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Emerging market countries are currently facing a dual challenge.
How to incorporate transnational regulations into their societies,
while building their own versions of regulatory capitalism. This
raises a multitude questions and challenges. Will the diffusion of
international public and private regulations of developed
countries, benefit a few and marginalize less developed countries?
Or, can these regulations foster transnational public-private
experiments to improve local regulatory capacities and social
conditions? What kinds of strategies might facilitate or impede
both transnational regulatory integration and local institutional
upgrading? This book offers a fresh perspective in reconciling the
seemingly incompatible goals of transnational integration and
development. It offers a new analytical framework and a set of case
studies that help forge a comparative analysis of integration and
development. It offers both the identification of the mechanisms
that can foster lasting transnational integration settlements and
broad based domestic institutional and economic upgrading. This
multidisciplinary study draws on current research from many leading
scholars. They analyse issues in a variety of regions around the
world and in industries and domains ranging from food safety,
manufacturing, telecommunications, finance, as well as labour and
environmental rights. The chapters reveal concrete lessons for
scholars and practitioners alike, around the different roles and
strategies that governments, the multilaterals, firms, and NGOs can
take, to facilitate the integration of international standards,
improve domestic institutions, and expand the benefits to a great
variety of local groups.
Emerging market countries are currently facing the dual challenge
of incorporating transnational regulations into their societies
while building their own versions of regulatory capitalism. This
raises a multitude questions and challenges. Will the diffusion of
international public and private regulations of developed
countries, benefit a few and marginalize less developed countries?
Or, can these regulations foster transnational public-private
experiments to improve local regulatory capacities and social
conditions? What kinds of strategies might facilitate or impede
both transnational regulatory integration and local institutional
upgrading? This book offers a fresh perspective in reconciling the
seemingly incompatible goals of transnational integration and
development. It offers a new analytical framework and a set of case
studies that help forge a comparative analysis of integration and
development. It offers both the identification of the mechanisms
that can foster lasting transnational integration settlements and
broad based domestic institutional and economic upgrading. This
multidisciplinary study draws on current research from many leading
scholars. They analyse issues in a variety of regions around the
world and in industries and domains ranging from food safety,
manufacturing, telecommunications, finance, as well as labour and
environmental rights. The chapters reveal concrete lessons for
scholars and practitioners alike, around the different roles and
strategies that governments, the multilaterals, firms, and NGOs can
take, to facilitate the integration of international standards,
improve domestic institutions, and expand the benefits to a great
variety of local groups.
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