- School of Social and Political Sciences - Research Publications
School of Social and Political Sciences - Research Publications
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ItemSocial governance in a global economy: Introduction to an evolving agendaMacdonald, K ; Marshall, S (Ashgate, 2010-12-01)
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ItemExperiments in globalizing justice: Emergent lessons and future trajectoriesMacdonald, K ; Marshall, S ; Macdonald, K ; Marshall, S (Ashgate Publishing, Limited, 2010-01-01)Civic, corporate and state-based governance initiatives that seek to promote norms of social or global ‘justice’ are achieving steadily rising levels of reach and influence in the global economy. More seem to be emerging every day, and their legitimacy as mechanisms of local, national and transnational regulation is achieving increasing acceptance in many quarters. They perform a range of functions – from delivering social services and facilitating economic redistribution and poverty reduction, to establishing, monitoring and enforcing social and labour standards within global production systems across large parts of the industrialized and developing worlds. Although the patterns of their diffusion are still limited and highly uneven, it is important to understand the forces that drive them, the mechanisms and actors through which they operate, and the factors that condition their success or failure.
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ItemRe-thinking market governanceMacdonald, K ; Marshall, S ; Pinto, S (Routledge, 2012-12-01)
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ItemGlobal democracy for a partially joined-up world: Toward a multi-level system of public power and democratic governance?Macdonald, K ; Archibugi, D ; Koenig-Archibugi, M ; Marchetti, R (Cambridge University Press, 2011-01-01)
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ItemFair Labor AssociationMacdonald, K ; Hale, T ; Held, D (Polity Press, 2011)The Fair Labor Association (FLA) is a US-based voluntary governance arrangement in which a number of high profile apparel and sportswear companies work together with universities and NGOs to promote compliance with core international labour standards within their supply chains. Since its establishment in the late 1990s, the Association has attracted significant attention and debate. Advocates of the Association regard it as a leader in developing innovative approaches to promoting compliance with international labour standards, pointing to its progress toward building independent auditing and complaints processes, and its efforts in recent years to strengthen the capacity building dimensions of its compliance program. In contrast, critics question both the Association’s accountability and its effectiveness, highlighting what they perceive to be its corporate-dominated governance structure, and its ongoing failure to achieve compliance with international labour standards within the supply chains of many FLA members.
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ItemThe Fair Trade SystemMacdonald, K ; Hale, T ; Held, D (Polity Press, 2011)The contemporary fair trade system has a distinctive, hybrid character as a production and trading network, a social governance arrangement, and a transnational social movement. From the perspective of global governance innovation, it can perhaps be best conceptualised as an ‘alternative’ normative and institutional system to both organise and govern production and trade. Its central purpose is to operate an alternative market through which commodities can be produced and traded on terms that promote sustainable social development among marginalized workers and producers, particularly those in the global South.
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ItemTransnational Business and the Politics of Social Risk: Re-Embedding Transnational Supply ChainsMACDONALD, K ; Marshall, S ; Lange, B ; Haines, F ; Thomas, D (Hart Pub Limited, 2015-08-27)This collection, located in the wider debates about global capitalism and its regulation, tackles the challenge of finding a way forward for regulation.
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ItemHow should we conceive of individual consumer responsibility to address labour injustices?Barry, C ; MacDonald, K ; Dahan, Y ; Lerner, H ; Milman-Sivan, F (Cambridge University Press, 2016)Many approaches to addressing labour injustices—shortfalls from minimally decent wages and working conditions— focus on how governments should orient themselves toward other states in which such phenomena take place, or to the firms that are involved with such practices. But of course the question of how to regard such labour practices must also be faced by individuals, and individual consumers of the goods that are produced through these practices in particular. Consumers have become increasingly aware of their connections to complex global production processes that often involve such injustice. For example, activist campaigns have exposed wrongful harm in factories producing clothes, shoes and mobile phones and farms producing coffee, tea and cocoa. These campaigns have promoted the message to ordinary people that by becoming connected to unjust labour practices through their purchasing behaviour, they acquire special additional moral responsibilities to contribute to reforming such practices, or to address the hardships suffered by the victims of the wrongdoing that result from them.