1st Edition

The G8-G20 Relationship in Global Governance

Edited By Marina Larionova, John J. Kirton Copyright 2015
    312 Pages
    by Routledge

    312 Pages
    by Routledge

    If the growing demand for global governance breathed new life into the established G7/8 and the more recent G20, it raised questions about the evolving and optimal relationship between them. One answer arose from the G20’s third summit, when it proclaimed the G20 would govern global finance and economics, while the old G8 would focus on development and security. Yet this rough division of labour did not address which issues lay within each category and how interconnections would be addressed to create comprehensive, coherent global governance for a complex world. This volume considers these questions. It explores the summits’ performance, the division of labour during their coexistence, their comparative strengths and limitations, and how the future partnership could be improved to benefit the global community. The authors explain the recent evolution and performance of the G8 and G20 summits and their evolving empirical relationship. They consider the G8/G20 relationship with other actors engaged in global governance, notably the major multilateral organizations and civil society. They assess G7/8 and G20 effectiveness and accountability. And they identify, based on this empirical and analytical foundation, how the relationship can be improved for today’s tightly wired world.

    I: Introduction; 1: Introduction; II: Architecture; 2: Changing Global Governance for a Transformed World; 3: The G7/8 and G20; 4: A World without G20 Summits; 5: Global Risk Governance and G20, G8, and BRICS Capabilities; III: Achievements; 6: Assessing G7/8 and G20 Effectiveness in Global Governance; 7: Working Together for G8–G20 Partnership: The Muskoka-Toronto Twin Summits of 2010; 8: G20; 9: B20–G20 Engagement; IV: Accountability; 10: The Muskoka Accountability Report; 11: G7/8 and G20 Accountability and Civil Society; 12: Mapping G7/8 and G20 Accountability; 13: Advancing G8 and G20 Effectiveness through Improved Accountability Assessment; V: Conclusion; 14: Conclusion

    Biography

    Dr Marina Larionova, National Research University Higher School of Economics, Moscow, Russia; Professor John J. Kirton, University of Toronto, Canada.

    ’An invaluable overview of how informal international organizations such as the G8, G20 and BRICS have moved to the center of international politics and global governance over the past few years. The authors bring diverse perspectives to the analysis of the inter-related development of these G-groups, with special attention to their effectiveness, their complementarities and their accountability.’ Duncan Snidal, Nuffield College, Oxford, UK ’This volume provides unique insights into how informal fora like the G8, G20 and BRICS are contributing to global governance. The editors are to be congratulated for this fascinating bouquet of essays on a triple-A set of topics of major interest: architecture, achievements and accountability.’ Jan Wouters, KU Leuven, Belgium