Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of figures
- List of tables
- List of boxes
- List of abbreviations
- List of contributors
- Acknowledgements
- Foreword
- Why This Book Matters!
- The Ten Principles of the United Nations Global Compact
- 1 Introduction: the United Nations Global Compact – retrospect and prospect
- Part I Achievements, trends and challenges: reflections on the Principles
- Part II Participants and engagement mechanisms
- Part III Governance and Communication on Progress
- Part IV Local Networks: the emerging global–local link
- 18 Building the United Nations Global Compact Local Network model: history and highlights
- 19 The United Nations Global Compact as a Network of Networks
- 20 Running a Global Compact Local Network: insights from the experience in Germany
- 21 Building corporate citizenship through the United Nations Global Compact: contributions and lessons learned from the Argentinean Local Network
- 22 Concluding remarks: from alleviating the negative impacts of globalization to transforming markets
- Glossary
- Bibliography
- Index
22 - Concluding remarks: from alleviating the negative impacts of globalization to transforming markets
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 February 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of figures
- List of tables
- List of boxes
- List of abbreviations
- List of contributors
- Acknowledgements
- Foreword
- Why This Book Matters!
- The Ten Principles of the United Nations Global Compact
- 1 Introduction: the United Nations Global Compact – retrospect and prospect
- Part I Achievements, trends and challenges: reflections on the Principles
- Part II Participants and engagement mechanisms
- Part III Governance and Communication on Progress
- Part IV Local Networks: the emerging global–local link
- 18 Building the United Nations Global Compact Local Network model: history and highlights
- 19 The United Nations Global Compact as a Network of Networks
- 20 Running a Global Compact Local Network: insights from the experience in Germany
- 21 Building corporate citizenship through the United Nations Global Compact: contributions and lessons learned from the Argentinean Local Network
- 22 Concluding remarks: from alleviating the negative impacts of globalization to transforming markets
- Glossary
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
Looking back at more than six decades of UN history, the words ‘indifference’ and ‘tension’ would best characterize the relationship between the global organization of states and the business community as key actors in the global marketplace.
A widely held opinion – that the United Nations was a ‘political’ organization, far removed from the concerns of ‘business’ – nurtured the image of two distinct and often hostile universes. Controversial issues on the United Nations' agenda (like the New Economic Order, Human Rights Guidelines for Multinational Companies and calls for boycott and sanctions) contributed to the divide between seemingly divergent actors, as did the debate on various economic models. This last was a flashpoint in conflictual East–West relations and the widening poverty gap between North and South, and has dominated the United Nations' political agenda for over two decades.
Despite early and positive examples of private–public partnerships in development cooperation and on environmental, social and labour issues, only the Global Compact would, in 2000, reframe the relationship more fundamentally and lay the groundwork for a different type of cooperation between the United Nations and the global business community. Through the Compact, the United Nations would recognize the strategic importance of the private sector as a key stakeholder of globalization and, indirectly, the significance of open markets and global norms for economic development.
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- Information
- The United Nations Global CompactAchievements, Trends and Challenges, pp. 386 - 396Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010
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