About the Book
Table of Contents:
Table of Contents for Emerging Powers in Global Governance: Lessons from the Heiligendamm Process , edited by Andrew F. Cooper and Agata Antkiewicz Foreword | Dirk Messner Preface | Yoginder Alag Acknowledgements Abbreviations and Acronyms 1. The Heiligendamm Process: Structural Reordering and Diplomatic Agency | Andrew F. Cooper 2. The Logic of the B(R)ICSAM Model for Global Governance | Timothy M. Shaw, Agata Antkiewicz, and Andrew F. Cooper 3. From G8 2003 to G13 2010? The Heiligendamm Processâs Past, Present, and Future | John Kirton B(R)ICSAM CASE STUDIES 4. Chinaâs Evolving G8 Engagement: Complex Interests and Multiple Identity in Global Governance Reform | Gregory T. Chin 5. India and the G8: Reaching Out or Out of Reach? | Abdul Nafey 6. Brazil and the G8 Heiligendamm Process | Denise Gregory and Paulo Roberto de Almeida 7. South Africa: Global Reformism, Global Apartheid, and the Heiligendamm Process | Brendan Vickers 8. A Break with the Past or a Natural Progression? Mexico and the Heiligendamm Process | Duncan Wood 9. ASEAN and the G8: Potentially Productive Partners or Two Ships Passing in the Night? | Paul Bowles THE EVOLVING ARCHITECTURE OF CHANGE 10. Germany and the Heiligendamm Process | Thomas Fues and Julia Leininger 11. Why Is the OECD Involved in the Heiligendamm Process? | Richard Woodward 12. Russia and Evolution of the Heiligendamm Process | Victoria V. Panova 13. The United States and Summit Reform in a Transformational Era | Colin I. Bradford, Jr. 14. Enhanced Engagement: The Heiligendamm Process and Beyond | Alan S. Alexandroff List of Contributors Index Contributors Alan S. Alexandroff is a Research Director at the Munk Centre for International Studies at the University of Toronto. He recently launched the Global Institutional Reform (GIR) Workshop at CIGI, a project designed to evaluate the adequacy of institutional reform proposals for the international system, leading to his edited volume, Can the World Be Governed? Possibilities for Effective Multilateralism (WLUP, 2008). In collaboration with Andrew F. Cooper, he is working on a second volume, Can the World Be Governed? Rising States; Rising Institutions . Paulo Roberto de Almeida is Professor of International Political Economy at Uniceub-Brasilia, and Associate Professor at Instituto Rio Branco, the Brazilian diplomatic academy. He is also a career diplomat since 1977 and previously served as Minister-Counselor at the Brazilian Embassy in Washington (1999â2003). He holds a Ph.D. in Social Sciences from the University of Brussels and an M.A. in International Economy from the University of Antwerpen. Besides his professional duties, he has engaged in academic activities in Brazil and abroad. Dr. Almeida is also a researcher in economic history and international economic relations of Brazil, and has authored many books in those areas. Agata Antkiewicz is Senior Researcher and Program Leader at CIGI, where she oversees the Shifting Global Order research theme as well as the BRICSAM and economic governance projects. She holds an M.A. in Economics, specializing in International Trade and International Relations, from the University of Economics in Wroclaw, Poland. Ms Antkiewiczâs authored or co-authored articles have been published by: The World Economy, Review of International Organizations, Journal of European Integration, Third World Quarterly, International Studies Review, Canadian Public Policy Journal , and National Bureau of Economic Research. Paul Bowles is Professor of Economics at the University of Northern British Columbia. He is a past-President of the Canadian Society for the Study of International Development and is also affiliated with universities in China and Mexico. He specializes in globalization, regionalism, and East Asian development. His most recent book is Globalization and National Currencies: Endangered Species? (Routledge, 2008). His current research projects include the political economy of Chinaâs currency choices and the political economy of labour and globalization. Colin I. Bradford, Jr., is Research Professor of Economics and International Relations at American University and a Non-Resident Senior Fellow at the Brookings Institution and at CIGI. He has held several positions, including Chief Economist at the United States Agency for International Development, Head of Research of the Development Centre of the OECD, Senior Staff of the Strategic Planning Unit of the World Bank, and Associate Professor in the Practice of International Economics and Management at the School of Organization and Management, Yale University. Gregory T. Chin teaches global politics, comparative politics, and East Asian political economy in the Department of Political Science and the Faculty of Graduate Studies at York University. He is a Senior Fellow at CIGI, and a member of the Advisory Board of the North Korea Research Group at the University of Toronto. He is a member of the Editorial Board of Rowman & Littlefieldâs New Millennium Books Series, and an academic member of the Editorial Board of the China and International Organization Books Series, jointly published by Shanghai Peopleâs Press and Shanghai International Studies University. He has held a visiting fellowship at Peking University (1997â98). His forthcoming book is entitled Chinaâs Automotive Modernization: Industrial Policy and Rival Firms (Palgrave, 2009). Andrew F. Cooper is Associate Director and Distinguished Fellow at CIGI and Professor of Political Science at the University of Waterloo, where he teaches in the areas of International Political Economy, Global Governance, Comparative and Canadian Foreign Policy, and the Practice of Diplomacy. He has been a Visiting Professor at Harvard University, the Australian National University, and in 2009 a Fulbright Visiting Chair of Public Diplomacy at the University of Southern California. Dr. Cooperâs recent publications include Global Governance and Diplomacy: Worlds Apart? (Palgrave, 2008), Celebrity Diplomacy (Paradigm, 2007), and Regionalisation and Global Governance: The Taming of Globalisation? (Routledge, 2007). Thomas Fues is Senior Research Fellow at the German Development Institute (DIE). His main research interests are global governance, emerging powers, United Nations, and international development cooperation. Recent publications include articles on G8 reform, the role of China and India in the global system, the UN development sector, as well as human rights and global governance. In addition to his research tasks, Dr. Fues is responsible for the Global Governance School at DIE as part of the training and dialogue programme âManaging Global Governanceâ with young professionals from governments and think tanks of emerging economies. Denise Gregory is a specialist in international relations and business administration, with experience in the areas of foreign trade, integration, and international trade negotiations. She was named Executive Director of the Brazilian Center for International Relations (CEBRI) in December 2004. Previously, she acted as Institutional Relations Director of Investe Brasil, and was Chief of Staff to the President of the Brazilian Economic and Social Development Bank (BNDES). Ms. Gregory has also held positions with the Executive Secretariat of the Foreign Trade Chamber (CAMEX), and Department of Foreign Trade Policy within the Foreign Trade Secretariat. John J. Kirton is a professor of Political Science at the University of Toronto, where he is a Fellow of Trinity College. Dr. Kirton is the director of the G8 Research Group, established at the University of Toronto in 1987. He is also a Research Associate of the Centre for International Studies, where he leads the Program on Global Health Diplomacy and the G20 Research Group. He has advised the Canadian and Russian governments and the World Health Organization on G7/8 participation, international trade, and sustainable development, and has written widely on G7/G8 summitry. Julia Leininger is Research Fellow at the German Development Institute (DIE) in the Competitiveness and Social Development department. She is also an associate of the Peace Research Institute Frankfurt as part of the PRIF/ Research Associate Project: Democracy Promotion through International Organisations. She has also held research positions with both the German Federal Ministry For Economic Cooperation and Development (BMZ) and the United Nations Development Programme. Her current research activities are in global governance, international institutions, and democracy promotion. Abdul Nafey is Professor at the Centre for Canadian, US and Latin American Studies, Jawaharal Nehru University (JNU). Before joining JNU, Dr. Nafey taught at the Universities of Delhi and Goa. He was Head of the Centre for Latin American Studies, Goa University in 1989â90. His areas of r
About the Author :
Andrew F. Cooper is the associate director of the Centre for International Governance Innovation (CIGI) and a professor in the Department of Political Science at the University of Waterloo. His research interests include international institutional reform, diplomatic innovation and practices, and celebrity diplomacy. Agata Antkiewicz is a senior researcher at the Centre for International Governance Innovation (CIGI), where she oversees the BRICSAM and economic governance projects. Her articles have been published in numerous international journals.
Review :
`` Emerging Powers in Global Governance is a rare example of how to marry theory and case-study to advance the understanding of and the debate on global governance. While it recognizes the centrality of emerging powers, it pushes for their inclusion in discussions on the new global architecture. The Heiligendamm Process is central to the book as the first significant step undertaken by the G8 in this area. Readers are presented with the agendas of the world's most industrialized countries and the aspirations of emerging countries, and are led to reflect on the way forward. -- Paola Subacchi, Research Director, International Economics, Chatham House
``Countries like Mexico, India, Brazil, and especially China are...emerging...to compete with the United States in the modern world.... Cooper and Antkiewicz elaborate and give readers everything they need to know on the matter. Complete and comprehensive, Emerging Powers in Global Governance is an educational read on today's world.'' -- Wisconsin Bookwatch, The Political Science Shelf, February 2009
``As globalization intensifies and the world changes at a rapid pace, emerging economies are acquiring growing economic and political importance. In this context, new challenges require new forms of global economic governance and deeper cooperation. At the 2007 G8 Summit in Heiligendamm, G8 leaders and the leaders of China, Brazil, India, Mexico, and South Africa agreed to start a political dialogue on selected global economic issues. This book explores the first steps of the new dialogue process and its future potential. It breaks new ground and could assist policy-makers in drawing the map for enhanced international cooperation.'' -- Ulrich Benterbusch, Director, Heiligendamm Process Support Unit, Organisation forEconomic Cooperation and Development