1st Edition

Global Institutions, Marginalization and Development

Edited By Craig N. Murphy Copyright 2005
    240 Pages
    by Routledge

    236 Pages
    by Routledge

    For more than a century and a half, the most powerful national governments have created institutions of multilateral governance that promise to make a more inclusive world, a world serving women, working people, the colonized, the 'backward', the destitute, and the despised.

    This groundbreaking book is a study of that promise, and of the real impact of this world government. It discusses what systems global institutions have, and have not done to keep their promise, and examines whether the system will serve the world's least-advantaged, or marginalize them further.

    This book focuses on whether it is the 'economists and political philosophers of the rich', or the social movements of the disadvantaged that are most likely to influence the world's lawmakers, and the processes by which they will complete the next generation of multilateral institutions.  

    An innovative study, this book is important reading for anyone with an interest in international political economy, global governance, development and the politics of north-south relations.

    1. Institutions and Marginalization 2. International Institutions and the Pursuit of Human Needs 3. International Organization and the Unfolding of Liberal Internationalism 4. The Historical Processes of Establishing Institutions of Global Governance 5. A Twice Passed-Over Alternative: The promise of democratic 'functionalism' in the 1930s and 1990s 6. International Institutions, Decolonisation and Development 7. The Failure of the Third World Alliance 8. Freezing the North-South Bloc(k) after the East-West Thaw 9. Global Governance: Poorly done and poorly understood 10. Political Consequences of the New Equality 11. The Epistemology of Poverty and the Poverty Epistemology 12. Building Global Governance in the Twenty-First Century 13. Marginalization, Development and International Relations

    Biography

    Craig N. Murphy