Contents: Volume I Acknowledgements Introduction Richard Higgott and Anthony Payne PART I CONCEPTS AND THEORIES 1. James N. Rosenau (1996), The Dynamics of Globalization: Toward an Operational Formulation 2. Susan Strange (1994), Wake Up, Krasner! The World Has Changed 3. Philip G. Cerny (1994), The Dynamics of Financial Globalization: Technology, Market Structure, and Policy Response 4. Eric Helleiner (1995), Explaining the Globalization of Financial Markets: Bringing States Back In 5. Robert Wade (1996), Globalization and Its Limits: Reports of the Death of the National Economy are Greatly Exaggerated 6. John Zysman (1996), The Myth of a Global Economy: Enduring National Foundations and Emerging Regional Realities 7. Jonathan Perraton, David Goldblatt, David Held and Anthony McGrew (1997), The Globalisation of Economic Activity 8. John Gerard Ruggie (1995), At Home Abroad, Abroad at Home: International Liberalisation and Domestic Stability in the New World Economy 9. Philip McMichael (1996), Globalization: Myths and Realities 10. Robert W. Cox (1992), Global Perestroika 11. Bob Jessop (1997), Capitalism and its Future: Remarks on Regulation, Government and Governance PART II THE STATE 12. Louise Amoore, Richard Dodgson, Barry K. Gills, Paul Langley, Don Marshall and Iain Watson (1997), Overturning Globalisation: Resisting the Teleological, Reclaiming the Political 13. Susan Strange (1995), The Defective State 14. Paul Hirst and Grahame Thompson (1995), Globalization and the Future of the Nation State 15. Leo Panitch (1995), Globalisation and the State 16. Jan Aart Scholte (1997), Global Capitalism and the State 17. Peter Burnham (1999), The Politics of Economic Management in the 1990s 18. Peter Evans (1997), The Eclipse of the State? Reflections on Stateness in an Era of Globalization 19. Linda Weiss (1997), Globalization and the Myth of the Powerless State 20. Geoffrey Garrett (1998), Shrinking States? Globalization and National Autonomy in the OECD 21. Mark W. Zacher (1992), The Decaying Pillars of the Westphalian Temple: Implications for International Order and Governance 22. David Armstrong (1998), Globalization and the Social State 23. Michael Mann (1997), Has Globalization Ended the Rise and Rise of the Nation-State? Name Index Volume II Acknowledgements An introduction by the editors to both volumes appears in volume I PART I NEW MODES OF GOVERNANCE 1. John Gerard Ruggie (1993), Territoriality and Beyond: Problematizing Modernity in International Relations 2. James N. Rosenau (1995), Governance in the Twenty-first Century 3. Paul Taylor (1999), The United Nations in the 1990s: Proactive Cosmopolitanism and the Issue of Sovereignty 4. Robert Wade (1996), Japan, the World Bank, and the Art of Paradigm Maintenance: The East Asian Miracle in Political Perspective 5. Jan Aart Scholte (2000), In the Foothills: Relations between the IMF and Civil Society 6. Gary Marks, Liesbet Hooghe and Kermit Blank (1996), European Integration from the 1980s: State-Centric v. Multi-level Governance 7. James Anderson and James Goodman (1995), Regions, States and the European Union: Modernist Reaction or Postmodern Adaptation? 8. Saskia Sassen (1995), The State and the Global City: Notes Towards a Conception of Place-Centered Governance 9. A. Claire Cutler (1995), Global Capitalism and Liberal Myths: Dispute Settlement in Private International Trade Relations 10. Timothy J. Sinclair (1994), Passing Judgement: Credit Rating Processes as Regulatory Mechanisms of Governance in the Emerging World Order 11. Ronnie D. Lipschutz (1997), From Place to Planet: Local Knowledge and Global Environmental Governance 12. Anne-Marie Slaughter (1997), The Real New World Order PART II NEW ACTORS, NORMS AND ISSUES 13. Lorraine Eden (1991), Bringing the Firm Back In: Multinationals in International Political Economy 14. John H. Dunning, An Overview of Relations with National Governments, Leslie Sklair, TNCs As Political Actors and Andrew Walter, Do They Really Rule the World? in Ankie Hoogvelt et al (1988), Debate: Transnational Corporations 15. Louis W. Pauly and Simon Reich (1997), National Structures and Multinational Corporate Behavior: Enduring Differences in the Age of Globalization 16. Jessica T. Mathews (1997), Power Shift 17. Leon Gordenker and Thomas G. Weiss (1995), NGO Participation in the International Policy Process 18. Cecelia Lynch (1998), Social Movements and the Problem of Globalization 19. Robert W. Cox (1999), Civil Society at the Turn of the Millennium: Prospects for an Alternative World Order 20. Richard Falk (1998), Global Civil Society: Perspectives, Initiatives, Movements 21. Kathryn Sikkink (1993), Human Rights, Principled Issue-Networks, and Sovereignty in Latin America 22. Andrew Hurrell and Ngaire Woods (1995), Globalisation and Inequality 23. David Held and Anthony McGrew (1998), The End of the Old Order? Globalization and the Prospects for World Order 24. Richard Devetak and Richard Higgott (1999), Justice Unbound? Globalization, States and the Transformation of the Social Bond Name Index