'Global rankings have become an institutionalized benchmark that drives policymaking and social perceptions of excellence. In this wide-ranging volume, Judith Kelley and Beth Simmons have summoned the best minds to reorient how we think about global dynamics.' Mauro F. Guillen, The Wharton School

'Do indicators matter? The Power of Global Performance Indicators offers impressive empirical evidence that they do. As the use of quantitative measures as a mode of governance mushrooms, countries and leaders become increasingly concerned about their reputations and rankings. This collection of studies provides invaluable evidence about how and why they work. It is essential reading for anyone interested in the trajectory of governance strategies today.' Sally Engle Merry, New York University

'Rankings have become a stealth but ubiquitous feature of our world. If there is an activity, there is a ranking. If there is an actor, it is ranked from several vantages points. States sometimes care about how there are ranked and judged, and sometimes they even care enough to change their behavior or manipulate how they are ranked. What makes this collection truly impressive is not just the evidence that ranking matter but the careful, and sometimes quite methodologically creative, demonstration of how they matter. An important book that is a significant contribution to the literature of international relations.' Michael Barnett, George Washington University

Se alle

'Especially since the 1990s, policy entrepreneurs have used comparative indicators of performance to affect policies of organizations that depend on impersonal transnational flows of resources. The Power of Global Performance Indicators demonstrates that in contemporary world politics, power can come less from the barrel of a gun than from marshalling and framing social science data.' Robert O. Keohane, Princeton University, New Jersey

'In my list of the best books on global governance, this one about Global Performance Assessments ranks very high. It scores high on all dimensions of a book performance assessment: great and innovative theme, good theoretical grounding, well-executed research, and very interesting findings. It is a Triple-A book.' Michael Zürn, Minda de Gunzburg Center for European Studies, Harvard University

Global performance indicators (GPIs), such as ratings and rankings, permeate nearly every type of human activity, internationally and nationally, across public and private spheres. While some indicators aim to attract media readership or brand the creator's organization, others increasingly seek to influence political practices and policies. The Power of Global Performance Indicators goes beyond the basic questions of methodological validity explored by others to launch a fresh debate about power in the modern age, exploring the ultimate questions concerning real-world consequences of GPIs, both intended and unintended. From business regulation to terrorism, education to foreign aid, Kelley and Simmons demonstrate how GPIs provoke bureaucracies, shape policy agendas, and influence outputs through their influence of third parties such as donors and market actors and, potentially, even broader global authority structures.
Les mer
1. Introduction: the power of global indicators Judith Kelley and Beth Simmons; Part I. Ratings, Rankings and Regulatory Behavior: 2. The power of ranking: the ease of doing business and global regulatory behavior Rush Doshi, Judith Kelley and Beth Simmons; 3. Blacklists, market enforcement, and the global regime to combat terrorist financing Julia C. Morse; 4. Power of indicators in global development policy: the millennium development goals Helena Hede Skagerlind; Part II. The Normative Influence of Ratings and Rankings: 5. A race to the top? The aid transparency index and the normative power of global performance indicators Dan Honig and Catherine Weaver; 6. International assessments and education policy: evidence from an elite survey Rie Kijima and Phillip Y. Lipscy; 7. Reporting matters: performance indicators and compliance in the ILO Faradj Koliev, Thomas Sommerer and Jonas Tallberg; 8. Freedom House's scarlet letter: assessment power through transnational pressure Jordan Roberts and Juan Tellez; Part III. Beyond and Within State: Influences and Impacts on Non-state Actors: 9. Can blacklisting reduce terrorist attacks? The case of the US Foreign Terrorist Organization (FTO) List Hyeran Jo, Brian Phillips and Joshua Alley; 10. Assessing international organizations: competition, collaboration, and politics of funding Ranjit Lall; Part IV. Skeptical Voices: Null Results, Unintended Consequences: 11. Third party policymakers and the limits of the influence of indicators Melissa M. Lee and Aila M. Matanock; 12. The millennium development goals and education: accountability and substitution in global performance indicators James H. Bisbee, James R. Hollyer, B. Peter Rosendorff and James Raymond Vreeland; 13. Conclusion: global performance indicators: themes, findings and an agenda for research Judith Kelley and Beth Simmons.
Les mer
'Global rankings have become an institutionalized benchmark that drives policymaking and social perceptions of excellence. In this wide-ranging volume, Judith Kelley and Beth Simmons have summoned the best minds to reorient how we think about global dynamics.' Mauro F. Guillen, The Wharton School
Les mer
Shows how global ratings and rankings shape political agendas and influence states' behavior, reframing how we think about power.

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781108487207
Publisert
2020-03-19
Utgiver
Vendor
Cambridge University Press
Vekt
740 gr
Høyde
235 mm
Bredde
158 mm
Dybde
29 mm
Aldersnivå
P, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
450

Om bidragsyterne

Judith Kelley is a Professor and Dean of the Duke Sanford School of Public Policy, Duke University, North Carolina. She is the author of Scorecard Diplomacy: Grading States to Influence their Reputation and Behavior (Cambridge, 2017), and Monitoring Democracy: When International Election Observation Works and Why It Often Fails (2012), winner of the Chadwick F. Alger Prize. Beth Simmons is a Professor of Law, Political Science and Business Ethics at the University of Pennsylvania. She is the author of Mobilizing for Human Rights: International Law in Domestic Politics (2009), recognized by the American Society for International Law, among others, as the best book of 2010.