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.
Inhaltsverzeichnis
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 Pécoud
8. Steering towards reglobalization: can a reformed G20 rise to the occasion?
Matthew Louis Bishop and Anthony Payne