Transnational rule-making is becoming increasingly common, with decisions being made at the global level, beyond the state. This book explores what the privatization of global rule-making means for democracy. Based on contemporary theoretical approaches to democratic global governance, it reconstructs three prominent rule-making processes in the field of global sustainability politics: the World Commission on Dams, the Global Reporting Initiative and the Forest Stewardship Council. Klaus Dingwerth argues that, if designed properly, private transnational rule-making can be as democratic as intergovernmental rule-making.
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Rezension
Ohanyan, Anna (2008) in: When the State Is Out: Democratic Credentials of Transnational Rule-Making, in: International Studies Review 10:4, 816-818.
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Dingwerth, Klaus
2007
Basingstoke: Palgrave
9-780-23054527-4
£ 55.00
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