There could hardly be a more appropriate time in world history to be revisiting the issues of globalisation and democracy. After almost two centuries of what might be regarded as globalisation in the current usage of the term, has fallen into disrepute. Voters have used the ballot box to reject both the concept of globalisation and the mainstream parties that promoted it. The UK voted to leave the EU, in the 2016 'Brexit' referendum, and the US elected Donald Trump as President. This three-volume collection brings together the key writings on globalisation and democracy exploring the progression of globalisation as well as themes such as employment, international trade, technology and the environment amongst other important issues. This collection provides both scholarly and lay readers an opportunity to analyze how globalisation has impacted the world we live in today.
There could hardly be a more appropriate time in world history to be revisiting the issues of globalisation and democracy. After almost two centuries of what might be regarded as globalisation in the current usage of the term, has fallen into disrepute. Voters have used the ballot box to reject both the concept of globalisation and the mainstream parties that promoted it. The UK voted to leave the EU, in the 2016 'Brexit' referendum, and the US elected Donald Trump as President. This three-volume collection brings together the key writings on globalisation and democracy exploring the progression of globalisation as well as themes such as employment, international trade, technology and the environment amongst other important issues. This collection provides both scholarly and lay readers an opportunity to analyze how globalisation has impacted the world we live in today.
Contents:
Acknowledgements
Research Review Jonathan Michie
PART I WHERE ARE WE AND HOW DID WE GET HERE?
1. Ha-Joon Chang (2011), ‘Kicking Away The Ladder – Globalisation
and Economic Development in Historical Perspective’, in Jonathan
Michie (ed.), Handbook of Globalisation, Chapter 24, Cheltenham, UK
and Northampton, MA, USA: Edward Elgar Publishing, 465–74
2. Joel Bakan (2015), ‘The Invisible Hand of Law: Private
Regulation and the Rule of Law’, Cornell International Law Journal,
48 (2), Spring, 279–300
3. François Bourguignon and Christian Morrisson (2002), ‘Inequality
Among World Citizens: 1820–1992’, American Economic Review, 92 (4),
September, 727–44
4. Richard E. Baldwin and Philippe Martin (1999), ‘Two Waves of
Globalisation: Superficial Similarities, Fundamental Differences’,
National Bureau of Economic Research Working Paper Series, W6904,
1–33
5. Bob Sutcliffe and Andrew Glyn (2011), ‘Measures of Globalisation
and their Misinterpretation’ in Jonathan Michie (ed.), Handbook of
Globalisation, Chapter 4, Cheltenham, UK and Northampton, MA, USA:
Edward Elgar Publishing, 87–103
PART II GLOBALISATION, GROWTH AND EMPLOYMENT
6. John H. Dunning (1973), ‘The Determinants of International
Production’, Oxford Economic Papers, 25 (3), November, 289–336
7. Luis A. Rivera–Batiz and Paul M. Romer (1991), ‘Economic
Integration and Endogenous Growth’, Quarterly Journal of Economics
, 106 (2), May, 531–55
8. Dani Rodrik (1997), ‘Has Globalization Gone Too Far?’,
California Management Review, 39 (3), Spring, 29–53
9. Jeffrey Henderson, Peter Dicken, Martin Hess, Neil Coe and Henry
Wai–Chung Yeung (2002), ‘Global Production Networks and the
Analysis of Economic Development’, Review of International
Political Economy, 9 (3), August, 436–64
10. Axel Dreher (2006), ‘Does Globalization Affect Growth? Evidence
from a New Index of Globalization’, Applied Economics, 38 (10),
1091–110
11. Jonathan Michie, Christine Oughton and Antonello Zanfei (2002),
‘Globalization, Growth and Employment’, Journal of
Interdisciplinary Economics, 13 (1–3), January, 1–11
12. Jonathan Michie, Christine Oughton and Matias Ramirez (2002),
‘Globalisation and Economic Performance’, Journal of
Interdisciplinary Economics, 13 (1–3), January, 165–83
PART III TRANSNATIONAL CORPORATIONS
13. Gerald Epstein (2011), ‘The Role and Control of Multinational
Corporations in the World Economy’, in Jonathan Michie (ed.),
Handbook of Globalisation, Chapter 9, Cheltenham, UK and
Northampton, MA, USA: Edward Elgar Publishing, 185–99
14. Elissa Braunstein (2011), ‘Foreign Direct Investment and
Development from a Gender Perspective’, in Jonathan Michie (ed.),
Handbook of Globalisation, Chapter 10, Cheltenham, UK and
Northampton, MA, USA: Edward Elgar Publishing, 200–11
PART IV INTERNATIONAL TRADE
15. Raymond Vernon (1966), ‘International Investment and
International Trade in the Product Cycle’, Quarterly Journal of
Economics, 80 (2), May, 190–207
16. Paul R. Krugman (1979), ‘Increasing Returns, Monopolistic
Competition and International Trade’, Journal of International
Economics, 9 (4), November, 469–79
17. John Gerard Ruggie (1982), ‘International Regimes,
Transactions, and Change: Embedded Liberalism in the Postwar
Economic Order’, International Organization, 36 (2), Spring,
379–415
18. Michael Kitson and Jonathan Michie (1995), ‘Conflict,
Cooperation and Change: The Political Economy of Trade and Trade
Policy’, Review of International Political Economy, 2 (4), Autumn,
632–57
19. Jeffrey A. Frankel and David Romer (1999), ‘Does Trade Cause
Growth?’, American Economic Review, 89 (3), June, 379–99
PART V GLOBALISATION AND TECHNOLOGY
20. Pari Patel and Keith Pavitt (1991), ‘Large Firms in the
Production of the World’s Technology: An Important Case of
“Non-Globalisation”’, Journal of International Business Studies, 22
(1), March, 1–21
21. Michael Storper (1992), ‘The Limits to Globalization:
Technology Districts and International Trade’, Economic Geography,
68 (1), January, 60–93
22. Daniele Archibugi and Jonathan Michie (1995), ‘The
Globalisation of Technology: A New Taxonomy’, Cambridge Journal of
Economics, Special Issue: Technology and Innovation, 19 (1),
February, 121–40
23. Pari Patel (1995), ‘Localised Production of Technology for
Global Markets’, Cambridge Journal of Economics, Special Issue:
Technology and Innovation, 19 (1), February, 141–53
24. John Cantwell (1995), ‘The Globalisation of Technology: What
Remains of the Product Cycle Model?’, Cambridge Journal of
Economics, Special Issue: Technology and Innovation, 19 (1),
February, 155–74
25. Daniele Archibugi and Jonathan Michie (1997), ‘Technological
Globalisation or National Systems of Innovation?’, Futures, 29 (2),
March, 121–37
26. Jeremy Howells and Jonathan Michie (1998), ‘Technological
Competitiveness in an International Arena’, International Journal
of the Economics of Business, 5 (3), November, 279–93
27. Simona Iammarino and Jonathan Michie (1998), ‘The Scope of
Technological Globalisation’, International Journal of the
Economics of Business, 5 (3), November, 335–53
28. Pari Patel and Modesto Vega (1999), ‘Patterns of
Internationalisation of Corporate Technology: Location vs. Home
Country Advantages’, Research Policy, 28 (2–3), March, 145–55
29. Daniel Archibugi, Jeremy Howells and Jonathan Michie (1999),
‘Innovation Systems in a Global Economy’, Technology Analysis and
Strategic Management, 11 (4), 527–39
Volume II
Contents:
Acknowledgements
PART I GLOBALISATION AND DEVELOPMENT
1. Paul Krugman and Anthony J. Venables (1995), ‘Globalization and
the Inequality of Nations’, Quarterly Journal of Economics, CX (4),
November, 857–80
2. Rajneesh Narula and John H. Dunning (2000), ‘Industrial
Development, Globalization and Multinational Enterprises: New
Realities for Developing Countries’, Oxford Development Studies, 28
(2), 141–67
3. Guillermo A. Calvo and Enrique G. Mendoza (2000), ‘Rational
Contagion and the Globalization of Securities Markets’, Journal of
International Economics, 51 (1), June, 79–113
4. Raphael Kaplinsky (2000), ‘Globalisation and Unequalisation:
What Can Be Learned from Value Chain Analysis?’, Journal of
Development Studies, 37 (2), 117–46
5. Jonathan Michie (2002), ‘Foreign Direct Investment and Human
Capital Enhancement in Developing Countries’, Competition and
Change, 6 (4), December, 363–72
6. Allen J. Scott and Michael Storper (2003), ‘Regions,
Globalization, Development’, Regional Studies, 37 (6–7),
August/October, 579–93
7. David Dollar and Aart Kraay (2004), ‘Trade, Growth, and
Poverty’, Economic Journal, 114 (493), February, F22–F49
8. Robert Hunter Wade (2004), ‘The Causes of Increasing World
Poverty and Inequality: Why the Matthew Effect Prevails’, New
Political Economy, 9 (2), June, 163–88
9. Helen V. Milner and Keiko Kubota (2005), ‘Why the Move to Free
Trade? Democracy and Trade Policy in the Developing Countries’,
International Organization, 59 (1), Winter, 107–43
10. Nita Rudra (2005), ‘Globalization and the Strengthening of
Democracy in the Developing World’, American Journal of Political
Science, 49 (4), October, 704–30
11. Eddy Lee and Marco Vivarelli (2006), ‘The Social Impact of
Globalization in the Developing Countries’, International Labour
Review, 145 (3), September, 167–84
12. Pinelopi Koujianou Goldberg and Nina Pavcnik (2007),
‘Distributional Effects of Globalization in Developing Countries’,
Journal of Economic Literature, XLV (1), March, 39–82
13. Margaret McMillan, Dani Rodrik and Íñigo Verduzco-Gallo (2014),
‘Globalization, Structural Change and Productivity Growth, with an
Update on Africa’, World Development, 63, November, 11–32
PART II GLOBALISATION AND LABOUR STANDARDS
14. Ajit Singh and Ann Zammitt (2011), ‘Globalisation, Labour
Standards and Economic Development’, in Jonathan Michie (ed.),
Handbook of Globalisation, Chapter 12, Cheltenham, UK and
Northampton, MA, USA: Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd, 230–56
15. Phillip Brown and Hugh Lauder (1996), ‘Education, Globalization
and Economic Development’, Journal of Education Policy, 11 (1),
1–25
16. Eddy Lee (1997), ‘Globalization and Labour Standards: A Review
of Issues’, International Labour Review, 136 (2), Summer,
173–89
17. Adrian Wood (1998), ‘Globalisation and the Rise in Labour
Market Inequalities’, Economic Journal, 108 (450), September,
1463–82
PART III NATIONAL CASE STUDIES
18. Robert R. Kaufman and Alex Segura–Ubiergo (2001),
‘Globalization, Domestic Politics, and Social Spending in Latin
America: A Time-Series Cross-Section Analysis, 1973–97’, World
Politics, 53 (4), July, 553–87
19. Richard Florida (1997), ‘The Globalization of R&D: Results
of a Survey of Foreign–Affiliated R&D Laboratories in the USA’,
Research Policy, 26 (1), March, 85–103
20. Jonathan Michie and Vishnu Padayachee (1998), ‘Three Years
after Apartheid: Growth, Employment and Redistribution?’, Cambridge
Journal of Economics, 22 (5), September, 623–35
21. Gordon Redding and Antony Drew (2016), ‘Dealing with the
Complexity of Causes of Societal Innovativeness: Social Enabling
and Disabling Mechanisms and the Case of China’, Journal of
Interdisciplinary Economics, 28 (2), 107–36
22. Bob Deacon (2000), ‘Eastern European Welfare States: The Impact
of the Politics of Globalization’, Journal of European Social
Policy, 10 (2), May, 146–61
PART IV INDUSTRY CASE STUDIES AND CORPORATE DIVERSITY
23. John Cantwell and Rajneesh Narula (2001), ‘The Eclectic
Paradigm in the Global Economy’, International Journal of the
Economics of Business, 8 (2), 155–72
24. Walter Kuemmerle (1999), ‘Foreign Direct Investment in
Industrial Research in the Pharmaceutical and Electronics
Industries – Results from a Survey of Multinational Firms’,
Research Policy, 28 (2–3), March, 179–93
25. David Bailey, Alex de Ruyter, Jonathan Michie and Peter Tyler
(2010), ‘Global Restructuring and the Auto Industry’, Cambridge
Journal of Regions, Economy and Society: Global Restructuring and
The Auto Industry, 3 (3), November, 311–8
26. Rhys Jenkins (2005), ‘Globalization, Corporate Social
Responsibility and Poverty’, International Affairs, 81 (3), May,
525–40
27. Chris Rowley and Jonathan Michie (2014), ‘Differing Forms of
Capital: Setting the Scene for Mutuality and Co-operation in the
Asia Pacific Region’, Asia Pacific Business Review, 20 (3),
322–9
28 Jonathan Michie and Chris Rowley (2014), ‘Mutuality in the Asia
Pacific Region’, Asia Pacific Business Review, 20 (3), 506–11
PART V GLOBALISATION AND THE ENVIRONMENT
29. Karen L. O’Brien and Robin M. Leichenko (2000), ‘Double
Exposure: Assessing the Impacts of Climate Change Within the
Context of Economic Globalization’, Global Environmental Change, 10
(3), October, 221–32
30. Clem Tisdell (2001), ‘Globalization and Sustainability:
Environmental Kuznets Curve and the WTO’, Ecological Economics, 39
(2), November, 185–96
31. Petra Christmann and Glen Taylor (2001), ‘Globalization and the
Environment: Determinants of Firm Self–Regulation in China’,
Journal of International Business Studies, 32 (3), September,
439–58
32. Gene M. Grossman and Alan B. Krueger (1991), ‘Environmental
Impacts of a North American Free Trade Agreement’, National Bureau
of Economic Research Working Paper Series, W3914, 1–55
33. Timothy J. Foxon, Jonathan Köhler, Jonathan Michie and
Christine Oughton (2013), ‘Towards a New Complexity Economics for
Sustainability’, Cambridge Journal of Economics, 37 (1), January,
187–208
Volume III
Contents
Acknowledgements
PART I GLOBALISATION AND WELFARE
1. Duane Swank (1998), ‘Funding the Welfare State: Globalization
and the Taxation of Business in Advanced Market Economies’,
Political Studies, XLVI (4), September, 671–92
2. Elmar Rieger and Stephan Leibfried (1998), ‘Welfare State Limits
to Globalization’, Politics and Society, 26 (3), September,
363–90
3. Torben Iversen and Thomas R. Cusack (2000), ‘The Causes of
Welfare State Expansion: Deindustrialization or Globalization?’,
World Politics, 52 (3), April, 313–49
4. Nita Rudra (2002), ‘Globalization and the Decline of the Welfare
State in Less-Developed Countries’, International Organization, 56
(2), Spring, 411–45
5. Walter Korpi and Joakim Palme (2003), ‘New Politics and Class
Politics in the Context of Austerity and Globalization: Welfare
State Regress in 18 Countries, 1975–95’, American Political Science
Review, 97 (3), August, 425–46
6. David Brady, Jason Beckfield and Martin Seeleib-Kaiser (2005),
‘Economic Globalization and the Welfare State in Affluent
Democracies, 1975–2001’, American Sociological Review, 70 (6),
December, 921–48
7. Reuven S. Avi-Yonah (2000), ‘Globalization, Tax Competition and
the Fiscal Crisis of the Welfare State’, Harvard Law Review, 113
(7), May, 1573–676
PART II GLOBALISATION AND CULTURE
8. Jan Nederveen Pieterse (1994), ‘Globalisation as Hybridisation’,
International Sociology, 9 (2), June, 161–84
9. Ronald Inglehart (2000), ‘Globalization and Postmodern Values’,
Washington Quarterly, 23 (1), Winter, 215–28
10. David Harvey (2009), ‘The Art of Rent: Globalisation, Monopoly
and the Commodification of Culture’, Socialist Register, 38,
93–110
PART III GLOBALISATION, DEMOCRACY AND GOVERNANCE
11. Paul Hirst and Grahame Thompson (1992), ‘The Problem of
‘Globalization’: International Economic Relations, National
Economic Management and the Formation of Trading Blocs’, Economy
and Society, 21 (4), November, 357–96
12. Paul Hirst and Grahame Thompson (1994), ‘Globalization, Foreign
Direct Investment and International Economic Governance’,
Organization, 1 (2), October, 277–303
13. Dani Rodrik (1998), ‘Why do More Open Economies Have Bigger
Governments?’, Journal of Political Economy, 106 (5), October,
997–1032
14. Peter Evans (1997), ‘The Eclipse of the State? Reflections on
Stateness in an Era of Globalization’, World Politics, 50 (1),
October, 62–87
15. Geoffrey Garrett (1996), ‘Global Markets and National Politics:
Collision Course of Virtuous Circle?’, International Organization,
52 (4), Autumn, 787–824
16. Neil Brenner (1999), ‘Globalisation as Reterritorialisation:
The Re-Scaling of Urban Governance in the European Union’, Urban
Studies, 36 (3), March, 431–51
17. Donald F. Kettl (2000), ‘The Transformation of Governance:
Globalization, Devolution and the Role of Government’, Public
Administration Review, 60 (6), November/December, 488–97
18. Sidney Tarrow (2001), ‘Transnational Politics: Contention and
Institutions in International Politics’, Annual Review of Political
Science, 4 (1), June, 1–20
19. Quan Li and Rafael Reuveny (2003), ‘Economic Globalization and
Democracy: An Empirical Analysis’, British Journal of Political
Science, 33 (1), January, 29–54 and 54a–54c
20. Beth A. Simmons and Zachary Elkins (2004), ‘The Globalization
of Liberalization: Policy Diffusion in the International Political
Economy’, American Political Science Review, 98 (1), February,
171–89
21. Erik Swyngedouw (2004), ‘Globalisation or ‘Glocalisation’?
Networks, Territories and Rescaling’, Cambridge Review of
International Affairs, 17 (1), April, 25–48
22. Francesco Giavazzi and Guido Tabellini (2005), ‘Economic and
Political Liberalizations’, Journal of Monetary Economics, 52 (7),
1297–330
23. J. Ernesto López–Córdova and Christopher M. Meissner (2008),
‘The Impact of International Trade on Democracy: A Long-Run
Perspective’, World Politics, 60 (4), July, 539–75
PART IV THE EUROPEAN UNION AND NAFTA
24. Philip Arestis and Malcolm Sawyer (2011), ‘European Integration
and the ‘Euro Project’, in Jonathan Michie (ed.), Handbook of
Globalisation, Chapter 15, Cheltenham, UK and Northampton, MA, USA;
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd, 313–23
25. Jim Stanford (2011), ‘The North American Free Trade Agreement:
Context, Structure and Performance’, in Jonathan Michie (ed.),
Handbook of Globalisation, Chapter 16, Cheltenham, UK and
Northampton, MA, USA; Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd, 324–55
PART V THE FUTURE OF GLOBALISATION AND DEMOCRACY
26. Colin Hines (2011), ‘Time to Replace Globalisation with
Localisation’, in Jonathan Michie (ed.), Handbook of Globalisation,
Chapter 25, Cheltenham, UK and Northampton, MA, USA: Edward Elgar
Publishing Ltd, 475–82
27. George DeMartino (2011), ‘Free Trade or Social Tariffs?’, in
Jonathan Michie (ed.), Handbook of Globalisation, Chapter 26,
Cheltenham, UK and Northampton, MA, USA: Edward Elgar Publishing
Ltd, 483–94
28. Photis Lysandrou (2011), ‘Global Inequality and the Global
Financial Crisis: The New Transmission Mechanism’, in Jonathan
Michie (ed.), Handbook of Globalisation, Chapter 27, Cheltenham, UK
and Northampton, MA, USA: Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd, 495–517
29. Geoffrey M. Hodgson (2011), ‘The Great Crash of 2008 and the
Reform of Economics’, in Jonathan Michie (ed.), Handbook of
Globalisation, Chapter 28, Cheltenham, UK and Northampton, USA:
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd, 518–37
Index
Edited by Jonathan Michie, Professor of Innovation and Knowledge Exchange, President of Kellogg College and Director of the Department for Continuing Education, University of Oxford, UK; Visiting Professor, European University Institute, Florence, Italy; Honorary Professor, University of the Witwatersrand, South Africa; Senior Fellow, Rutgers, US
‘This collection provides both scholarly and lay readers an
opportunity to analyze how globalization has impacted the world we
live in today.’
*Development Journal*
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