Michael Zürn (WZB & Freie Universität Berlin) has published A Theory of Global Governance: Authority, Legitimacy, and Contestation (Oxford Univ. Press 2018). Here's the abstract:
This book offers a major new theory of global governance, explaining both its rise and what many see as its current crisis. The author suggests that world politics is now embedded in a normative and institutional structure dominated by hierarchies and power inequalities and therefore inherently creates contestation, resistance, and distributional struggles. Within an ambitious and systematic new conceptual framework, the theory makes four key contributions. Firstly, it reconstructs global governance as a political system which builds on normative principles and reflexive authorities. Second, it identifies the central legitimation problems of the global governance system with a constitutionalist setting in mind. Third, it explains the rise of state and societal contestation by identifying key endogenous dynamics and probing the causal mechanisms that produced them. Finally, it identifies the conditions under which struggles in the global governance system lead to decline or deepening.
Zürn: A Theory of Global Governance: Authority, Legitimacy, and Contestation
Reviewed by Ladi Michael
on
May 15, 2018
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