World War II
and examines its future prospects.
Even as the United States will continue to dominate
the emerging structures of world governance,
Tabb maintains, it will have to change the assumptions
behind its championing of classical models of
international free trade. A new financial architecture
must encompass debt forgiveness, multilateral
agreements on investment, and a more inclusive
model of growth in the twenty-first century.
Contents
1. Introduction
2. The Verb and the Noun
3. Debating Globalization
4. The Nature and Scope of International Political
Economics
5. The Postwar Economic Order and Global State
Economic Governance Institutions
6. Clubs, Soft Law and International Financial
Institutions
7. Finance: Orthodox and Heterodox
8. The Bretton Woods Institutions
9. Transnational Corporations and Trade Theory
10. From International Trade Organization to
World Trade Organization
11. Market Efficiency Versus Labor Rights and
Environmental Protection
12. Redecorating and New Architecture
13. The Evolving International Political Economy
References
About the Author
William K. Tabb is professor of economics at
Queens College and (sometimes) professor of
political science at the Graduate School of
the City University of New York. His previous
books include The Amoral Elephant, Reconstructing
Political Economy, and The Postwar Japanese
System.
Some comments on this
book
"The best comprehensive analysis and critique
of globalization and especially of economic
governance in a vast literature."
Richard Falk, Princeton University.
"Hard-hitting in its critical perspective
yet sensitive to competing positions, Tabb's
most recent book is indispensable reading for
anyone wanting to know who, if anyone, is in
charge of a globalizing economy and how it's
run."
James H. Mittelman, School of International
Service, American University.
"The best critical analysis of the constructing
of current economic governance institutions
and agendas. Throughout this analysis Tabb shows
us how partial a map of this process has been
produced by the main scholarly traditions on
the subject. This juxtaposition illuminates
the contingent character of the current system
and the work that can be done to develop alternative
objectives."
Saskia Sassen, author of Losing Control? Sovereignty
in an Age of Globalization.
"This is definitely an original and constructive
contribution. The book is well written and engaging
and the arguments are clear and well formulated."
Christopher Chase-Dunn, University of California,
Riverside.
"The book does a wonderful job of laying
out the dilemmas of the current incomplete attempts
to govern the global economy, placing them in
a historical context that allows us to see viable
alternatives."
Craig N. Murphy, Wellesley College and chair,
Academic Council on the U.N. System (2002-2004).
August 21, 2004.
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