CONTENTS:- Figures; List of Contributors; Acknowledgements; List of abbreviations; Introduction: Reforming the International system from the top a Leaders' 20 Summit; Making change happen at the global level; Anticipating the future: A political Agenda for global economic governance; A Leaders' 20 Summit?; Multilateralism and the limits of global governance; Balancing act: Japan's strategy in global and regional financial governance; The political economy of dissent: Global public after Cancun; Toward multilateral reform: The G20's contribution; On sherpas and coolies: The L20 and non-Brahmanical futures; China's evolving global view; Brazil's multiple forms of external engagement: Foreign policy dilemmas; South Africa: Beyond the impasse in global governance; The L20 and the restructuring of the international economic order: An Egyptian perspective; Government networks, world order, and the L20; The L20 in the twenty-first century; Index.
DESCRIPTION
The system of global governance is under serious challenge. The UN, the G7/8, the IMF and the World Bank are but a handful of the organizations suffering from a crisis of legitimacy for an international system that appears ill-suited for timely, innovative and effective solutions to contemporary global challenges. Moreover, it is a system that made sense mainly for the post-second World War era, but sixty years later seems ill-equipped for bridging the growing political and economic divides between North and South and accommodating the needs of the big, emergent markets. Some scholars and practitioners have suggested that the time has come for the establishment of new multilateral forums that reflect 21st century realities. One opinion attracting increased attention in policy and academic circles to create a Summit of the leaders of 20 nations (L20), an institution that draws its inspiration from both the current G7/8 leaders' meetings and the G20 finance ministers' meetings. This book explores whether the creation of an L20 is a feasible possibility for the international community. It offers thematic and geographic arguments in favour of the L20, with a particular emphasis on the larger role that it could play in bringing about reform of the global economic and financial systems. The book concludes with a discussion of the changing nature of relationships in a globalised world, and makes a case for why an L20 would be a worthwhile addition to the international architecture.