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Global Governance Under Fire - (Princeton Studies in International History and Politics) by Richard Clark & Allison Carnegie
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Highlights
- How international organizations can combat populist opposition--and the implications for institutional resilience, legitimacy, and accountability Populist leaders around the world increasingly reject international organizations, decrying them as constraints on state power and rallying followers against the "global elite" who run them.
- About the Author: Allison Carnegie is professor of political science at Columbia University.
- 280 Pages
- Political Science, International Relations
- Series Name: Princeton Studies in International History and Politics
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Book Synopsis
How international organizations can combat populist opposition--and the implications for institutional resilience, legitimacy, and accountability
Populist leaders around the world increasingly reject international organizations, decrying them as constraints on state power and rallying followers against the "global elite" who run them. These institutions--painstakingly built through decades of negotiation and multilateral cooperation--are often seen as passive bystanders, unable or unwilling to push back. In Global Governance Under Fire, Allison Carnegie and Richard Clark challenge this view, arguing that international organizations are, in fact, strategic agents with the tools to resist populist pressures. Offering fresh theoretical insights and original empirical analysis, they investigate how these institutions fight back and how their defensive strategies are reshaping global governance.
Using a multimethod approach that draws on novel data and qualitative evidence, Carnegie and Clark identify four key strategies that international organizations employ both to appease and to sideline populists and their constituents. They find that while these strategies help fortify global governance against populist opposition, they may also produce unintended consequences, potentially eroding institutional legitimacy and fueling further resistance. A timely and compelling account, the book provides a crucial roadmap for understanding--and safeguarding--the global order.
About the Author
Allison Carnegie is professor of political science at Columbia University. She is the author of Power Plays: How International Institutions Reshape Coercive Diplomacy and the coauthor of Secrets in Global Governance: Disclosure Dilemmas and the Challenge of International Cooperation. Richard Clark is assistant professor of political science at the University of Notre Dame and the author of Cooperative Complexity: The Next Level of Global Economic Governance.