Civil Society and World Regions
How Citizens Are Reshaping Regional Governance in Times of Crisis
Contributions by Chukwudi David Anyanwu, Mercedes Botto, Alan Collins, Antonio Fiori, Andréas Godsäter, Okechukwu C. Iheduru, Sunhyuk Kim, Helen E.S. Nesadurai, Marco Pinfari, Jan Aart Scholte University of Gothenburg, Andy Storey Edited by Lorenzo Fioramonti
Publication date:
11 December 2013Length of book:
204 pagesPublisher
Lexington BooksDimensions:
235x156mm6x9"
ISBN-13: 9780739187104
Supranational regionalism and regional integration have for a long time been top-down processes, led by the few and imposed on the many. The role of citizens, especially those active in civil society, has been neglected by scholars, students, and commentators of regionalism. In reaction to the prevalence of these top-down models, a “new regionalism” approach has proliferated in the past few years. This book aims to further develop such a research agenda by providing an up-to-date overview of the contribution of civil society to world regionalism, from Europe to Africa, Asia, and the Americas. This is not only relevant as a research topic; it is also of critical importance from a political standpoint. As regions across the world experience prolonged governance crises, it becomes paramount to understand the extent to which these new regional formations actually reflect the interests and needs of their people. While old regionalism was accepted as a de facto elite-driven byproduct of both the Cold War and neoliberal globalization, the twenty-first-century regionalism—if it is to survive—will need to refocus its objectives through new forms of participation and inclusion. Regions without citizens are unlikely to stand the test of time, especially in times of crises.
This timely collection brings together varieties of civil societies and global regions; its contribution to regional governance is thus not just doubled, but rather squared. Informed by regional cases and experts, this book considers prospects for sustainable regional development at a time when the Old West is declining and ‘new powers’ are advancing. An important reflection on which interests are served by contemporary regionalism and which institutions may advance or decline in the post-global crisis era.