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This volume draws on insights from a diverse group of scholars and
practitioners on issues of justice and law and integration,
identity and economic development, cultures and community building,
and power and peace. The authors reveal the complexity of global
justice as a contested ideal and explore the intersection of local
and global dynamics that pose challenges to and facilitate paths
towards justice's realization.
This unique volume unpacks the concept and practice of naming and
shaming by examining how governments, NGOs and international
organisations attempt to change the behaviour of targeted actors
through public exposure of violations of normative standards and
legal commitments.
This volume draws on insights from a diverse group of scholars and
practitioners on issues of justice and law and integration,
identity and economic development, cultures and community building,
and power and peace. The authors reveal the complexity of global
justice as a contested ideal.
This unique volume unpacks the concept and practice of naming and
shaming by examining how governments, NGOs and international
organisations attempt to change the behaviour of targeted actors
through public exposure of violations of normative standards and
legal commitments.
Illicit cross-border flows, such as the smuggling of drugs,
migrants, weapons, toxic waste, and dirty money, are proliferating
on a global scale. This underexplored, clandestine side of
globalization has emerged as an increasingly important source of
conflict and cooperation among nation-states, state agents,
nonstate actors, and international organizations. Contrary to
scholars and policymakers who claim a general erosion of state
power in the face of globalization, this pathbreaking volume of
original essays explores the selective nature of the stateOs
retreat, persistence, and reassertion in relation to the illicit
global economy. It fills a gap in the international political
economy literature and offers a new and powerful lens through which
to examine core issues of concern to international relations
scholars: the changing nature of states and markets, the impact of
globalization across place and issue areas, and the sources of
cooperation and conflict.
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