Panorama del Gas Natural en los Países Industrializados
In: Problemas del desarrollo: revista latinoamericana de economía, Band 19, Heft 75
ISSN: 2007-8951
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In: Problemas del desarrollo: revista latinoamericana de economía, Band 19, Heft 75
ISSN: 2007-8951
In: Review of policy research, Band 21, Heft 1, S. 107-127
ISSN: 1541-1338
AbstractGlobalization and "global governance" have become the buzzwords at the turn of the century in order to name and explain the emerging post‐Cold War international order. The first one makes reference to the technological revolution that is modifying our notions of space, time, and production, while the latter attempts to illustrate how power and its regulatory practices are being transformed among polities. We discuss these two notions in the first part of this essay to argue that, in fact, the emerging "global" order will be different from that grounded on state‐centered notions of territory and sovereignty. Our arguments focus on the Mexican case to highlight how this country is moving from an inward‐looking, state‐centered, authoritarian machinery of governance, to a postsovereign, principle‐based, multilayered governance structure. This transition has mainly manifested in the governance mechanisms of corporate and human rights. This does not mean that policy tools of the "ancient regime" have completely disappeared. State‐centered structures of governance will remain important during this stage of economic and political change. Areas moving into postsovereign and principled regulatory practices will overlap with those that remain under the monopoly of national bureaucracies. Though Mexico's economic and political change could be explained as a reactive movement against the collapse of the state‐centered authoritarian model, an important conclusion of this essay is that the emerging pattern of postsovereign and principled bureaucratic governance will play a major role in shaping the future of those changes.
In: The review of policy research: RPR ; the politics and policy of science and technology ; journal of the Science, Technology, and Environmental Politics Section of the American Political Science Association, Band 21, Heft 1, S. 107-127
ISSN: 1541-132X
Examines economic and political change in light of globalization and "global governance"; some focus on political decentralization, and governance of corporate and human rights, including indigenous autonomy.
In: American behavioral scientist: ABS, Band 40, Heft 7, S. 858-883
ISSN: 0002-7642
In: The international political economy of new regionalisms series
Open regionalism and post-hegemonic regionalism in the Americas : contextualizing the debate / José Briceño-Ruiz and Isidro Morales -- Rethinking our region in a post-hegemonic moment / Pia Riggirozzi and Diana Tussie -- The renewal of US "free trade" diplomacy in the Americas : from NAFTA to a deeper agenda of "competitive liberalization" for the region / Isidro Morales -- From open regionalism to neo-extractivism : a new geography of trade in Latin America? / Cintia Quiliconi -- Latin America beyond the continental divide : open regionalism and post-hegemonic regionalism co-existence in a changing region / José Briceño Ruiz -- Beyond the Pacific-Atlantic divide : Latin American regionalism before a new cycle / José Antonio Sanahuja -- Resilient or declining? : Mercosur and the future of post-neoliberal regionalism in Latin America / Mario Carranza -- The Pacific alliance and the construction of a new economic regime? : lights and shadows of the renewal of open regionalism / Lorena Oyarzún Serrano -- Regionalism in Central America : an "all-in" strategy / Olivier Dabène and Kevin Partheney -- Post-hegemonic regionalism in Argentina, Brazil, and Venezuela / José Briceño Ruiz, Tullo Vigevani, and Karina Pasquariello Mariano -- Conclusions / José Briceño-Ruiz and Isidro Morales
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