As citizens of a middle power, Canadians know how it feels to be objects of global forces. But they are also agents of globalization who have helped build structures of transnational governance that have highly uneven impacts on prosperity, human security, and the environment, often for the worse. This timely book argues that these imbalances need to be recognized and corrected.A Perilous Imbalance situates Canada’s experience of globalization in the context of three interlinked trends: the emergence of a global supraconstitution, the transformation of the nation-state, and the growth of governance beyond the nation-state. The authors advocate a revitalization of the Canadian state as a vehicle for pursuing human security, ecological integrity, and social emancipation, and for creating spaces in which progressive, alternative forms of law and governance can unfold. This book shines an urgent light on the dangerous imbalances in contemporary forms of globalized governance that jeopardize not only Canadians but also citizens worldwide.
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Tackles the pressing question of how Canadian engagement with globalization can be marshaled to advance rather than impair human security, ecological integrity, and social emancipation.
1 IntroductionPart 1: Canada’s Emerging Supraconstitution2 The Supraconstitution: A Framework for Analysis3 Making the World Safe for Transnational Capital: The Economic Supraconstitution4 Good Citizens of Planet Earth? The Weakness of Global Social and Environmental Governance5 Taking the Measure of the SupraconstitutionPart 2: Consolidating or Confronting Hegemony? Governance Within and Beyond the State6 From Retreat to Revitalization: The Paradoxes of the Globalized State7 Global Law Beyond the State: Governance by Business and Civil Society8 Rethinking Canadian Governance and Law in a Globalized WorldNotesReferencesIndex
Les mer
Sophisticated, bold, and accessible, A Perilous Imbalance is important reading for anyone seeking to assess Canada’s legal and political engagement with globalization. Clarkson and Wood deftly integrate developments across a wide range of activities, actors, and arenas, offering a complex yet clear set of arguments about the uneven distribution of globalization’s benefits and burdens for the country and its citizens.
Les mer
This timely exploration of Canada’s involvement as a middle power in a globalizing world offers a practical yet often radical analysis that sets it apart as a challenging contribution to a pressing subject.
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Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780774814881
Publisert
2009
Utgiver
Vendor
University of British Columbia Press
Vekt
640 gr
Høyde
235 mm
Bredde
159 mm
Aldersnivå
UU, UP, 05
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
360
Om bidragsyterne
Stephen Clarkson is a professor of political economy at the University of Toronto and a senior fellow of the Centre for International Governance Innovation. Stepan Wood is a professor of law at Osgoode Hall Law School, York University, and a Core Faculty member of the York Institute for Research and Innovation in Sustainability.