05923oam 2200829Ka 450 991046172340332120210222102045.01-280-49935-497866135945870-262-30121-0(CKB)2670000000174010(EBL)3339421(OCoLC)785195453(SSID)ssj0000681735(PQKBManifestationID)11447389(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000681735(PQKBWorkID)10663443(PQKB)10885483(StDuBDS)EDZ0000131053(OCoLC)785195453(OCoLC)794489205(OCoLC)817078687(OCoLC)961499395(OCoLC)962651204(OCoLC)1055401111(OCoLC)1066689679(OCoLC)1081226503(OCoLC-P)785195453(MaCbMITP)8458(MiAaPQ)EBC3339421(EXLCZ)99267000000017401020120410d2012 uy 0engur|n|---|||||txtccrReflexive governance for global public goods /edited by Eric Brousseau, Tom Dedeurwaerdere, and Bernd SiebenhünerCambridge, Mass. MIT Press20121 online resource (383 p.)Politics, science, and the environmentDescription based upon print version of record.0-262-01724-5 Includes bibliographical references and index.Contents; Series Foreword; Acknowledgments; Contributors; Introduction; Global Public Goods and the Governance Issues They Raise; The Challenges of Global Governance; Conceptualizing Global Governance and Global Public Goods; Framing Individual and Collective Actions: Challenges in Designing Incentive Schemes; A Web of Mechanisms to Ensure Compliance; Reflexive Processes of Governance; The Necessity and Difficulty of Knowledge Generation; The Potential of the Reflexive Governance Approach; Improving Institutional Fit; Part I. The Challenges in Governing Global Public GoodsChapter 1. Global Public Goods: The Participatory Governance ChallengesThe Governance Issues Raised by the Many Features of Public Goods; Pure and Impure Public Goods; Heterogeneity in Consumption and Contribution; Public Goods as Societal Issues; A Framework for Analyzing Collective Governance; Disentangling the Logic and the Mechanisms of Coordination; Public Goods in a World of Bounded Rationality; Public Goods in a Global Context; The Role of Knowledge Communities in Global Governance; Reflexive Governance for Collective Learning about the Provision of GPGsChapter 2. Rethinking Public Goods and Global Public GoodsOut of Step: The Current Concept and Reality of Public Goods; Non-Excludability and Non-Rivalry as Poor Predictors of Publicness; Sometimes Enjoyed by All But Also Frequently Contested; Sometimes Supplied by the State Alone But Mostly Multi-Actor Provided; Sometimes National in Scope but Also Transnational in Reach; A Focus on Already-Public Goods; Recognition of Economic Market Failure but Not Political Market Failure; Concern About Fiscal Balance Not Macro Allocative EfficiencyNarrowing the Gap between the Theory and Reality of Public GoodsFormulating an Expanded, Empirical Definition of Public Goods; Recognizing Transnationalness as a Special Dimension of Publicness; Introducing the Tool of Provision Path Analysis; Developing a Theory of Actor Failure in Public Goods Provision; Taking Account of the Full Political Process and Life-Cycle of the Good; Developing a Concept of Adequate Public Goods Provision; The Role of Reflexive Governance in Fostering an Adequate and Legitimate Provision of Global Public Goods; NotesChapter 3. New Face of Development Assistance: Public Goods and Changing EthicsPublic Good Aid; Millennium Development Goals (MDGs); Aggregation Technology and New Directions in Giving; Five Sectors of Aid; Prognosis for Public Goods Based on Spatial Considerations; Conclusion; Notes; Part II. Designing Complex Incentive Schemes; Chapter 4. Crowding Out and Crowding In of Intrinsic Preferences; Standard Microeconomics: Homo Oeconomicus; A Broader Set of Motivations; Crowding Theory; Empirical Evidence on Motivation Crowding Effects; Conclusions; NotesChapter 5. Regulatory Reform and Reflexive Regulation: Beyond Command and ControlGovernance challenges and solutions for the provision of global public goods in such areas as the environment, food security, and development.Politics, Science, and the EnvironmentPublic interestInternational cooperationCommon goodInternational cooperationPublic interestEnvironmental aspectsCommon goodEnvironmental aspectsPublic interestEconomic aspectsCommon goodEconomic aspectsEnvironmental protectionInternational cooperationSustainable developmentInternational cooperationSOCIAL SCIENCES/Political Science/GeneralPublic interestInternational cooperation.Common goodInternational cooperation.Public interestEnvironmental aspects.Common goodEnvironmental aspects.Public interestEconomic aspects.Common goodEconomic aspects.Environmental protectionInternational cooperation.Sustainable developmentInternational cooperation.303.44Brousseau Eric1033934Dedeurwaerdere Tom876122Siebenhüner Bernd1026738OCoLC-POCoLC-PBOOK9910461723403321Reflexive governance for global public goods2452757UNINA