Monday, May 10, 2010

New Issue: Global Policy

The latest issue of Global Policy (Vol. 1, no. 2, May 2010) is out. Contents include:
  • Robert Howse & Ruti Teitel, Beyond Compliance: Rethinking Why International Law Really Matters
  • Daniele Archibugi & Andrea Filippetti, The Globalisation of Intellectual Property Rights: Four Learned Lessons and Four Theses
  • Robert Wade, After the Crisis: Industrial Policy and the Developmental State in Low-Income Countries
  • Gawdat Bahgat, Sovereign Wealth Funds: An Assessment
  • Matthew Bolton & Thomas Nash, The Role of Middle Power–NGO Coalitions in Global Policy: The Case of the Cluster Munitions Ban
  • Howard Davies, Global Financial Regulation after the Credit Crisis
  • Andrew Sheng, The Regulatory Reform of Global Financial Markets: An Asian Regulator's Perspective
  • Eddy Wymeersch, Global and Regional Financial Regulation: The Viewpoint of a European Securities Regulator
  • Edgar A. Whitley & Gus Hosein, Global Identity Policies and Technology: Do we Understand the Question?
  • Linda Yueh, An International Approach to Energy Security
  • Todd Moss, What Next for the Millennium Development Goals?
  • Andy Salmon, Embracing Evolution Post-Iraq : A response to 'Counterinsurgency Concepts: What we learned in Iraq' by General David Petraeus
  • Isabelle Mateos y Lago & Yongzheng Yang, The IMF and a New Multilateralism : A response to 'Global Governance after the Financial Crisis: A New Multilateralism or the Last Gasp of the Great Powers?' by Ngaire Woods
  • Shinji Takagi, The IMF and a Renewed Birth of Multilateralism : A response to 'Global Governance after the Financial Crisis: A New Multilateralism or the Last Gasp of the Great Powers?' by Ngaire Woods
  • Paulo Barrozo, The Child as a Person : A response to 'International Adoption: The Human Rights Position' by Elizabeth Bartholet