Broken solidarities : how open global governance divides and rules /

Felix Anderl's book is a stimulating analysis of the decline of the social movement against the World Bank and the rise of a new form of transnational rule. The book observes international organizations and social movements in their interaction, demonstrating how social movements are divided an...

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Tác giả chính: Anderl, Felix (Tác giả)
Định dạng: Licensed eBooks
Ngôn ngữ:Tiếng Anh
Được phát hành: Bristol : Bristol University Press, 2022.
Loạt:Bristol Studies in International Theory.
Truy cập trực tuyến:https://www.jstor.org/stable/10.2307/j.ctv2rh2c4r
Mục lục:
  • Front Cover
  • Series
  • Broken Solidarities: How Open Global Governance Divides and Rules
  • Copyright information
  • Table of contents
  • List of Figures and Tables
  • Acknowledgments
  • Introduction
  • Divide and rule? Open global governance and cooptation
  • Rule without a ruler
  • Fragmentation in interaction: IR and social movement studies
  • Plan of the book
  • 1 Social Movements and International Relations
  • Movements and institutions: mechanisms of contention
  • Mechanisms of contention in global governance
  • Contestation
  • Politicization
  • Dynamics of contention
  • 2 Transnational Rule and Resistance
  • Legitimate authorities?
  • The strange case of rule in IR
  • Rule without a government
  • Transnational governmentality
  • 3 Complex Rule in Global Governance
  • Institutions and critique
  • Ruling by fragmenting critique
  • The normative dimension: a neoliberal governing rationality
  • The discursive dimension: a reflexive order of justification
  • The organizational dimension: a managerial bureaucracy
  • 4 Mechanisms of Fragmentation
  • Messy mechanisms
  • From causation to constitution
  • Mechanism 1: Economization
  • Institutional observations
  • Practices of critique
  • Mechanism 2: Incorporation
  • Institutional observations
  • Practices of critique
  • Mechanism 3: Legitimation
  • Institutional observations
  • Practices of critique
  • Mechanism 4: Professionalization
  • Institutional observations
  • Practices of critique
  • Mechanism 5: Regulation
  • Institutional observations
  • Practices of critique
  • 5 A History of Interaction: The World Bank Group and its Early Critics
  • Radical resistance against the World Bank Group in the 1980s and 1990s
  • 1988 in Berlin: the beginning of a movement?
  • 1990s: the movement is growing
  • Approaching the millennium: peak turmoil.
  • Institutionalizing interaction: from ignorance to incorporation
  • Regular meetings with civil society
  • Narmada and the inspection panel: opening-up by force
  • 1996: Wolfensohn's Tenure
  • "A brilliant choice": hiring individuals from the movement
  • Open towards some, ignorant towards others
  • Early 2000s: let the fragmentation begin!
  • 1. NGOs publicly discredit radical peers
  • 2. North-South fragmentation
  • 3. The World Bank diffuses into NGOs or creates new ones
  • The creation of 'civil society' and its forum
  • 6 When a Contentious Process Opens Up: Extractive Industries Review
  • A transnational movement against extractive industries projects
  • The Extractive Industries Review: incorporation
  • Implementing the review
  • Contestation: the Bali walkout
  • Clashing expectations: professionalization and economization
  • The outcome: recommendations for the World Bank Group
  • Back to business as usual? Legitimation and regulation
  • Legitimation
  • Regulation
  • 7 Fragmentation in Contestation: The Movement during the EIR Process
  • Economization
  • Delineation from economized logic
  • Incorporation
  • Elevation of individuals
  • Legitimation
  • Professionalization
  • Regulation
  • 8 Uncontentious Politics? The Civil Society Policy Forum
  • Relevance
  • Proceedings
  • From accountability to action?7
  • Everybody is equally unhappy
  • Economization
  • Incorporation
  • Legitimation
  • Professionalization
  • Regulation
  • 9 Fragmentation in Cooperation: Observing the Changing Practices of Critique
  • Townhall
  • Economization
  • Incorporation
  • Legitimation
  • Professionalization
  • Regulation
  • Fragmentation
  • Fights over economization
  • Fights over participation or non-participation
  • Estrangement between 'weak' reformists and 'irresponsible' maximalists
  • Decreasing trust levels between professionals and activists.
  • Forced or self-induced exclusion of groups and their claims that are 'external' to rules of the game
  • Conclusion
  • Complex rule
  • Sure?
  • 9/11 and the war in Iraq
  • Protest cycle theory
  • Implications for international theory
  • The future of complex rule and its critique
  • References
  • Index
  • Back Cover.