
Saving Globalization
Why Globalization and Democracy Offer the Best Hope for Progress, Peace and Development
Mike Moore(Author)
Wiley (Publisher)
1st Edition
Published on 29. October 2009
Book
Hardback
348 pages
978-0-470-82503-7 (ISBN)
Description
Globalization is not new, nor is it a policy, it's a process that has existed as long as man looked over the horizon, travelled and traded. It can't be stopped but it can be slowed. It came to a grinding halt in August 1914 and the Marxist detour cost millions of lives and lost three generations their opportunity and hope in many countries. More wealth has been created in the past 60 years than in all of history. After the most successful decade of sustained economic growth in history, this progress is threatened.
Extreme inequality, corruption and environmental degradation threaten the stability and legitimacy of many developing countries' regimes. Anti-globalization and anti-capitalist campaigners' confidence has been emboldened due to the present economic crisis. Protectionist rhetoric is growing as are the arguments to control and regulate markets. Leaders are meeting to discuss how to face these problems and create a new international architecture. How did we get to this position? What should we do? What is it that determines why some contemporary states are successful while others have failed?
Saving Globalization departs from its analysis of the globalised economy in the twenty-first century to answer these question by tracing the development of what Moore considers to be 'the big ideas of history': democracy, independent courts, the separation of church and state, property rights, independent courts, a professional civil service, and civil society. Democratic capitalism has worked for most people. Why? It is a remarkable story, from the Greeks to the Geeks, encompassing technological progress and the corrections and contradictions between liberty and equality, technology, growth and the environment. In defence of the many virtues and opportunities that globalisation offers, Mike Moore makes the case for a fresh and new approach to our international Institutions and for domestic policies that promote equity and fairness.
The book controversially attacks the new enemies of reason and evidence. The threats now come from all sides, especially workers in developed countries who fear for their jobs. Mike Moore is a political practitioner turned theoretician.
Extreme inequality, corruption and environmental degradation threaten the stability and legitimacy of many developing countries' regimes. Anti-globalization and anti-capitalist campaigners' confidence has been emboldened due to the present economic crisis. Protectionist rhetoric is growing as are the arguments to control and regulate markets. Leaders are meeting to discuss how to face these problems and create a new international architecture. How did we get to this position? What should we do? What is it that determines why some contemporary states are successful while others have failed?
Saving Globalization departs from its analysis of the globalised economy in the twenty-first century to answer these question by tracing the development of what Moore considers to be 'the big ideas of history': democracy, independent courts, the separation of church and state, property rights, independent courts, a professional civil service, and civil society. Democratic capitalism has worked for most people. Why? It is a remarkable story, from the Greeks to the Geeks, encompassing technological progress and the corrections and contradictions between liberty and equality, technology, growth and the environment. In defence of the many virtues and opportunities that globalisation offers, Mike Moore makes the case for a fresh and new approach to our international Institutions and for domestic policies that promote equity and fairness.
The book controversially attacks the new enemies of reason and evidence. The threats now come from all sides, especially workers in developed countries who fear for their jobs. Mike Moore is a political practitioner turned theoretician.
More details
Edition
1., Auflage
Language
English
Place of publication
Chichester
United Kingdom
Publishing group
John Wiley and Sons Ltd
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Dimensions
Height: 22.9 cm
Width: 15.2 cm
Thickness: 35 mm
Weight
1000 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-470-82503-7 (9780470825037)
Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Additional editions

Mike Moore
Saving Globalization
Why Globalization and Democracy Offer the Best Hope for Progress, Peace and Development
E-Book
09/2011
Wiley
€17.99
Available for download

Mike Moore
Saving Globalization
Why Globalization and Democracy Offer the Best Hope for Progress, Peace and Development
E-Book
09/2011
Wiley
€17.99
Available for download
Person
Mike Moore is a former Director-General of the World Trade Organization (WTO) and former prime minister, foreign minister, trade minister and deputy finance minister of New Zealand. He has been honored by over 16 governments and universities in the Americas, Africa, the Pacific and Europe. As Director-General of the WTO, the Doha Development Trade Round was launched and China joined the WTO. He serves on a number of commercial boards and is an Adjunct and Visiting Professor at several universities in a number of countries. He served on the UN Commission for the Legal Empowerment of the Poor and the UN Commission on Migration. As CEO of the Moore Group, he has advised governments and businesses worldwide, specializing in Asia, the Middle East and Africa. He is involved with a number of think tanks and developmental groups, including the Global Leadership Foundation. In 2010 he intends to launch a new organization that will help fund schools in developing countries. Mike Moore is a political practioner turned theoretician and Saving Globalization is his tenth book.
www.mike-moore.info
www.mike-moore.info
Content
Foreword
Preface
Acknowledgments
Introduction
A Note About Terminology
Part 1: THE WORLD TODAY
Chapter 1: Accelerating Change and the Threat of De-Globalization
Chapter 2: The Rise and Rise of China
Chapter 3: Enter India
Chapter 4: The Islamic World: The Need for Mutual Respect
Part 2: BIG IDEAS THROUGH HISTORY
Chapter 5: Early Consensus Government
Chapter 6: Democracy--A Universal Impulse?
Chapter 7: The Gift of Greece
Chapter 8: "Civis Romanus Sum": Roman Citizenship and Roman Law
Chapter 9: The Glorious Revolution: Freedom in the Seventeenth Century
Chapter 10: Magna Carta and Beyond
Chapter 11: Revolution and Reform: 1775-1914
Chapter 12: Modern International Institutions
Part 3: THE PILLARS OF FREEDOM AND PROGRESS
Chapter 13: The Need for Good Governance
Chapter 14: Openness
Chapter 15: Free Trade
Chapter 16: A New Democracy
Chapter 17: Mobility and the Decent Society
Part 4: ENEMIES OF THE OPEN SOCIETY
Chapter 18: Power and Manipulation
Chapter 19: The Dangers of Absolute Conviction
Chapter 20: The Enemies of Reason
Part 5: AFTERTHOUGHTS AND RECONSIDERATIONS
Chapter 21: Information and Reputation
Chapter 22: Engagement in a Rapidly Changing World
Chapter 23: American Engagement
Chapter 24: Climate Change and the Energy Challenge
Chapter 25: What We Must Do
Endnotes
Index
Preface
Acknowledgments
Introduction
A Note About Terminology
Part 1: THE WORLD TODAY
Chapter 1: Accelerating Change and the Threat of De-Globalization
Chapter 2: The Rise and Rise of China
Chapter 3: Enter India
Chapter 4: The Islamic World: The Need for Mutual Respect
Part 2: BIG IDEAS THROUGH HISTORY
Chapter 5: Early Consensus Government
Chapter 6: Democracy--A Universal Impulse?
Chapter 7: The Gift of Greece
Chapter 8: "Civis Romanus Sum": Roman Citizenship and Roman Law
Chapter 9: The Glorious Revolution: Freedom in the Seventeenth Century
Chapter 10: Magna Carta and Beyond
Chapter 11: Revolution and Reform: 1775-1914
Chapter 12: Modern International Institutions
Part 3: THE PILLARS OF FREEDOM AND PROGRESS
Chapter 13: The Need for Good Governance
Chapter 14: Openness
Chapter 15: Free Trade
Chapter 16: A New Democracy
Chapter 17: Mobility and the Decent Society
Part 4: ENEMIES OF THE OPEN SOCIETY
Chapter 18: Power and Manipulation
Chapter 19: The Dangers of Absolute Conviction
Chapter 20: The Enemies of Reason
Part 5: AFTERTHOUGHTS AND RECONSIDERATIONS
Chapter 21: Information and Reputation
Chapter 22: Engagement in a Rapidly Changing World
Chapter 23: American Engagement
Chapter 24: Climate Change and the Energy Challenge
Chapter 25: What We Must Do
Endnotes
Index