About the Author:
Paul Kennedy's best-selling book Preparing for the 21st Century, 1993, Random House, puts him in the bestseller list of world historians. He is Professor of History and Director of International Security Studies, Institute for International Security Studies, Yale University;Dirk Messner and Franz Nuscheler are leading German intellectuals on issues of globalization, and members of the scientific committee of the Development and Peace Foundation (founded by Willy Brandt in 1986). Both are directors of the Institute for Development and Peace at the University of Duisburg in Germany.
Review:
"The complex relationship among developments in politics, ecology, economics, security, and global governance systems is the focus of this book. The contributors strive to come up with prophetic answers about the direction in which the world is heading at the beginning of the twenty-first century. This insightful volume combines scholarly analysis with recommendations for political action." -- The Futurist"These essays argue that global forces are increasing the risks of violence and instability. These risks, in turn, must be addressed by greater transnational cooperation. The book is most intriguing when the authors try to pin down the meaning of global governance, defined here as the sum total of world regulatory policies and mechanisms that guide the interaction of economies and societies. The book makes a reasoned case for a more rule-based governance system." -- Foreign Affairs"Compact introductory review" -- Future Survey"This collection contains five essays sponsored by the German Development and Peace Foundation and a sixth that is a response to the Brandt Report, North-South: A Program for Survival (London, 1980). The end of the Cold War and the emergence of the political-economic phenomenon of transnationalism have had a significant effect on the distribution of natural and financial resources, commonly referred to as globalization. The authors note that demographic trends have combined with a view that wealth is maldistributed between the industrialized sector and much of the remainder of the world, and that societies no longer correspond to the historic concept of the nation-state but tend to overlap with one another, leading toward a world society. Economic indicators pointto greater unpredictability of financial markets providing necessary services. One essay also focuses on the increasing environmental degradation and resulting attempts to institute international regulatory instruments. There is a clarion call for the development of a rational approach to global governance to resolve issues of widening poverty and despair. Essential reading for those interested in international political economics, because of its content and its contribution to the debate over the dynamics of globalization." -- CHOICE
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