Global Stakeholder Democracy

£74.99

Global Stakeholder Democracy

Power and Representation Beyond Liberal States

Political science and theory International relations International law Social and political philosophy

Author: Terry Macdonald

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Language: English

Published by: OUP Oxford

Published on: 7th August 2008

Format: LCP-protected ePub

Size: 2 Mb

ISBN: 9780191607967


Global Stakeholder Democracy

A pressing question at the forefront of current global political debates is: how can we salvage the democratic project in the context of globalization? In recent years political activists have mounted high-profile campaigns for the democratization of powerful international institutions such as the World Bank and IMF, and for greater corporate accountability. In turn, many of the NGOs linked to these campaigns have themselves faced demands for greater democratic legitimacy.

Global Stakeholder Democracy responds to these challenges by outlining an innovative theoretical and institutional framework for democratizing the many state and non-state actors wielding public power in contemporary global politics. In doing so, the book lays out a promising new agenda for global democratic reform. Its analysis begins with the recognition that we cannot simply recreate traditional constitutional and electoral institutions of democratic states on a global scale, through the construction of a democratic super-state. Rather, we must develop new kinds of democratic institutions capable of dealing with the realities of global pluralism, and democratizing powerful non-state actors as well as states.

Through reflecting on the democratic dilemmas surrounding the political power of global NGOs, the book mounts a powerful challenge to the state-centric theoretical assumptions that have underpinned the established democratic theories of both cosmopolitan and communitarian liberals. In particular, it challenges the widespread assumption that sovereign power, bounded (national or global) societies, and electoral processes are essential institutional foundations of a democratic system.

The book then re-thinks the democratic project from its conceptual foundations, posing the questions: What needs to be controlled? Who ought to control it? How could they do so? In answering these questions, the book develops a novel theoretical model of representative democracy that is focused on plural (state and non-state) actors rather than on unitarystate structures. It elaborates a democratic framework based on the new theoretical concepts of public power, stakeholder communities and non-electoral representation, and illustrates the practical implications of these proposals for projects of global institutional reform.

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