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This is an open access title available under the terms of a CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 International licence. It is free to read at Oxford Academic and offered as a free PDF download from OUP and selected open access locations.
How does governing work today? How does society (mis)handle pressing challenges such as armed violence, cultural difference, ecological degradation, economic restructuring, geopolitical shifts, global pandemics, migration flows, and technological change in ways that are (not) democratic, effective, fair, peaceful, and sustainable? This volume addresses these key questions with reference to the theme of 'polycentrism', i.e. the idea that contemporary governing is dispersed, fluctuating, messy, elusive, and headless. Chapters develop this notion of polycentrism from the perspectives of a broad spectrum of academic disciplines and theoretical approaches, offering comprehensive coverage of exciting new thinking about how today's world is (mis)ruled. The book identifies four paradigms of knowledge about polycentric governing - organizational, legal, relational, and structural - and pursues conversations across the divides that normally keep these approaches within separate research communities. These exceptional inter-paradigm exchanges focus particularly on issues of techniques (how governing is done), power (what forces drive governing), and legitimacy (whether governing is rightful). Comparisons between the multiple perspectives on polycentric governing highlight, and help to clarify, the distinctive emphases, potentials, and limitations of each approach. In addition, various combinations of the different theories generate promising novel avenues of thought about polycentrism. The book will allow readers to develop and refine their own understandings of governing today and hence to become more empowered political subjects.
Contents
Part I. Introduction
1: Frank Gadinger and Jan Aart Scholte: An Introduction to Polycentric Governing
2: Nina Schneider: Historicizing Polycentric Governing
3: Tamirace Fakhoury and Rosalba Icaza: Undoing Coloniality? Polycentric Governing and Refugee Space
Part II. Organizational Approaches
4: Fariborz Zelli, Lasse Gerrits, Ina Möller, and Oscar Widerberg: Institutional Complexity and Political Agency in Polycentric Governance
5: Andreas Thiel: Polycentric Governing and Polycentric Governance
6: Sigrid Quack: Transnational Governance: Polycentric Interactions
Part III. Legal Approaches
7: Alexis Galán: Taming Polycentric Governing: Global Administrative Law's Reformist Ambition
8: Jothie Rajah: Law's Governing Centres: A Global Sociolegal Approach
9: Philip Liste: Transnational Legal Realism: The Polycentric Workings of Power within Law
Part IV. Relational Approaches
10: Frank Gadinger: Fields, Trajectories, and Symbolic Power: Studying Practices of Polycentric Governing with Bourdieu
11: Christian Bueger and Tobias Liebetrau: Governing Assemblages: Territory, Technology, and Traps
12: Alejandro Esguerra: An Actor-Network Perspective on Polycentric Governing
Part V. Structural Approaches
13: Henk Overbeek: A Marxist Interpretation of Polycentric Governing
14: Frida Beckman: A Governmentality Perspective on Polycentric Governing
15: Marianne H. Marchand: Polycentric Governing from an Intersectional and Transnational Feminist Perspective: New Openings and Opportunities for Women's Voices from the Global South?
Part VI. Conclusion
16: Frank Gadinger and Jan Aart Scholte: Conclusion: What Does Polycentrism (Not) Reveal about Governing Today?