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The Return of the public in global governance / edited by Jacqueline Best and Alexandra Gheciu.

Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextPublication details: New York : Cambridge University Press, 2014.Description: x, 265 p. ; 24 cmContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 9781107052956 (hardback)
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 327.101 BES 22
LOC classification:
  • JZ1318 .R485 2014
Other classification:
  • POL011000
Online resources:
Contents:
Machine generated contents note: Part I. Introduction: 1. Introduction Jacqueline Best and Alexandra Gheciu; 2. Theorizing the public as practices: transformations of the public in historical context Jacqueline Best and Alexandra Gheciu; Part II. Transformations of the Public in Historical Context: 3. The dynamics of 'private' security strategies and their public consequences: transnational organizations in historical perspective Deborah Avant and Virginia Haufler; 4. Out from the shadows: governing OTC derivatives after the 2007-08 financial crisis Eric Helleiner; Part III. Reconstituting the Global Public Today: 5. The 'demand side' of good governance: the return of the public in World Bank policy Jacqueline Best; 6. The publicness of non-state global environmental and social governance Steven Bernstein; 7. Climate re-public: practising public space in conditions of extreme complexity Matthew Paterson; 8. Transforming the logic of security provision in post-Communist Europe Alexandra Gheciu; 9. Understanding US national intelligence: analyzing practices to capture the chimera Anna Leander; Part IV. Conceptualizing the Public as Practices: Theoretical Implications: 10. Constitutive public practices in a world of changing boundaries Tony Porter; 11. Publics, practices, and power Rita Abrahamsen and Michael C. Williams.
Summary: This book focuses on the other side of the equation: the transformation of the public dimension of governance in the era of globalization. It analyses that transformation, advancing two major claims: first, that the public is beginning to play a more significant role in global governance, and, second, that it takes a rather different form than has traditionally been understood in international relations theory. The authors suggest that unless we transcend conventional wisdom about the public as a distinct sphere, separate from the private domain, we cannot understand the dynamics and consequences of its apparent return. Using examples drawn from international political economy, international security and environmental governance, they argue that 'the public' should be conceptualized as a collection of culturally-specific social practices.
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Holdings
Item type Current library Call number Status Date due Barcode Item holds
Book Book Calcutta 327.101 BES (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available IIMC-143330
Total holds: 0

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Machine generated contents note: Part I. Introduction: 1. Introduction Jacqueline Best and Alexandra Gheciu; 2. Theorizing the public as practices: transformations of the public in historical context Jacqueline Best and Alexandra Gheciu; Part II. Transformations of the Public in Historical Context: 3. The dynamics of 'private' security strategies and their public consequences: transnational organizations in historical perspective Deborah Avant and Virginia Haufler; 4. Out from the shadows: governing OTC derivatives after the 2007-08 financial crisis Eric Helleiner; Part III. Reconstituting the Global Public Today: 5. The 'demand side' of good governance: the return of the public in World Bank policy Jacqueline Best; 6. The publicness of non-state global environmental and social governance Steven Bernstein; 7. Climate re-public: practising public space in conditions of extreme complexity Matthew Paterson; 8. Transforming the logic of security provision in post-Communist Europe Alexandra Gheciu; 9. Understanding US national intelligence: analyzing practices to capture the chimera Anna Leander; Part IV. Conceptualizing the Public as Practices: Theoretical Implications: 10. Constitutive public practices in a world of changing boundaries Tony Porter; 11. Publics, practices, and power Rita Abrahamsen and Michael C. Williams.

This book focuses on the other side of the equation: the transformation of the public dimension of governance in the era of globalization. It analyses that transformation, advancing two major claims: first, that the public is beginning to play a more significant role in global governance, and, second, that it takes a rather different form than has traditionally been understood in international relations theory. The authors suggest that unless we transcend conventional wisdom about the public as a distinct sphere, separate from the private domain, we cannot understand the dynamics and consequences of its apparent return. Using examples drawn from international political economy, international security and environmental governance, they argue that 'the public' should be conceptualized as a collection of culturally-specific social practices.

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