A Better Globalization: Legitimacy, Governance, and Reform
Publication Info
Publication Type
See also
Initiatives
Research Topics
- Capital Flows/ Financial Crises
- Economic Growth
- Globalization
- Governance/Democracy
- International Financial Institutions
- Migration and Population
- Security and Development
- Trade Policy
Opinions
- Nancy Birdsall testifies before House Foreign Affairs Committee about Poverty and Inequality in Latin America
- What to Read: Inequality and Development in a Globalizing World (Syllabus)
- Globalization and Development: New Challenges and New Opportunities
Articles
- Scrap the G8?
- IMF to Propose Greater Representation for Developing Countries
- Lost Opportunities for Global Majority [FT]
- IMF to Boost Votes of Big, Fast-Growing Developing Countries
- Q&A: The UN at 60
- UN Reform Process Delayed Pending More Talks
Multimedia
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Kemal Dervis with Ceren Özer
03/01/2005
The huge costs of armed conflict, the great challenge of state failure, and the slow pace of international actions to address world poverty all point to weaknesses in the global institutional framework and the need for much more effective international cooperation. A Better Globalization: Legitimacy, Governance, and Reform is a reformist manifesto that argues that gradual institutional change can produce beneficial results if it is driven by an ambitious long-term vision and by a determination to continually widen the limits of the possible. It presses for reform on a broad front with a renewed, more legitimate, and more effective United Nations as the overarching framework for global governance based on global consent.
• 256 pp. ISBN paper 0-8157-1763-6 • $26.95
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Selections from the book available in PDF format:
Preface and Acknowledgments
Introduction
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Appendixes
References and Index
What others are saying about A Better Globalization: Legitimacy, Governance, and Reform
“One of the most imaginative solutions to the problem of reorganizing the United Nations.”
Francis Fukuyama
Professor of International Political Economy
John Hopkins University
“Derviº brings unique insight into improving the effectiveness and legitimacy of global institutions.”
Paul Martin
Prime Minister of Canada
“In this book [Derviº] skillfully uses his extensive national and international experience to discuss some of the difficult global issues of our time.”
General Brent Scowcroft
former US National Security Advisor
“For out-of-the-box ideas on [global governance], this is certainly the book to read.”
Ernesto Zedillo
former President of Mexico



