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Global Governance, Participation and the Public Sphere
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 March 2014
Abstract
We argue that the democratization of global governance will ultimately depend upon the creation of an appropriate public sphere that connects decision-making processes with transnational constituency. The emergence of such a public sphere would require more transparency in international organizations as well as institutional settings in which policy-makers respond to stakeholders’ concerns. Organized civil society plays a key role by exposing global rule-making to public scrutiny and bringing citizens’ concerns onto the agenda. We illustrate the prospects and difficulties of building a transnational public sphere with the example of the WTO.
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References
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4 Legitimacy can be understood as a general compliance of the people with decisions of a political order that goes beyond coercion or the contingent representation of interests. Normatively, democratic legitimacy results from a rational agreement among free and equal citizens.
5 Robert Howse is one of several authors who argue that the provisions of the WTO and their interpretation by the dispute settlement body can be understood not as usurping legitimate democratic choices for stricter regulations, but as enhancing the quality of deliberation among citizens about risk and control, although only at the level of membership ( Howse, R., ‘Democracy, Science, and Free Trade: Risk Regulation on Trial at the World Trade Organization’, Michigan Law Review, 98: 7 (2000), pp. 2329–57CrossRefGoogle Scholar).
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28 See One World Trust (ed.), Global Accountability Report, London, One World Trust, 2003, p. 15.
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35 For example, not even the representatives of international governmental organizations such as the United Nations Environment Programme are admitted as observers to the meetings of the WTO Committee on Trade and Environment.
36 A symposium on the ‘Doha Development Agenda’ took place from 29 April to 1 May 2002 in Geneva, see also .
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38 Jens Steffek, ‘Free Trade as a Moral Choice: How Conflicts of Principle Have Troubled Transatlantic Economic Relations in the Past, and How a “Council on Trade and Ethics” Could Help Prevent them in the Future’, in European University Institute (ed.), Preventing Transatlantic Trade Disputes: Four Prize-winning Essays, Florence, European University Institute, 2001, pp. 45–55.
39 There are already some efforts at training developing country delegations, and in particular those without permanent representation in Geneva. Since 1998 the Geneva-based Agency for International Trade Information and Cooperation (AITIC) provides technical assistance to developing country delegates. The WTO itself holds training sessions for member governments without permanent representation, the so-called ‘Geneva weeks’. In 2001, the Advisory Centre on WTO Law was established as a law office specializing in international economic law, providing legal services and training exclusively to developing countries and economies-in-transition.
40 See Miles Kahler's contribution to this issue.
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