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Book details for The Coming Democracy: New Rules For Running A New World Buy The Coming Democracy: New Rules For Running A New World
The Coming Democracy: New Rules For Running A New World
Book author(s) Book subject

Ann Florini

Politics

Sales rank 1,447,681 Customers rating (based on 3 reviews)
The Coming Democracy: New Rules For Running A New World

Brief description of The Coming Democracy: New Rules For Running A New World

National governments are proving ill-equipped to manage an increasingly complicated suite of global problems, from infectious diseases to climate change to conflicts over international trade. In The Coming Democracy, leading political analyst Ann Florini sets forth a compelling new paradigm for transnational governance, one based on the concept of ?transparency?? the idea that the free flow of information (on topics ranging from corporate and government behavior to nuclear proliferation to biodiversity protection) provides powerful ways to hold decision makers accountable and to give ordinary people meaningful voice in shaping the policies that affect them. Dramatic breakthroughs in information technology of the past decade have made such transparency possible on a global scale.

Florini offers a clear and comprehensive assessment of the possibilities for using transparency to develop effective approaches to transnational governance. She shows how this new form of governance promises real hope for managing global problems, and provides a compelling scenario that demonstrates how existing conventions and institutions can lead the way in the evolution of a better system of global governance.

Book details
PublisherIsland Press
Release date02/2003
AvailabilityUsually ships in 24 hours
EditionHardcover
List price$30
Our price$30
Used pricefrom $0.86
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Comments by amazon customers about The Coming Democracy: New Rules For Running A New World

Governments Broken, New Combinations with Business & Civil Society Needed
A great deal of hard work went into this volume, and as I went over the notes to see who was quoted and who was not, I had to competing thoughts: first, that we really need to start encouraging authors and publishers to do footnotes rather than endnotes to increase the integrated value of the whole; and second, that this is an East Coast publication, representing an important but incomplete slice of the literature. I would say that this book is essential reading for wonks and academics as well as policy staff, and not for the general public. J. F. Rischard's HIGH NOON: Twenty Global Problems, Twenty Years to Solve Them, is a much better book for the public, for policymakers, and for staff wanting a quick but comprehensive overview. The author is at the forefront among those who understand that governments are either broken or partisan, and that only new combinations of government, business, and civil society can devise new means of governance. The two most important words in this book are governance, and transparency. The most important concept in this book is the need for citizens to demand, receive, and exploit full access to all relevant information from governments, organizations such as the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund, and others, including corporations. The author worries that the center will not hold--that the polarization of wealthy versus poor may obviate the long-standing role of the center. George Soros has recently stated that the banks and Wall Street have to radically alter their economic and social contracts with the middle class and the poor "or risk losing everything," this author does not go so far, but the bulk of her work supports the Soros proposition. The book is consistent with the slowly emerging consensus that human security must be understood in its broadest terms, but being published in 2003, does not reflect the findings of the High Level Threat Panel of the United Nations (LtGen Dr. Brent Scowcroft being the American member), to wit, that poverty, infectuous disease, environmental degradation, inter-state conflict, civil war, genocide, other atrocities, proliferation, terrorism, and transnational crime are all demanding of concerted global action. The book does not grapple with the even harder issue of identifying and integrating the twelve policies (agriculture, debt, diplomacy, economy, education, energy, family, immigration, justice, security, social security, water), nor does the book attempt to discuss how the eight challengers--the other 900 lb gorrillas in the world system (Brazil, China, India, Indonesia, Iran, Russia, Venezuela, and Wild Cards such as Turkey, South Africa, Catholicism, and Islam) might be persuaded to test the author's great faith in harnessing collective identities to support collective actions that are often opposed by the traditional stake-holders, namely governments and multinational corporations. On balance, I would put this book in the top 25 on the topic, but not as the easiest, most relevant, or most comprehensive. The index is marginal, and the book would have benefitted greatly from both a conversion of the endnotes to footnotes--the author has done a first-class job on notes--and inclusion of a proper bibliography.


A blueprint master plan for expanding democracy on a global level
The world is changing - and with it, the nature of democracy itself: that's the message of Ann Florini's The Coming Democracy: New Rules For Running A New World, which considers the nature of these changes and presents a new framework for transnational governance. From an assessment of key systems and institutions to be involved in such a global management system to technological advances which led to further democratization around the world, The Coming Democracy offers a blueprint master plan for expanding democracy on a global level.

Sensible Principles for Solving the World's Problems
In the growing literature on questions of "global governance," this is by far the most accessible and compelling book to date. Florini explains in lucid prose how the simple principles of transparency and accountability (driven by the spread of technology and democratic values, respectively) can reshape traditional problem-solving approaches led by governments and international institutions. Instead, actors ranging from businesses to non-governmental organizations - and networks between them - can also contribute in credible and constructive ways. As the scope of truly global issues which affect everyone across borders increases, Florini's approach becomes not only more plausible but also more necessary.



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