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Symposium: Authority, legitimacy, and contestation in global governance

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 December 2020

Orfeo Fioretos*
Affiliation:
Temple University, Philadelphia, PA, USA
Jonas Tallberg
Affiliation:
Stockholm University, Stockholm, Sweden
*
*Corresponding author. E-mail: fioretos@temple.edu
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Abstract

As global governance institutions appear increasingly contested by state and non-state actors alike, understanding their origin, operation, and impact is becoming ever more urgent. This symposium uses Michael Zürn's A Theory of Global Governance: Authority, Legitimacy, and Contestation (OUP, 2018) as a springboard to explore the state of global governance theory. A Theory opens new terrain and advances bold and original arguments, including the contention that global governance is itself best understood as a political system. It analyzes a cycle from rising authority beyond the state through the 20th century, to ensuing legitimation problems toward the century's end, to the politicization and contestation triggered by such problems. A book of such ambition inevitably elicits queries within diverse international relations research communities. This symposium features seven articles from diverse traditions in engagement with A Theory's understanding of global contestation, authority, and legitimacy. These are followed by a response from Zürn. An introduction situates A Theory within extant research on global governance, highlights its endogenous theory of global politics, and identifies the stakes of deepening research on the sources of global authority, contestation, and political legitimation.

Type
Symposium: Authority, Legitimacy, and Contestation in Global Governance: Edited by Orfeo Fioretos and Jonas Tallberg
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2020. Published by Cambridge University Press

Contents

99–111 Politics and Theory of Global Governance

Orfeo Fioretos and Jonas Tallberg

112–121 The Global Politics Paradigm: Guide to the Future or Only the Recent Past?

Robert O. Keohane

122–130 Rule and Resistance in Global Governance

Nicole Deitelhoff and Christopher Daase

131–143 Change in or of Global Governance?

Michael Barnett

144–156 Global Governance in the Age of Epistemic Authority

Vincent Pouliot

157–168 Locating (New) Materialist Characters and Processes in Global Governance

Anna Leander

169–178 Governance by Other Means: Rankings as Regulatory Systems

Judith Kelley and Beth A. Simmons

179–191 Beyond Institutionalism: Toward a Transformed Global Governance Theory

Jan Aart Scholte

192–204 On the Role of Contestation, the Power of Reflexive Authority, and Legitimation Problems in the Global Political System

Michael Zürn