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The Rise of Post-Hegemonic Regionalism

by Riggirozzi, Pía.
Authors: Tussie, Diana.%editor. | SpringerLink (Online service) Series: United Nations University Series on Regionalism ; . 4 Physical details: XVIII, 194 p. online resource. ISBN: 9400726945 Subject(s): Regional planning. | Humanities / Arts / Design. | Regional and Cultural Studies. | Political Science, general.
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1. The Rise of Post-Hegemonic Regionalism in Latin America; Pía Riggirozzi and Diana Tussie -- 2. Reconstructing Regionalism in Latin America: What Does Development Have To Do With It?; Pía Riggirozzi -- 3. Consistency and Resilience through Cycles of Repolitization;  Olivier Dabène -- 4. Infrastructure: Learning and Cooperation for the Provision of Regional Public Goods ; Ricardo Carciofi -- 5. Defence in a Post Hegemonic Regional Agenda: The Case of the South American Defence Council ; Jorge Battaglino -- 6. The Rise of Monetary Agreements in South America ; Pablo Trucco -- 7. Socio-Environmental Regionalism in South America: Tensions in New Development Models; Marcelo Saguier -- 8. Regionalism and Civil Society: Bridging the Democratic Gap?; Andres Serbín) -- 9. Moving Regions: Brazil’s Global Emergence and the Redefinition of Latin American Borders; Andres Malamud -- 10. Postlude; Pía Riggirozzi and Diana Tussie --  .

This book offers a timely analysis, and a novel and nuanced argument about post-neoliberal models of regional governance in non-European contexts. It provides the first in-depth, empirically-driven analysis of current models of regional governance in Latin America that emerged out of the crisis of liberalism in the region. It contributes to comparative studies of the contemporary global political economy as it advances current literature on the topic by analysing distinctive, overlapping and conflicting trajectories of regionalism in Latin America. The book critically explores models of transformative regionalism and specific dimensions articulating those models beyond neoliberal consensus-building. As such it contests the overstated case of integration as converging towards global capitalism. It provides an analytical framework that not only examines the 'what, how, who and why' in the emergence of a specific form of regionalism but sets the ground for addressing two relevant questions that will push the study of regionalism further: What factors enable or constrain how transformative a given regionalism is (or can be) with respect to the powers and policies of states encompassed by it? and: What factors govern how resilient a given regionalism is likely to be under changing political and economic conditions?    

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