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Showing 1 - 4 of 4 matches in All Departments
Questions of European economic and political integration have been placed firmly on the policy agenda as we enter the late 1990s. The Economic Emergence of a New Europe? explores the arguments and forms of analysis deployed by those who have been pressing for closer integration since the early 1980s.Although events in Denmark and the United Kingdom have thrown the future of the post-Maastricht European Community into some confusion, the agreements already reached will propel the Community along a path of ever closer economic co-operation. Casting a sceptical eye over much of the economic analysis used to explore the effects and implications of the integration process, this book critically examines the reasons behind the contemporary imperative for greater integration among the European states, and assesses the likely limits of this programme.
With the advent of globalization--where corporate organizations and
the commercial relations that accompany them are argued to be
becoming increasingly transnational--the locus of powers,
authorities, and responsibilities has shifted to the global level.
The nation-state arena is losing its capacity to regulate and
control commercial processes and practices as a transformational
logic kicks-in, associated with new forms of global rule-making and
governance. It is this new arena of global rule-making that can be
considered as a surrogate form of global constitutionalization, or
"quasi-constitutionalization." But as might be expected, this
surrogate process of constitutionalization is not a coherent system
or set of rounded outcomes but full of contradictory half-finished
currents and projects: an "assemblage" of many disparate advances
and often directionless moves--almost an accidental coming together
of elements. It is this assemblage that is to be investigated and
unbundled by the analysis of the book.
This text conducts a survey into the ways in which the word "network" has been deployed in a wide range of literature. In particular, it offers a commentary on how the idea of networks has been used to illustrate contemporary forms of socio-economic organization (as with the idea of a "network society" or a "network state", for instance), broadly conceived to also include the political aspects of networks. The term "network" has become a ubiquitous metaphor to describe too many aspects of contemporary life. In doing so, Grahame Thompson argues, the term has lost much of its analytical precision and has no clear conceptual underpinnings. The problem is that something claiming to explain everything ends up by explaining very little. The book brings some intellectual clarity to the discussion of networks by asking whether it is possible to construct a clearly demarcated idea of a network as a separable form of socio-economic co-ordination and governance mechanism with its own consistent logic. In doing this, the primary contrast is with hierarchies and markets as alternative and already well understood forms of socio-economic co-ordination each with their own distinctive logic.
The term 'network' has become a ubiquitous metaphor to describe too many aspects of contemporary life. In doing so, Thompson argues, the term has lost much of its analytical precision and has no clear conceptual underpinnings. The book brings some intellectual clarity to the discussion of networks by asking whether it is possible to construct a clearly demarcated idea of a network as a separable form of socio-economic coordination and governance mechanism with its own consistent logic.
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