doi.org/10.1515/9780691234687?locatt=mode:legacy UR - https://www.degruyter.com/isbn/9780691234687 UR - https://www.degruyter.com/document/cover/isbn/9780691234687/original ER -