This book charts the way towards a better, repurposed globalization, which it calls 'reglobalization', and shows how this can be built, incrementally but realistically, via reforms to the partial and fragile existing structures of global governance.
"Reglobalization is a timely and trenchant intervention in contemporary debates about the challenges and possibilities of building a more humane form of globalization. Bishop and Payne have put together a first-class line-up of scholars who explore the many different ways in which we could and must move beyond the neoliberal form of globalization that is so clearly failing us today without giving up on the more progressive possibilities of a genuinely global political and economic way of life."
Jacqueline Best, University of Ottawa, Canada
"As globalization retreats,?Reglobalization?not only accounts for its pathologies, but, more importantly, charts potential trajectories out of its crisis. Reminding readers that its current form is not given, the book issues a rallying cry to save globalization by going beyond its neoliberal nature. Surveying a wide range of global issues, including tax, inequality, trade, climate and migration, the authors lay out a comprehensive blueprint for a re-embedded, post-neoliberal reglobalization. This book will be essential reading for those looking to save globalization from itself before it is too late."
Tom Chodor, Monash University, Australia
"Seeking to separate its discussion from the policies and practices of neoliberalism, this important and compelling book asks us to rethink the case for globalization. It looks toward future possibilities, reimagining globalization in terms of its progressive potential in a post-neoliberal context. As the diverse chapters make clear, 're-globalization' is no easy task; but it is a project that serves to reanimate debates about the 'global' within International Political Economy, one that recognises how scholarship has an active role to play in rethinking, reimagining and reforming the global economic order."
Juanita Elias, University of Warwick, United Kingdom?