Global Public Policy Institute
Reinhardtstraße 15
10117 Berlin
Germany
Phone +49 30 275 959 75-0
Fax +49 30 690 88 200
E-Mail gppi@gppi.net
Related projects
Networking United Nations Private Sector Focal Points
Evaluation of the UN Somalia Assistance Strategy
Joint Stakeholders in Global Energy Governance?
The Role of Transition Funds in Bridging Relief and Development
Origins of Strategy for Justice and Security Sector Reform in Afghanistan and Pakistan
Other GPPi books
Thorsten Benner, Stephan Mergenthaler, Philipp Rotmann (2011)
The New World of UN Peace Operations: Learning to Build Peace?
Oxford University PressJulia Steets (2010)
Accountability in Public Policy Partnerships
Palgrave Macmillan (UK) / Macmillan (US)Jan Martin Witte, Andreas Goldthau (2010)
Global Energy Governance: The New Rules of the Game
Brookings Institution PressJulia Steets, Daniel S. Hamilton, eds. (2009)
Humanitarian Assistance: Improving US-European Cooperation
Global Public Policy Institute and the Center for Transatlantic Relations at Johns Hopkins UniversityGlobal Public Policy
Governing Without Government?
By Wolfgang H. Reinicke
Brookings Institution Press (1998)
To order the book, please visit the Brookings website.
During the last decade "globalization" has become a fashion among policymakers and academics alike. Not one day passes during which the term is not being invoked to legitimize a policy decision, promote a policy prescription, or explain a policy outcome. Despite its frequent use, however, little is known about globalization and its effects.
In this pathbreaking book, Wolfgang Reinicke provides an in-depth analysis of economic globalization and examines its implications for public policy. National responses, as suggested on both ends of the political spectrum in the United States and elsewhere, are often flawed. Global public policy – not world government, but a mixed approach to global management in which states, corporations, NGOs, regional and international organizations, and coalitions cooperate – provides an alternative and promising framework.
Using four case studies – global banking, money laundering, dual-use export controls, and trade in chemical precursors – the book develops the concept of global public policy and shows how its principles have the potential to improve the capacities of policymakers to deal with the challenges of the 21st century.
To order the book, please visit the Brookings website.
