Emerging market countries are currently facing a dual challenge. How to incorporate transnational regulations into their societies, while building their own versions of regulatory capitalism. This raises a multitude questions and challenges.
Will the diffusion of international public and private regulations of developed countries, benefit a few and marginalize less developed countries? Or, can these regulations foster transnational public-private experiments to improve local regulatory capacities and social conditions? What kinds of strategies might facilitate or impede both transnational regulatory integration and local institutional upgrading?
This book offers a fresh perspective in reconciling the seemingly incompatible goals of transnational integration and development. It offers a new analytical framework and a set of case studies that help forge a comparative analysis of integration and development. It offers both the identification of the mechanisms that can foster lasting transnational integration settlements and broad based domestic institutional and economic upgrading.
This multidisciplinary study draws on current research from many leading scholars. They analyse issues in a variety of regions around the world and in industries and domains ranging from food safety, manufacturing, telecommunications, finance, as well as labour and environmental rights. The chapters reveal concrete lessons for scholars and practitioners alike, around the different roles and strategies that governments, the multilaterals, firms, and NGOs can take, to facilitate the integration of international standards, improve domestic institutions, and expand the benefits to a great variety of local groups.
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Integrating developing countries into regional and global markets is challenging and uncertain. While it may aid economic development, it may also result in significant economic exclusion. This book examines these key challenges and offers policy making suggestions to create broad, sustainable regulatory change, and balanced distribution of benefit
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PART I: STATICS AND DYNAMICS IN REGIONAL TIRS WITH RULE TAKERS AND HEGEMONS ; PART II: EMERGING TIRS IN THE GLOBAL SOUTH: BLOCKAGE AND COORDINATION IN THE MERCOSUR ; PART III: FRAGMENTATION AND REGIME COMPLEXITY IN TRRS
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A comparative account of the strengths and weakness of integration strategies across regions of emerging markets
Explains the diverse outcomes of transnational regulatory integration attempts; clear examples of roles and strategies of key actors like MNCs, multilateral agencies, governments, NGOs
Aids understanding of the specific problems of including developing countries in regulatory integration
Contributions from across the social sciences with cases drawing from Latin America and Europe
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Laszlo Bruszt is Professor of Sociology at the Department of Social and Political Sciences of the European University Institute, Firenze. His earlier research on the economic and political transformation in the post-communist countries resulted in several scholarly articles and the award-winning book (with David Stark) Post-Socialist Pathways. His current work on the interplay between transnationalization, institutional development and economic change has resulted
in articles in such scholarly journals as Review of International Political Economy and Studies in Comparative International Development as well as the edited volume (with Ronald Holzhacker) The
Transnationalization of States, Economies and Civil Societies. New Modes of Governance in Europe (Springer, 2009).
Gerald A. McDermott is Associate Professor of International Business at the Darla Moore School of Business of the University of South Carolina and is a Senior Research Fellow at IAE Business School in Argentina. He was previously Assistant Professor of Multinational Management at the Wharton School of Business. He specializes in international business and political economy, mainly on issues of institutional change, innovation, risk, and corporate strategy in emerging market countries,
particularly East-Central Europe and Latin America. His book, Embedded Politics: Industrial Networks and Institutional Change in Post-Communism (University of Michigan Press, 2002), was a finalist for APSA's
2003 Woodrow Wilson Foundation Award for the Best Book on government, politics, and international affairs.
Les mer
A comparative account of the strengths and weakness of integration strategies across regions of emerging markets
Explains the diverse outcomes of transnational regulatory integration attempts; clear examples of roles and strategies of key actors like MNCs, multilateral agencies, governments, NGOs
Aids understanding of the specific problems of including developing countries in regulatory integration
Contributions from across the social sciences with cases drawing from Latin America and Europe
Les mer
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780198778776
Publisert
2016
Utgiver
Vendor
Oxford University Press
Vekt
558 gr
Høyde
233 mm
Bredde
155 mm
Dybde
21 mm
Aldersnivå
UP, P, 05, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
384