ABSTRACT

Examining the powerful idea of the return, reconstitution and redeployment of the public domain in a post-Seattle and post-Washington consensus world order, this innovative book is the most forward-looking and comprehensive examination of the need to rethink the tenants of global free trade.

In the past two decades, countries have focused on broadening and guaranteeing market access, and as the pendulum swings back for the market, the issue of investing in the public domain becomes a priority. The authors believe that devising new institutions of governance for a globalizing world requires fundamental change nationally and internationally. They argue that new public spaces, places and services are required to strengthen democracy and create sanctuaries in society where the market mechanism cannot reach. The public domain is an incipient concept that enables states to reduce the intrusiveness of markets and at the same time develop a strong national performance to reduce the inequality and social exclusion in an increasingly volatile global economy.

This original volume boasts an impressive list of international contributors who have demonstrated innovation and leadership in their fields. It will strongly appeal to advanced students, academics and policy makers involved in the field of global governance and international political economy.

chapter |34 pages

Introduction: The fundamentals of our time

Values and goals that are inescapably public

part |2 pages

PART I R Section 1 Revisiting the fundamentals in a post-Washington consensus era

chapter 1|35 pages

The return of the public domain after the triumph of markets

Revisiting the most basic of fundamentals

chapter 2|13 pages

Reinventing Gladstone?

The public conscience and the public domain

part |2 pages

PART I R Section 2 Moving the boundary between the market and the state

part |2 pages

PART II T Section 3 Rethinking public goods in an era of globalization

chapter 8|27 pages

Avoiding the tragedy of the commons: greening governance through the market or the public domain

Greening governance through the market or the public domain?

chapter 9|24 pages

Human security in the global era

part |2 pages

PART II T Section 4 Global governance and new state practices

chapter 10|19 pages

Public goods: taking the concept into the twenty-first century

Taking the concept to the twenty- first century

chapter 12|23 pages

Regionalism: the meso public domain in Latin America and

The meso public domain in Latin America and South-East Asia

chapter 13|14 pages

Global markets and social legitimacy: the case of the ‘global’ compact

The case of the ‘global compact’

chapter 14|25 pages

Democratizing globalism