Rosenau 2009
Rosenau 2009
Rosenau 2009
REFERENCES
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Global Governance 1 (1995), 13-43
Governance in the
Twenty-first Century
_-_________-__-___. /fflv ___________________
James N. Rosenau
Conceptual Nuances
13
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14 Governance in the Twenty-first Century
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fames N. Rosenau 15
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16 Governance in the Twenty-first Century
and more organizations to satisfy their needs and wants. Indeed, since the
needs and wants of people are most effectively expressed through orga
nized action, the organizational explosion of our time is no less consequen
tial than the population explosion. Hastened by dynamic technologies that
have shrunk social, economic, political, and geographic distances and
thereby rendered the world ever more interdependent, expanded by the ad
vent of new global challenges such as those posed by a deteriorating envi
ronment, an AIDS epidemic, and drug trafficking, and further stimulated
by widespread authority crises within existing governance mechanisms,
the proliferation of organizations is pervasive at and across all levels of
human activity?from neighborhood organizations, community groups, re
gional networks, national states, and transnational regimes to international
systems.
Not only is global life marked by a density of populations, it is also
dense with organized activities, thereby complicating and extending the
processes of global governance. For while organizations provide decision
points through which the steering mechanisms of governance can be carried
forward, so may they operate as sources of opposition to any institutions
and policies designed to facilitate governance. Put in still another way, if it
is the case, as many (including myself) argue, that global life late in the
twentieth century is more complex than ever before in history, it is because
the world is host to ever greater numbers of organizations in all walks of
life and in every corner of every continent. And it is this complexity, along
with the competitive impulses that lead some organizations to defy steerage
and resort to violence, that makes the tasks of governance at once so diffi
cult and so daunting.
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James N. Rosenau 17
Put differently, the continuing disaggregation that has followed the end
of the Cold War suggests a further extension of the anarchic structures that
have long pervaded world politics. If it was possible to presume that the ab
sence of hierarchy and an ultimate authority signified the presence of anar
chy during the era of hegemonic leadership and superpower competition,
such a characterization of global governance is all the more pertinent today.
Indeed, it might well be observed that a new form of anarchy has evolved
in the current period?one that involves not only the absence of a highest
authority but that also encompasses such an extensive disaggregation of au
thority as to allow for much greater flexibility, innovation, and experimen
tation in the development and application of new control mechanisms.
In sum, while politicians and pundits may speak confidently or longingly
about establishing a new world order, such a concept is meaningful only as
it relates to the prevention or containment of large-scale violence and war. It
is not a concept that can be used synonomously with global governance if by
the latter is meant the vast numbers of rule systems that have been caught up
in the proliferating networks of an ever more interdependent world.
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18 Governance in the Twenty-first Century
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f?mes N. Rosenau 19
superpower competition. Partly they have been driven by a search for new,
more effective forms of political organization better suited to the turbulent
circumstances that have evolved with the shrinking of the world by dy
namic technologies. Partly they have been driven by the skill revolution
that has enabled citizens to identify more clearly their needs and wants as
well as to empower them more thoroughly to engage in collective action.
Partly they have been stimulated and sustained by "subgroupism"?the
fragmenting and coalescing of groups into new organizational entities?that
has created innumerable new sites from which authority can emerge and to
ward which it can gravitate. Partly they have been driven by the continu
ing globalization of national and local economies that has undermined long
established ways of sustaining commercial and financial relations. And, no
less, the shifts have been accelerated by the advent of interdependence is
sues?such as environmental pollution, AIDS, monetary crises, and the
drug trade?that have fostered new and intensified forms of transnational
collaboration as well as new social movements that are serving as transna
tional voices for change.
In short, the numerous shifts in the loci of governance stem from in
teractive tensions whereby processes of globalization and localization are
simultaneously unfolding on a worldwide scale. In some situations these
foregoing dynamics are fostering control mechanisms that extend beyond
national boundaries, and in others the need for the psychological comfort of
neighborhood or ethnic attachments is leading to the diminution of national
entities and the formation or extension of local mechanisms. The combined
effect of the simultaneity of these contradictory trends is that of lessening
the capacities for governance located at the level of sovereign states and na
tional societies. Much governance will doubtless continue to be sustained
by states and their governments initiating and implementing policies in the
context of their legal frameworks?and in some instances national govern
ments are likely to work out arrangements for joint governance with rule
systems at other levels?but the effectiveness of their policies is likely to
be undermined by the proliferation of emergent control mechanisms both
within and outside their jurisdictions. In the words of one analyst, "The
very high levels of interdependence and vulnerability stimulated by tech
nological change now necessitate new forms of global political authority
and even governance."7
Put more emphatically, perhaps the most significant pattern discernible
in the crisscrossing flow of transformed authority involves processes of bi
furcation whereby control mechanisms at national levels are, in varying de
grees, yielding space to both more encompassing and narrower, less com
prehensive forms of governance. For analytic purposes, we shall refer to the
former as transnational governance mechanisms and the latter as subna
tional governance mechanisms, terms that do not preclude institutionalized
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20 Governance in the Twenty-first Century
governmental mechanisms but that allow for the large degree to which our
concern is with dynamic and evolving processes rather than with the rou
tinized procedures of national governments.
While transnational and subnational mechanisms differ in the extent of
their links across national boundaries?all the former are by definition
boundary-spanning forms of control, while some of the latter may not ex
tend beyond the jurisdiction of their states?both types must face the same
challenges to governance. Both must deal with a rapidly changing, ever
more complex world in which people, information, goods, and ideas are in
continuous motion and thus endlessly reconfiguring social, economic, and
political horizons. Both are confronted with the instabilities and disorder
that derive from resource shortages, budgetary constraints, ethnic rivalries,
unemployment, and incipient or real inflation. Both must contend with the
ever greater relevance of scientific findings and the epistemic communities
that form around those findings. Both are subject to the continuous tensions
that spring from the inroads of corrupt practices, organized crime, and rest
less publics that have little use for politics and politicians. Both must cope
with pressures for further fragmentation of subgroups on the one hand and
for more extensive transnational links on the other. Both types of mecha
nisms, in short, have severe adaptive problems and, given the fragility of
their legal status and the lack of long-standing habits of support for them,
many of both types may fail to maintain their essential structures intact.
Global governance, it seems reasonable to anticipate, is likely to consist of
proliferating mechanisms that fluctuate between bare survival and increas
ing institutionalization, between considerable chaos and widening degrees
of order.
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James N. Rosenau 21
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* European Environmental Bureau
World Trade Organization
American Jewish Congress
United Nations System
human-rights regime
* credit rating agencies crime syndicates election monitoring
the Greek lobby European Union
Institutionalized
* internet
* nongovernmental organizations
social movements -
Transnational
Subnational
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James N. Rosenau 23
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24 Governance in the Twenty-first Century
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James N. Rosenau 25
Despite the lack of structural constraints that allow for their growth,
however, social movements may not remain permanently inchoate and
nascent. At those times when the issues of concern to their members climb
high on the global agenda, they may begin to evolve at least temporary or
ganizational arrangements through which to move toward their goals. The
Internationa! Nestl? Boycott Committee is illustrative in this regard: it or
ganized a seven-year international boycott of Nestl? products and then was
dismantled when the Nestl? Company complied with its demands. In some
instances, moreover, the organizational expression of a movement's aspira
tions can develop enduring features. Fearful that the development of orga
nizational structures might curb their spontaneity, some movement mem
bers might be aghast at the prospect of formalized procedures, explicit
rules, and specific role assignments, but clearly the march toward goals re
quires organizational coherence at some point. Thus have transnational so
cial movement organizations (TSMOs) begun to dot the global landscape.
Oxfam and Amnesty International are two examples among many that
could be cited of movement spinoffs that have evolved toward the institu
tionalized extreme of the continuum. The European Environmental Bureau
(EEB), founded in 1974, has moved less rapidly toward that extreme, but
it now has a full-time staff quartered in a Brussels office and shows signs
of becoming permanent as the environmental movement matures.14
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26 Governance in the Twenty-first Century
least initially may foster a relocation of authority from the political to the
economic realm. To be sure, some microregions may span conventional
boundaries within a single state and thus be more logically treated as in
stances of subnational control mechanisms, but such a distinction is not
drawn here because many such regions are, as noted in the ensuing para
graphs, transnational in scope. Indeed, since they "are interlinked pro
cesses,7'17 it is conceivable that the evolution of microregions contributes to
the emergence of macroregions, and vice versa.
An insightful example along these lines is provided by the develop
ments that have flowed from the success of a cooperation pact signed in
1988 by Lyon, Milan, Stuttgart, and Barcelona, developments that have led
one analyst to observe that "a resurrection of 'city states' and regions is
quietly transforming Europe's political and economic landscape, diminish
ing the influence of national governments and redrawing the continental
map of power for the 21st century."18 All four cities and their surrounding
regions have an infrastructure and location that are more suited to the
changes at work in Europe. They are attracting huge investment and enjoy
ing a prosperity that has led to new demands for greater autonomy. Some
argue that, as a result, the emerging urban centers and economies are fos
tering "a new historical dynamism that will ultimately transform the politi
cal structure of Europe by creating a new kind of 'Hanseatic League' that
consists of thriving city-states."19 One specialist forecasts that there will be
nineteen cities with at least twenty million people in the greater metropoli
tan area by the year 2000, with the result that "cities, not nations, will be
come the principal identity for most people in the world."20 Others offer
similar interpretations, anticipating that these identity shifts will have pro
found implications for nationhood and traditional state boundaries.21
And what unit is evolving in the place of the nation-state as a natural
unit for organizing activity within the economic realm? Again the data
point to the emergence of control mechanisms that are regional in scope.
These regional control mechanisms are not governmentalty imposed but
"are drawn by the deft but invisible hand of the global market for goods
and services."22 This is not to say, however, that region states are lacking in
structure. On the contrary, since they make "effective points of entry into
the global economy because the very characteristics that define them are
shaped by the demands of that economy."23 Needless to say, since the bor
ders of regional states are determined by the "naturalness" of their eco
nomic zones and thus rarely coincide with the boundaries of political units,
the clash between the incentives induced by markets and the authority of
governments is central to the emergence of transnational governance mech
anisms. Indeed, it is arguable that a prime change at work in world politics
today is a shift in the balance between those two forces, with political
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James N. Rosenau 27
State-Sponsored Mechanisms
Although largely nursed into being through the actions of states, macrore
gions may be no less nascent than cities and microregions. And like their
micro counterparts, the macroregions, which span two or more states, are
deeply ensconced in a developmental process that may, in some instances,
move steadily toward institutionalization, while in others the evolutionary
process may either move slowly or fall short of culminating in formal in
stitutions. Movement toward institutionalization?or in Hettne's felicitous
term, "regionness"?occurs the more a region is marked by "economic in
terdependence, communication, cultural homogeneity, coherence, capacity
to act and, in particular, capacity to resolve conflicts."26
Whatever their pace or outcome, those processes have come to be
known as the "new" regionalism, which is conceived to be different from
the "old" regionalism in several ways. While the latter was a product of
Cold War bipolarity, the former has come into being in the context of pre
sent-day multipolarity. The old regionalism was, in effect, created on a top
down basis from the outside by the superpowers. The new regionalism, on
the other hand, consists of more spontaneous processes from within that un
fold largely on a bottom-up basis as the constituent states find common
cause in a deepening interdependence. As one observer puts it,
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28 Governance in the Twenty-first Century
Currently, of course, the various new regions of the world are at very dif
ferent stages of development, with some already having evolved the rudi
ments of control mechanisms while others are still at earlier stages in the
process. As noted below, Europe has advanced the most toward institution
alized steering mechanisms, but the decline of hegemons, the advent of
democracies, and the demise of governmentally managed economies
throughout the world has fostered the conditions under which the new re
gionalism can begin to flourish. Pronounced movements in this direction
are discernible in the Nordic region, in the Caribbean, in the Andean
Group, and in the Southern Cone of South America. Lesser degrees of re
gionness are evident in the three Asia-Pacific regions?East Asia, South
east Asia, and the European Pacific?and the former Soviet Union, while
the regionalization process has yet to become readily recognizable in South
Asia, the Middle East, and Africa.
Whatever the degree to which the new regionalism has taken hold in
various parts of the world, however, it seems clear that this macrophe
nomenon is increasingly a central feature of global governance. Indeed, the
dynamics of macroregions can be closely linked to those of microregions in
the sense that as the former shift authority away from national states, so do
they open up space for the latter to evolve their own autonomous control
mechanisms. "This can be seen all over Europe today."28 The dynamics of
globalization and localization are intimately tied to each other.
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fam?s N. Rosenau 29
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30 Governance in the Twenty-first Century
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James N. Rosenau 31
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32 Governance in the Twenty-first Century
sometimes working with, sometimes against, state and market actors who
are not accustomed to regarding civil society as an independent actor."36
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fames N. Rosenau 33
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34 Governance in the Twenty-first Century
State-Sponsored Mechanisms
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James M Rosenau 35
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36 Governance in the Twenty-first Century
The European Union. Much more so than the United Nations, the history
of the European Union (EU) is a record of the evolutionary route to insti
tutionalization. Even a brief account of this history is beyond the scope of
this analysis, but suffice it to say that it is one macroregion that has passed
through various stages of growth to its present status as an elaborately in
stitutionalized instrument of governance for the (increasing number of)
countries within its jurisdiction. Sure, it was states that formalized the in
stitutionalization, but they did so as a consequence of transformations that
culminated in the member countries holding referenda wherein the estab
lishment of the E? was approved by citizenries. In this sense the EU offers
a paradigmatic example of the dynamics that propel evolutionary processes
from nascent to institutionalized steering mechanisms. As one observer puts
it, this transformation occurred through "the gradual blurring of the dis
tinction made between the 'Community' and the 'nation-states' which
agreed to form that community in the first place... . Although the two are
by no means linked as tightly as are subnational units to the center in the
traditional state, the Community-state entanglement is such that the Com
munity is very far from being a traditional regional organization."45 Indeed,
such is the evolution of the European Union that it
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James N. Rosenau 37
In short, while the EU does not have "federal law because Community leg
islation suffers from the defect that its statutes are not legitimized by a
democratic legislature/'47 it does have a rule system in the combination of
its executive and judicial institutions.
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38 Governance in the Twenty-first Century
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fam?s N. Rosenau 39
central loci of control in the processes of global governance; they are very
central indeed. No account of the global system can ignore them or give
them other than a prominent place in the scheme of things. Nevertheless,
states have lost some of their earlier dominance of the governance system,
as well as their ability to evoke compliance and to govern effectively. This
change is in part due to the growing relevance and potential of control
mechanisms sustained by transnational and subnational systems of rule.
If the analysis were deemed complete here, the reader, like the author,
would likely feel let down, as if the final chapter of this story of a disag
gregated and fragmenting global system of governance has yet to be writ
ten. It is an unfinished story, one's need for closure would assert. It needs
a conclusion, a drawing together of the "big picture," a sweeping assess
ment that offers some hope that somehow the world can muddle through
and evolve techniques of cooperation that will bridge its multitude of dis
aggregated parts and achieve a measure of coherence that enables future
generations to live in peace, achieve sustainable development, and maintain
a modicum of creative order. Assess the overall balance, one's training
cries out, show how the various emergent centers of power form a multi
polar system of states that will manage to cope with the challenges of war
within and among its members. Yes, that's it?depict the overall system as
polyarchical and indicate how such an arrangement can generate multilat
eral institutions of control that effectively address the huge issues that clut
ter the global agenda. Or, perhaps better, indicate how a hegemon will
emerge out of the disaggregation and have enough clout to foster
both progress and stability. At the very least, one's analytic impulses de
mand, suggest how worldwide tendencies toward disaggregation and local
ization may be offset by no less powerful tendencies toward aggregation
and globalization.
Compelling as these alternative interpretations may be, however, they
do not quell a sense that it is only a short step from polyarchy to Pollyanna
and that one's commitment to responsible analysis must be served by not
taking that step. The world is clearly on a path-dependent course, and some
of its present outlines can be discerned if, as noted at the outset, allowance
is made for nuance and ambiguity. Still, in this time of continuing and pro
found transformations, too much remains murky to project beyond the im
mediate present and anticipate long-term trajectories. All one can conclude
with confidence is that in the twenty-first century the paths to governance
will lead in many directions, some that will emerge into sunlit clearings and
others that will descend into dense jungles. ?
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40 Governance in the Twenty-first Century
Notes
James N. Rosenau is University Professor of International Affairs at George Wash
ington University. He is the author or editor of numerous publications, including,
Global Voices: Dialogues in International Relations (1993), The United Nations in
a Turbulent World (1992), Governance Without Government (1992), and Turbu
lence in World Politics: A Theory of Change and Continuity (1990).
The author is grateful to Walter Truett Anderson and Hongying Wang for their
reactions to an early draft of this article.
1. Alexander King and Bertrand Schneider, The First Global Revolution: A Re
port of the Council of Rome (New York: Pantheon Books, 1991), pp. 181-182 (ital
ics added). For other inquiries that support the inclusion of small, seemingly local
systems of rule in a broad analytic framework, see John Friedmann, Empowerment:
The Politics of Alternative Development (Cambridge, Mass.: Blackwell, 1992), and
Robert Huckfeldl, Eric Plutzer, and John Sprague, "Alternative Contexts of Politi
cal Behavior: Churches, Neighborhoods, and Individuals," Journal of Politics 55
(May 1993): 365-381.
2. Steven A. Rosell et al., Governing in an Information Society (Montreal: In
stitute for Research on Public Policy, 1992), p. 21.
3. Rule systems have much in common with what has come to be called the
"new institutionalism." See, for example, Robert O. Keohane, "International Insti
tutions: Two Approaches," International Studies Quarterly 32 (December 1988):
379-396; James G. March and Johan P. Olsen, "The New Institutionalism: Organi
zational Factors in Political Life," American Political Science Review 78 (Septem
ber 1984): 734-749; and Oran R. Young, "International Regimes: Toward a New
Theory of Institutions," World Politics 39 (October 1986): 104-122. For an ex
tended discussion of how the concept of control is especially suited to the analysis
of both formal and informal political phenomena, see James N. Rosenau, Calculated
Control as a Unifying Concept in the Study of International Politics and Foreign
Policy, Research Monograph No. 15 (Princeton: Center of International Studies,
Princeton University, 1963).
4. Cf, Rosenau and Ernst-Otto Czempiel, eds., Governance Without Govern
ment: Order and Change in World Politics (Cambridge: Cambridge University
Press, 1992). Also see the formulations in Peter Mayer, Volker Rittberger, and
Michael Zurn, "Regime Theory: State of the Art and Perspectives," in Volker
Rittberger, ed., Regime Theory and International Relations (New York: Oxford
University Press, 1993), and Timothy J. Sinclair, "Financial Knowledge as Gover
nance," a paper presented at the Annual Meeting of the International Studies Asso
ciation, Acapulco, 23-27 March 1993.
5. Anthony G. McGrew, "Global Politics in a Transitional Era," in Anthony
G. McGrew, Paul G. Lewis, et al., eds., Global Politics: Globalization and the Na
tion-State (Cambridge: Polity Press, 1992), p. 318.
6. Martin Hewson, "The Media of Political Globalization," a paper presented
at the Annual Meeting of the International Studies Association, Washington, D.C.,
March 1994, p. 2.
7. John Vogler, "Regimes and the Global Commons: Space, Atmosphere and
Oceans," in McGrew, Lewis, et al., Global Politics, p. 118.
8. Diana Jean Schemo, "Rebuilding of Suburban Dreams," New York Times, 4
May 1994, p. All.
9. Steven Greenhouse, "Kissinger Will Help Mediate Dispute Over Zulu
Homeland," New York Times, 12 April 1994, p. A8.
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James N, Rosenau 41
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42 Governance in the Twenty-first Century
that a similar process is occurring in the Southwest without the approval of Wash
ington, D.C., or Mexico City, see Cathryn L. Thorup, Redefining Governance in
North America: The Impact of Cross-Border Networks and Coalitions on Mexican
Immigration into the United States (Santa Monica: The Rand Corporation, 1993).
Although using a different label ("tribes"), a broader discussion of regional states
can be found in Joel Kotkin, Tribes: How Race, Religion and Identity Determine
Success in the New Global Economy (New York: Random House, 1993).
25. Ohmae, "The Rise of the Region State," p. 83.
26. Hettne, "The New Regionalism," p. 7.
27. Ibid., pp. 2-3. For another formulation that also differentiates between the
old and new regionalism, see Kaisa Lahteenmaki and Jyrki Kakonen, "Regionaliza
tion and Its Impact on the Theory of International Relations," paper presented at the
Annual Meeting of the International Studies Association, Washington, D.C., March
1994, p. 9. For a contrary perspective, see Stephen D. Krasner, "Regional Economic
Blocs and the End of the Cold War," paper presented at the International Colloqium
on Regional Economic Integration, University of S?o Paulo, December 1991.
28. Hettne, "The New Regionalism," p. 11.
29. Arthur Stein, "Coordination and Collaboration: Regimes in an Anarchic
World," in David A. Baldwin, ed., Neorealism and Neoliberalism: The Contempo
rary Debate (New York: Columbia University Press, 1993), p. 29.
30. Vogler, "Regimes and the Global Commons," p. 123.
31. Stein, "Coordination and Collaboration," p. 31.
32. Cathryn L. Thorup, "Redefining Governance in North America: Citizen
Diplomacy and Cross-Border Coalitions," Enfoque (Spring 1993): 1, 12.
33. For a valuable attempt to explore this concept theoretically and empirically,
see Thorup, "The Politics of Free Trade and the Dynamics of Cross-Border Coali
tions in U.S-Mexican Relations," Columbia Journal of World Business 26 (Sum
mer 1991): 12-26
34. David Ronfeldt and Cathryn L. Thorup, "North America in the Era of Cit
izen Networks: State, Society, and Security," (Santa Monica: RAND 1993), p. 22.
35. Ivo D. Duchachek, "The International Dimension of Subnational Govern
ment," Publias 14 (Fall 1984): 25.
36. Ronfeldt and Thorup, "North America in the Era of Citizen Networks,"
p. 24.
37. This brief discussion of the credit rating agencies in the private sector is
based on Timothy J. Sinclair, "The Mobility of Capital and the Dynamics of Global
Governance: Credit Risk Assessment in the Emerging World Order," a paper pre
sented at the Annual Meeting of the International Studies Association, Washington,
D.C., March 1994, and Sinclair, "Passing Judgment: Credit Rating Processes as
Regulatory Mechanisms of Governance in the Emerging World Order," Review of
International Political Economy (April 1994).
38. Sinclair, "The Mobility of Capital and the Dynamics of Global Gover
nance," p. 16.
39. Phil Williams, "Transnational Criminal Organizations and International Se
curity," Survival 36 (Spring 1994): 97. See also Williams, "International Drug Traf
ficking: An Industry Analysis," Low Intensity Conflict and Law Enforcement 2
(Winter 1993): 397-420. For another dimension of transnational criminality, see
Victor T. Levine, "Transnational Aspects of Political Corruption," in Arnold J. Hei
denheimer, Michael Johnston, and Victor T. LeVine, eds., Political Corruption: A
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