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E-grāmata: How Democracy Survives: Global Challenges in the Anthropocene

Edited by (Boston University, USA), Edited by (Boston University, USA)
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How Democracy Survives explores how liberal democracy can better adapt to the planetary challenges of our time by evolving beyond the Westphalian paradigm of the nation state.

The authors bring perspectives from Africa, Asia, Europe, Latin America, and North America, their chapters engaging with the concept of transnational democracy by tracing its development in the past, assessing its performance in the present, and considering its potential for survival in this century and beyond. Coming from a wide array of intellectual disciplines and policymaking backgrounds, the authors share a common conviction that our global institutionsboth governments and international organizationsmust become more resilient, transparent, and democratically accountable in order to address the cascading political, economic, and social crises of this new epoch, such as climate change, mass migration, more frequent and severe natural disasters, and resurgent authoritarianism.

This book will be relevant for courses in international relations and political science, environmental politics, and the preservation of democracy and federalism around the world.

The Open Access version of this book, available at www.taylorfrancis.com, has been made available under a Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial-No Derivatives 4.0 license. Thanks to the support of libraries working with Knowledge Unlatched www.knowledgeunlatched.org
Notes on Contributors x
Foreword xiv
Luis Cabrera
List of Abbreviations
xvi
Introduction 1(6)
Michael Holm
R. S. Deese
PART I The Forgotten Promise of 1945
7(90)
1 The Other American Dream: The One World Order and Human Rights
9(20)
Michael Holm
2 We Were Once Colonized: Nehru, India, and Afro-Asianism at the United Nations
29(14)
Swapna Kotia Nayudu
3 The Peaceful Settlement of Disputes and
Chapter VI of the UN Charter: Forgotten "Cardinal Feature" of the Dumbarton Oaks Proposals?
43(22)
Maja Croff
4 The Postwar European Integration Process and the Progressive Construction of a Supranational Legal Order
65(16)
Susanna Cafaro
5 Democracy and the Spectacle of Consent: The Forgotten Promise of the United Nations
81(16)
R. S. Deese
PART II Globalizing Consent
97(80)
6 Perceived Inequality and Democratic Support: A Close Analysis from the Asian Barometer Survey
99(9)
Yu-tzung Chang
Osbern Huang
7 Africa, Its Diaspora, Transitional Justice, and Global Democracy: Towards a World Parliament
108(12)
Tim Murithi
8 "World Organization through Democracy": Clarence Streit and the Genesis of the Present World Order
120(19)
Tiziana Stella
9 Current Proposals for Closer Cooperation among Democracies
139(19)
John J. Davenport
10 Representation and Participation of Citizens at the United Nations: The Democratic Legitimacy of the UN and Ways to Improve It
158(19)
Andreas Bummel
PART III Confronting the Anthropocene
177(83)
11 The Climate Commons and the Survival of Democracy
179(17)
Spencer R. Weart
12 Democracies, Authoritarians, and Climate Change: Do Regime Types Matter?
196(16)
Daniel J. Fiorino
13 Democracy to Avert Ecocide
212(17)
Camila Vergara
14 What Disaster Response Can Teach Us about Democracy in the Anthropocene
229(12)
Malka Older
15 Democracy in the Age of Automation, Robotics, and AdvancedAI
241(19)
Michael Bess
Epilogue 260(3)
Michael Holm
R. S. Deese
Index 263
Michael Holm teaches at Boston University, USA.

R. S. Deese teaches at Boston University, USA.