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GOVERNANCE THROUGH DEVELOPMENT【2025|PDF|Epub|mobi|kindle电子书版本百度云盘下载】

GOVERNANCE THROUGH DEVELOPMENT
  • CELINE TAN 著
  • 出版社: ROUTLEDGE
  • ISBN:0415495547
  • 出版时间:2011
  • 标注页数:263页
  • 文件大小:70MB
  • 文件页数:284页
  • 主题词:

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图书目录

1 Introduction1

1.1 Crisis and change in international economic lawmaking1

1.2 A new ‘social contract’3

1.3 Scope of inquiry5

1.4 Framework of analysis9

1.4.1 Analysing the relationship between actors, principles and mechanisms of global isation9

1.4.2 Locating regulatory patterns within a wider analysis of power12

1.4.3 Representational power and the discipline of discourse14

1.4.4 Legal pluralism and the constitutive power of law16

1.5 A note on methods18

1.6 Cartography of the book18

2 PRSPs in postcolonial international law and global governance23

2.1 PRSPs in the international order: asymmetrical sovereignty and circumscription of state autonomy24

2.1.1 Locating the PRSP project in the ‘postcoloniality’ of international law25

2.1.2 Reproducing colonial asymmetries through postcolonial law27

2.2 Institutions of postcolonial governance: the Bretton Woods system31

2.2.1 Legacies of the colonial encounter31

2.2.2 Aggravating asymmetry33

2.2.3 Monopolising the forum35

2.3 Managing the third world: the Bank and Fund in postcolonial governance36

2.3.1 Bridging the dynamic of difference37

2.3.2 Managing the terms of engagement41

2.4 Continuities and consolidation of postcolomal law50

3 PRSPs and the crisis of legitimacy in the international order60

3.1 PRSPs as a response to the limitations of structural adjustment61

3.1.1 The disciplinary rationale of adjustment lending62

3.1.2 The failure to discipline63

3.2 Postscripting the Washington Consensus64

3.2.1 From adjustment to poverty reduction65

3.2.2 Securing legitimacy through participation66

3.2.3 Universal framework for disbursement66

3.3 Competing agendas for change68

3.3.1 The role of the epistemic coalition69

3.3.2 The institutional response to the conceptual framework72

3.3.3 Gco-strategic interests and the role of the NGO lobby75

3.4 Missing pieces in the jigsaw: the absent south80

3.5 PRSPs and the legacy of state fragmentation82

3.5.1 Internationalisation of decision-making82

3.5.2 The retreat of the state84

3.6 Crisis and containment86

4 ‘Ownership’ as conditionality: PRSPs and the evolution of conditional financing94

4.1 Deconstructing conditionality95

4.1.1 Conditionality versus conditions for financing96

4.1.2 IMF conditionality98

4.1.3 World Bank conditionality100

4.1.4 Policy regulation101

4.2 Conditionality as a default regulatory instrument102

4.2.1 Evolution of IMF conditionality103

4.2.2 Conditionality and the Bank’s new role106

4.3 Conditionality as a mechanism for economic governance110

4.3.1 Fund conditionality enshrined110

4.3.2 Governance through resource dependency113

4.4 A new jurisprudence115

4.4.1 Discretionary control116

4.4.2 Mission creep117

4.4.3 Absence of external oversight118

4.5 From coercion to consent120

4.5.1 Carrots not sticks120

4.5.2 From tranching to front-loading123

4.5.3 Increasing institutional leverage126

4.6 Conditionalitv, discipline and the new biopower127

5 Reforming the nation state: PRSPs and rehabilitating the structurally adjusted state134

5.1 Rehabilitation of the state135

5.1.1 The good governance agenda: continuities and discontinuities135

5.1.2 Reinventing the regulative capacity of the state138

5.2 Modalities of state reconfiguration142

5.2.1 Globalised development modelling142

5.2.2 Standardising domestic governance146

5.3 Ownership and the principle of countrv selectivitv150

5.3.1 Rewarding ‘good’ behaviour150

5.3.2 The JSAN guidelines and biopolitical control153

5.4 Donor interventions and the politics of partnership156

5.4.1 Micro-management and diverted emphasis156

5.4.2 Discipline of the bottom line159

5.4.3 PRSPs and the aid harmonisation agenda161

5.5 Control and constitutional mimicry163

6 Redesigning the political project: discipline and legitimation through participatory policymaking169

6.1 The liberal political project as an antidote to state autonomy171

6.1.1 Responding to the ‘democratic deficit’171

6.1.2 Liberal legality and neocolonial representations172

6.2 Participation, politics and policy accountability175

6.2.1 PRSPs and participatory policymaking175

6.2.2 The participation myth177

6.3 Reconfiguring the political landscape: PRS processes in operation178

6.3.1 The imported state179

6.3.2 The politics of technocratic governance and the role of transnational advocates184

6.3.3 The marginalisation of indigenous politics189

6.4 The globalisation of political consensus193

6.4.1 PRSPs and the lack of operational relevance194

6.4.2 Dissonance between policies, practice and programmes196

6.5 Remapping the political landscape198

7 Consolidation and conclusion: PRSPs, transnational governance and globalised legal regimes204

7.1 A new global compact205

7.2 A new regulatory project207

7.2.1 A global administrative space208

7.2.2 Discursive discipline210

7.2.3 The rise of network governance211

7.3 Foreclosing international reform213

7.3.1 Problematising the state213

7.3.2 The nation state as a site of political struggle and redistribution215

7.3.3 Subverting the ‘right to development’216

7.4 Biopower and the new technologies of discipline218

7.4.1 A biopolitical global constitution218

7.4.2 Resistance and ‘globalisation from below’221

7.5 Concluding remarks and directions for further research222

Appendix225

Bibliography232

Index250

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