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ID095619
Title ProperFinancial governance and transnational deliberative democracy
LanguageENG
AuthorGermain, Randall
Publication2010.
Summary / Abstract (Note)Recent concern with the institutional underpinning of the international financial architecture has intersected with broader debates concerning the possibility of achieving an adequate deliberative context for decisions involving transnational economic governance. Scholars working within traditions associated with international political economy, deliberative democracy, cosmopolitanism and critical theory have informed this broader debate. This article uses this debate to ask whether the structure of financial governance at the global level exhibits the necessary conditions to support deliberative democracy. In particular, it considers the extent to which publicness and a public sphere have become part of the broader structure of financial governance. Although in some ways financial governance is a hard case for this debate, an argument can be made that a public sphere has emerged as an important element of the international financial architecture. At the same time, the analysis of the role of the public sphere in financial governance reveals important lessons which public sphere theorists and deliberative democracy advocates need to consider in order to extend their analysis into the realm of global political economy.
`In' analytical NoteReview of International Studies Vol. 36, No. 2; Apr 2010: p493-509
Journal SourceReview of International Studies Vol. 36, No. 2; Apr 2010: p493-509
Key WordsPolitical Economy ;  Financial Governance ;  Transnational Diliberative Democracy ;  Democracy ;  Global Finance


 
 
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