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Governing Global Networks
International Regimes for Transportation and Communications
Governing Global Networks analyses the mutual interests which have sustained the regulatory regimes for four major international service industries.
Mark W. Zacher (Author), Brent A. Sutton (With)
9780521559737, Cambridge University Press
Paperback, published 12 October 1995
316 pages, 1 table
22.8 x 15.3 x 2.3 cm, 0.472 kg
Governing Global Networks argues that most international regimes are grounded in states' mutual cooperation, and not in the dictates of the most powerful states. It focuses on the regimes for four important international industries - shipping, air transport, telecommunications and postal services. Of particular importance to these regimes have been states' interests in both the free flow of commerce and their policy autonomy. The authors examine the relationship between these potentially conflicting goals. In particular they trace the impact of deregulation, which has led some states increasingly to place gains from economic openness ahead of their desire to maintain a high degree of control of their own economies; and to the decline of the traditional cartel elements of these regimes. This analysis is an important contribution to theoretical debates between neo-realists and neo-liberals in the study of international organisations and international political economy.
Preface
Acknowledgements
1. International regimes and global networks
2. Mutual interests and international regime theory
3. The international regime for shipping
4. The international regime for air transport
5. The international regime for telecommunications
6. The international regime for postal services
7. Normative continuities and international regime theory
Notes
Index.
Subject Areas: International relations [JPS]
