Michael Head, Scott Mann, and Simon Kozlina (eds), Transnational Governance: Emerging Models of Global Legal Regulation (Ashgate, 2012) has just been published.
As globalization continues to spread and evolve, so nation-states
attempt to govern financialization, tax evasion, corruption, terrorism,
civil and military conflicts and environmental dangers, social
polarization and the complexities in human rights implementation, by
institutional and transnational means. This volume discusses these
issues from different legal perspectives and highlights the challenges
of governing human activity in an age of remarkable interconnectedness.
Covering a broad range of policy areas and analysis of emerging
forms of governance from liberal to critical and Marxist, the chapters
are legal in their approach and form an important contribution to the
growing study of emergent forms of authority, coordination and power
developing in response to the challenges presented by some of the key
contemporary governance issues in the first half of the twenty-first
century.
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