ALTERED STATES
Globalization, Sovereignty, and Governance
Gordon Smith and Moisés Naím
IDRC 2000
ISBN 0-88936-917-8
e-ISBN 1-55250-262-7
96 pp.
Disponible en français
The dangerous turmoil is plain to see in the everyday failures of governments. Economic insecurity, polluted environments, the transfiguring power of global media, brooding conflicts of tribe and territory: all confound the capacity of even the most powerful state to govern alone, even on its own territory. For all the opportunities that globalization promises, it raises urgent questions of governance. Can states any longer govern? Has the achievement of democratic government come too late for most of the world? Can globalization be democratized?
In Altered States, Gordon Smith and Moisés Naím provide practical recommendations for improved governance and for strengthening and reforming the United Nations. They explore the dynamics of globalization and discuss what makes today's globalization distinct. They test the prevailing wisdom about sovereignty and state capacity, and sort out the humbug. They consider whether sovereignty itself is an impediment or a requirement to security and prosperity. And, in three urgent areas ripe for progress — preventing deadly conflict, providing opportunities for the young, and managing the many harms of climate change — they advance plans of action by which states, with others in the global community, can govern successfully in the future.
The message of Altered States is one of both hope and warning: globalization opens great possibilities of prosperity, security, and human well-being, but only if new ways of governance are constructed. The United Nations must lead in this process and, at the Millennium Assembly in September, seize the opportunity to reconstruct our future.
THE AUTHORS
Gordon Smith is Director of the Centre for Global Studies at the University of Victoria and a Senior Fellow in the Liu Centre at the University of British Columbia, Canada. He is Chairman of the Board of Governors of Canada's International Development Research Centre and the Canadian Institute for Climate Studies, and directs the Canadian Global Change Program. Previously, Dr Smith was Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs and Personal Representative of the Prime Minister of Canada for the G7 and G8 summits. He has also served Canada as its Ambassador to NATO and as its Deputy Minister of Social Development. Dr Smith was educated at McGill University and received his doctorate from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
In Conversation: Gordon Smith
Moisés Naím is the Editor of Foreign Policy magazine. He has written extensively on the political economy of international trade and investment, multilateral organizations, economic reforms, and on globalization. He is the author or editor of eight books and of numerous articles. Dr Naím served as Venezuela's Minister of Trade and Industry and played a central role in the initial launching of major economic reforms in 1989. Preceding his ministerial position, Dr Naim served as Professor and Dean at the Instituto de Estudios Superiores de Administración in Caracas. Between 1992 and 1996, he was the Director of the Projects on Economic Reforms and on Latin America at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace in Washington, DC. Dr Naim has also been associated with the World Bank, first as an executive director and some years later as Senior Adviser to the President. Dr Naím holds doctorate and master's degrees from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
Document(s) |
Foreword 2003-07-25
Maureen O'Neil
President, International Development Research Centre
Preface 2003-07-25
Executive Summary 2003-07-25
Introduction: GLOBALIZATION: HOPES AND WARNINGS 2003-07-24
Globalization challenges and reinforces the power of the state. Governance is tested in a turbulent confusion of opportunity, insecurity, and anxiety. The Millennium Assembly of the United Nations offers the chance for productive debate on how humankind will govern itself in the global village.
Part 1: SOVEREIGNTY AND GLOBALIZATION: GOVERNMENT IN A STATE OF CONFUSION 2003-07-24
What do the World Bank, Microsoft, and Greenpeace have in common? The noisy town square of world politics is populated by all manner of nonstates. Part 1 explores how failures of governance are related to pressures of globalization. It then suggests how governments might respond to urgent problems of peace and security, social equity, and protecting the global environment.
Part 2: FOR THE MILLENNIUM ASSEMBLY: THREE IMPERATIVES OF GOVERNANCE 2003-07-24
Preventing deadly conflict, providing opportunities for the young, and managing climate change three urgent obligations of governance. Part 2 examines these imperatives in their complex dimensions: South-North; foreign-domestic; publicprivate. Practical recommendations for improved governance are proposed for the consideration of the Millennium Assembly.
Conclusion: GOVERNING PRINCIPLES: THE UNITED NATIONS AND THE MILLENNIUM ASSEMBLY 2003-07-24
Globalization demands that we develop new forms of governance. And, as a natural nexus to the growing global networks of governance, the United Nations can lead in this process. Just as in 1944 at Bretton Woods, in Manhattan at the turn of the millennium, we can seize the opportunity to reconstruct our future.
Appendix 1: Sources and Resources 2003-07-23
Appendix 2: Friends of the United Nations 2003-07-22
Appendix 3: List of Acronyms 2003-07-22
Appendix 4: The Authors, the Publisher, and the Sponsor 2003-07-21