Coping with Globalisation
Cross-National Patterns in Domestic Governance and Policy Performance
Frank Cass Publishers
Erschienen am 1. Juni 2002
Buch
Hardcover
320 Seiten
978-0-7146-5295-5 (ISBN)
Artikel ist vergriffen; siehe Neuauflage
Beschreibung
How do processes of globalization, as evidenced by increasing cross-border flows of capital, goods, people, and ideas, affect domestic governance in established industrial countries as well as in fragile, developing societies? How do these forces influence domestic governance and national performance, such as with respect to respect for human rights, fulfillment of people's basic needs, and economic growth and competitiveness? What conditions shape the effectiveness with which officials cope with external pressures and internal challenges, perhaps even enabling them to take advantage of these pressures and challenges for a few select countries? What important characteristics separate these more successful countries from those that are less successful? What policy lessons and theoretical implications can one draw from rigorous empirical research? In addition to these questions, this volume probes the interactions between domestic and international political economies, and inquires about their effects in different regional and national contexts.
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Sprache
Englisch
Verlagsort
London
Großbritannien
Verlagsgruppe
Taylor & Francis Ltd
Zielgruppe
Für höhere Schule und Studium
Für Beruf und Forschung
Illustrationen
illustrations
ISBN-13
978-0-7146-5295-5 (9780714652955)
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Steve Chan | James R. Scarritt
Coping with Globalization
Cross-National Patterns in Domestic Governance and Policy Performance
Buch
08/2003
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Inhalt
Globalization, regionalization, and domestic change - outside in and inside out, Steve Chan and James Scarritt; institutional change and economic performance in Africa, 1970-1995, Smita Singh; good-bye Latin debt, hello Asian contagion - government responsiveness to financial crises, Kimberly Niles; responses to globalization in the ASEAN countries, Susan Mcmillan; is it a small world after all? Foreign economic penetration, information technology diffusion, and government respect for human rights, David Richards; regimes, economic development and human development, Ross Burkhart. Conclusion, James R. Scarritt.