Common Goods: Reinventing European and International Governance

Pirmais vāks
Adrienne Windhoff-Héritier
Rowman & Littlefield, 2002 - 356 lappuses
As European countries become more interdependent, the provision of common goods increasingly must be organized across national boundaries, levels of government, and sectors. In addition, former adversaries in the public and private sectors must learn to collaborate rather than compete. These changing paradigms call for new institutional and instrumental arrangements that move beyond existing modes of national governance. Offering a unique focus on the emerging role of private actors, this volume explores the evolving challenge of governing common goods in an increasingly transnational environment. The first systematic analysis of institutional solutions for providing common goods, this book shows how hierarchies established over centuries of nation-state rule have become obsolete, while negotiation and self-regulation have grown in importance. The contributors explore innovative solutions to the collective action problems countries encounter when clear lines of traditional authority dissolve.
 

Atlasītās lappuses

Saturs

Common Goods and Governance
15
PropertyRights Regimes and Common Goods A Complex Link
29
Transnational Common Goods Regulatory Competition for Environmental Standards
59
Common Goods and the Role of Private Actors
83
Governance and Globalization Conceptualizing the Role of Public and Private Actors
85
Negotiating Privacy across Arenas The EUUS Safe Harbor Discussions
105
The Privatization of Global Governance and the Modern Law Merchant
127
NonState Actors and the Provision of Common Goods Compliance with International Institutions
159
National Level
233
The New Regulatory Regime The Institutional Design of Telecommunications Regulation at the National Level
235
Contracts and Resource Allocation Markets and Law as the Basis of Policy Instruments
263
Privatizing Governance in the Financial Markets
277
Private Makers of Public Policy Bond Rating Agencies and the New Global Finance
279
Standardizing as Governance The Case of Credit Rating Agencies
293
Rating Agencies and Systemic Risk Paradoxes of Governance
317
Conclusion
337

European Level
183
New Modes of Governance in Europe PolicyMaking without Legislating?
185
The Case of Public Mission versus Competition Rules and Trade Rules
207
Index
343
About the Contributors
355
Autortiesības

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Par autoru (2002)

Adrienne HZritier is director of the Max Planck Project Group, 'Common Goods: Law, Politics and Economics.'

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