The Governor's Dilemma : Indirect Governance Beyond Principals and Agents Paperback / softback
Edited by Kenneth W. (Jack E. Brown Chair in Law and Professor of Global Studies Emeritus, Jack E. Bro Abbott, Bernhard (Professor of Global Governance, Professor of Global Governance, LMU Munich) Zangl, Duncan (Professor of International Relations, Professor of International Relations, Nuffield Snidal, Philipp (Professor of Comparative and European Public Policy, Professor of Comparative and Genschel
Paperback / softback
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The Governor's Dilemma develops a general theory of indirect governance based on the tradeoff between governor control and intermediary competence; the empirical chapters apply that theory to a diverse range of cases encompassing both international relations and comparative politics.
The theoretical framework paper starts from the observation that virtually all governance is indirect, carried out through intermediaries.
But governors in indirect governance relationships face a dilemma: competent intermediaries gain power from the competencies they contribute, making them difficult to control, while efforts to control intermediary behavor limit important intermediary competencies, including expertise, credibility, and legitimacy.
Thus, governors can obtain either high intermediary competence or strong control, but not both.
This competence-control tradeoff is a common condition of indirect governance, whether governors are domestic or international, public or private, democratic or authoritarian; and whether governance addresses economic, security, or social issues.
The empirical chapters analyze the operation and implications of the governor's dilemma in cases involving the governance of violence (e.g., secret police, support for foreign rebel groups, private security companies), the governance of markets (e.g., the Euro crisis, capital markets, EU regulation, the G20), and cross-cutting governance issues (colonial empires, "Trump's Dilemma").
Competence-control theory helps explain many features of governance that other theories cannot: why indirect governance is not limited to principal-agent delegation, but takes multiple forms; why governors create seemingly counter-productive intermediary relationships; and why indirect governance is frequently unstable over time.
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Available to Order - This title is available to order, with delivery expected within 2 weeks
- Format:Paperback / softback
- Pages:320 pages
- Publisher:Oxford University Press
- Publication Date:11/03/2020
- Category:
- ISBN:9780198855064
Information
-
Available to Order - This title is available to order, with delivery expected within 2 weeks
- Format:Paperback / softback
- Pages:320 pages
- Publisher:Oxford University Press
- Publication Date:11/03/2020
- Category:
- ISBN:9780198855064