Navroz K. Dubash, Bronwen Morgan
The Rise of the Regulatory State of the South: Infrastructure and Development in Emerging Economies
Navroz K. Dubash, Bronwen Morgan
The Rise of the Regulatory State of the South: Infrastructure and Development in Emerging Economies
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Recent decades have witnessed energetic institution-building in the developing world as regulatory agencies take over the role of the executive in key sectors. Here country case studies and interdisciplinary commentaries examine the rise of the regulatory state in the south and highlight the consequences for development and regulation worldwide.
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Recent decades have witnessed energetic institution-building in the developing world as regulatory agencies take over the role of the executive in key sectors. Here country case studies and interdisciplinary commentaries examine the rise of the regulatory state in the south and highlight the consequences for development and regulation worldwide.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Law and Global Governance
- Verlag: Oxford University Press, USA
- Seitenzahl: 350
- Erscheinungstermin: 24. August 2013
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 236mm x 163mm x 23mm
- Gewicht: 612g
- ISBN-13: 9780199677160
- ISBN-10: 0199677166
- Artikelnr.: 37500953
- Law and Global Governance
- Verlag: Oxford University Press, USA
- Seitenzahl: 350
- Erscheinungstermin: 24. August 2013
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 236mm x 163mm x 23mm
- Gewicht: 612g
- ISBN-13: 9780199677160
- ISBN-10: 0199677166
- Artikelnr.: 37500953
Navroz K. Dubash is a Senior Fellow at the Centre for Policy Research, New Delhi. His works focuses on the governance of infrastructure sectors, with particular attention to energy, water, and climate change governance at sub-national, national, and international scales. He is a Lead Author for the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, and has served on India's Expert Committee on Low Carbon Strategies for Inclusive Growth as well as on Expert Groups on water and energy policy. He serves on the editorial boards of Global Environmental Politics, Climate Policy, Utilities Policy, Environmental Policy and Governance, and the Journal of Environment and Development, and holds PhD and MA degrees in Energy and Resources from the University of California, Berkeley, and an AB with honours from Princeton University. Bronwen Morgan joined UNSW Law School as a Professor in Law and an Australian Research Council Future Fellow in October 2012, having taught at the University of Bristol, UK for seven years. Prior to Bristol, she taught at the University of Oxford in association with both St Hilda's College and Wadham College and remains an Associate Research Fellow of the Oxford University Centre for Socio-legal Studies. She holds a PhD in Jurisprudence and Social Policy from the University of California at Berkeley as well as Honours degrees in Arts and Law from the University of Sydney. She is a past Trustee of the US-based Law and Society Association, past Executive Member of the UK Socio-legal Studies Association, a co-editor of the Cambridge University Law in Context book series, and serves on the boards of a number of interdisciplinary journals including Economy and Society, Regulation and Governance, Journal of Human Rights and the Environment, and International Journal of Law in Context.
* 1: Navroz K. Dubash and Bronwen Morgan: The Rise of the Regulatory
State of the South: The Infrastructure of Development
* Part One: Case Studies
* 2: Rene Uruena: The Rise of the Constitutional Regulatory State in
Columbia: The Case of Water Governance
* 3: Ahmed Badran: Understanding the Egyptian Regulatory State:
Independent Regulators in Theory and Practice
* 4: Mariana Prado: Implementing Independent Regulatory Agencies in
Brazil: The Contrasting Experiences in the Electricity and
Telecommunications Sectors
* 5: Navroz Dubash: Regulation Through the Back Door: Understanding the
Implications of Institutional Transplant
* 6: Alison Post and Maria Victoria Murillo: The Regulatory State Under
Stress: Economic Shocks and Regulatory Bargaining in the Argentine
Electricity and Water Sectors
* 7: Arun Thiruvengadam and Piyush Joshi: Judiciaries as Crucial Actors
in Southern Regulatory Systems: A Case Study of Indian Telecom
Regulation
* 8: Nai Rui Chng: Regulatory Mobilization and Service Delivery at the
Edge of the Regulatory State
* Part Two: Commentaries
* 9: Kanishka Jayasuriya: Regulatory State with Dirigiste
Characteristics: Variegated Pathways of Regulatory Governance
* 10: Jacint Jordana: Institutional Challenges of the Regulatory State
in the Developing World
* 11: Michael Dowdle: The Peripheral Regulatory State
* 12: Lant Pritchett: The Regulatory State Goes South in the South
* 13: David Levi-Faur: The Regulatory State and the Developmental State
* 14: Roselyn Hsueh: Institutional Development and the Regulatory State
of the South
* 15: Benedict Kingsbury and Megan Donaldson: The Roles of Law in the
Regulatory States of the South
* 16: Kathryn Hochstetler: Civil Society and the Regulatory State of
the South
* Conclusion
* 17: Navroz K. Dubash and Bronwen Morgan: The Embedded Regulatory
State: Between Rules and Deals
State of the South: The Infrastructure of Development
* Part One: Case Studies
* 2: Rene Uruena: The Rise of the Constitutional Regulatory State in
Columbia: The Case of Water Governance
* 3: Ahmed Badran: Understanding the Egyptian Regulatory State:
Independent Regulators in Theory and Practice
* 4: Mariana Prado: Implementing Independent Regulatory Agencies in
Brazil: The Contrasting Experiences in the Electricity and
Telecommunications Sectors
* 5: Navroz Dubash: Regulation Through the Back Door: Understanding the
Implications of Institutional Transplant
* 6: Alison Post and Maria Victoria Murillo: The Regulatory State Under
Stress: Economic Shocks and Regulatory Bargaining in the Argentine
Electricity and Water Sectors
* 7: Arun Thiruvengadam and Piyush Joshi: Judiciaries as Crucial Actors
in Southern Regulatory Systems: A Case Study of Indian Telecom
Regulation
* 8: Nai Rui Chng: Regulatory Mobilization and Service Delivery at the
Edge of the Regulatory State
* Part Two: Commentaries
* 9: Kanishka Jayasuriya: Regulatory State with Dirigiste
Characteristics: Variegated Pathways of Regulatory Governance
* 10: Jacint Jordana: Institutional Challenges of the Regulatory State
in the Developing World
* 11: Michael Dowdle: The Peripheral Regulatory State
* 12: Lant Pritchett: The Regulatory State Goes South in the South
* 13: David Levi-Faur: The Regulatory State and the Developmental State
* 14: Roselyn Hsueh: Institutional Development and the Regulatory State
of the South
* 15: Benedict Kingsbury and Megan Donaldson: The Roles of Law in the
Regulatory States of the South
* 16: Kathryn Hochstetler: Civil Society and the Regulatory State of
the South
* Conclusion
* 17: Navroz K. Dubash and Bronwen Morgan: The Embedded Regulatory
State: Between Rules and Deals
* 1: Navroz K. Dubash and Bronwen Morgan: The Rise of the Regulatory
State of the South: The Infrastructure of Development
* Part One: Case Studies
* 2: Rene Uruena: The Rise of the Constitutional Regulatory State in
Columbia: The Case of Water Governance
* 3: Ahmed Badran: Understanding the Egyptian Regulatory State:
Independent Regulators in Theory and Practice
* 4: Mariana Prado: Implementing Independent Regulatory Agencies in
Brazil: The Contrasting Experiences in the Electricity and
Telecommunications Sectors
* 5: Navroz Dubash: Regulation Through the Back Door: Understanding the
Implications of Institutional Transplant
* 6: Alison Post and Maria Victoria Murillo: The Regulatory State Under
Stress: Economic Shocks and Regulatory Bargaining in the Argentine
Electricity and Water Sectors
* 7: Arun Thiruvengadam and Piyush Joshi: Judiciaries as Crucial Actors
in Southern Regulatory Systems: A Case Study of Indian Telecom
Regulation
* 8: Nai Rui Chng: Regulatory Mobilization and Service Delivery at the
Edge of the Regulatory State
* Part Two: Commentaries
* 9: Kanishka Jayasuriya: Regulatory State with Dirigiste
Characteristics: Variegated Pathways of Regulatory Governance
* 10: Jacint Jordana: Institutional Challenges of the Regulatory State
in the Developing World
* 11: Michael Dowdle: The Peripheral Regulatory State
* 12: Lant Pritchett: The Regulatory State Goes South in the South
* 13: David Levi-Faur: The Regulatory State and the Developmental State
* 14: Roselyn Hsueh: Institutional Development and the Regulatory State
of the South
* 15: Benedict Kingsbury and Megan Donaldson: The Roles of Law in the
Regulatory States of the South
* 16: Kathryn Hochstetler: Civil Society and the Regulatory State of
the South
* Conclusion
* 17: Navroz K. Dubash and Bronwen Morgan: The Embedded Regulatory
State: Between Rules and Deals
State of the South: The Infrastructure of Development
* Part One: Case Studies
* 2: Rene Uruena: The Rise of the Constitutional Regulatory State in
Columbia: The Case of Water Governance
* 3: Ahmed Badran: Understanding the Egyptian Regulatory State:
Independent Regulators in Theory and Practice
* 4: Mariana Prado: Implementing Independent Regulatory Agencies in
Brazil: The Contrasting Experiences in the Electricity and
Telecommunications Sectors
* 5: Navroz Dubash: Regulation Through the Back Door: Understanding the
Implications of Institutional Transplant
* 6: Alison Post and Maria Victoria Murillo: The Regulatory State Under
Stress: Economic Shocks and Regulatory Bargaining in the Argentine
Electricity and Water Sectors
* 7: Arun Thiruvengadam and Piyush Joshi: Judiciaries as Crucial Actors
in Southern Regulatory Systems: A Case Study of Indian Telecom
Regulation
* 8: Nai Rui Chng: Regulatory Mobilization and Service Delivery at the
Edge of the Regulatory State
* Part Two: Commentaries
* 9: Kanishka Jayasuriya: Regulatory State with Dirigiste
Characteristics: Variegated Pathways of Regulatory Governance
* 10: Jacint Jordana: Institutional Challenges of the Regulatory State
in the Developing World
* 11: Michael Dowdle: The Peripheral Regulatory State
* 12: Lant Pritchett: The Regulatory State Goes South in the South
* 13: David Levi-Faur: The Regulatory State and the Developmental State
* 14: Roselyn Hsueh: Institutional Development and the Regulatory State
of the South
* 15: Benedict Kingsbury and Megan Donaldson: The Roles of Law in the
Regulatory States of the South
* 16: Kathryn Hochstetler: Civil Society and the Regulatory State of
the South
* Conclusion
* 17: Navroz K. Dubash and Bronwen Morgan: The Embedded Regulatory
State: Between Rules and Deals