Description

Book Synopsis

The recurring image throughout the developing world is one of the disintegration of civil order debilitating leaders into a crisis of governance. Not a day goes by without extensive media coverage of some form of corruption, perceived or real, concerning the lack of productivity and/or increasing incidences of fraud and unethical behavior. An Ethical Turn in Governance: The Call for a New Development Narrative posits that the intensification of this crisis is compatible with the root cause of capitalist modernization with its rapid and disorientating changes. To mitigate the accompanying effects, a call is made for [re]conceptualization of the search for a solution through incorporating and strengthening the value of an ethical consciousness in our thinking and policies of governance. The idea is an urgent possibility, perhaps even a controversial and ambitious proposal, for countries to begin imagining how it might be brought about and what it would look like. The central aim and o

Trade Review

There are rising governance concerns in many Caribbean Community (CARICOM) countries. Broome, who has in-depth expertise in regional governance efforts, argues that a lack of focus on ethical consciousness has hindered the development of a regional framework and stifled enthusiasm for new initiatives. He identifies a number of failed and vulnerable states that have not achieved sustainable institutional capacity, curbed corruption or reduced crime, or lifted people out of poverty. Broome asserts that Caribbean countries have often adopted corporatist and consumerist approaches to engage in the global economy. As a political theorist, he is critical of management science for neglecting ethical approaches to governance, and the field of development ethics is not focused enough on corruption problems. Broome offers an ethical institutional framework to shift scholarship, as much as applied governance, toward combating what he calls an epistemological and ontological crisis. The chapter notes provide context for readers unfamiliar with the historical details of CARICOM countries, but the book is probably most useful to scholars already well versed in Caribbean governance issues. The text may also be relevant to those studying other developing regions and to critics of neoliberalism. Highly recommended. Researchers and faculty.

* Choice Reviews *

Table of Contents

Chapter 1: The Vulnerability of Governance in the Caribbean: Threats to sustainability

Chapter 2: What’s in an Ethical Turn?

Chapter 3: The Intellectual Bias Against Ethics

Chapter 4: Whence We’ve come: The Systemic Dimensions of Modernization

Chapter 5: Modernization and Its Institutional Manifestations on The Liberal Democratic State

Chapter 6: The Unintended Consequences (Paradoxes) of Good Governance

Chapter 7: The Paradox of Democracy: When Democracy Can Undermine Good Governance

Chapter 8: Conclusion: Governing Without Government?

An Ethical Turn in Governance

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    A Paperback by Pearson A. Broome

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      View other formats and editions of An Ethical Turn in Governance by Pearson A. Broome

      Publisher: Lexington Books
      Publication Date: 1/10/2023 12:02:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9781498591997, 978-1498591997
      ISBN10: 149859199X

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      The recurring image throughout the developing world is one of the disintegration of civil order debilitating leaders into a crisis of governance. Not a day goes by without extensive media coverage of some form of corruption, perceived or real, concerning the lack of productivity and/or increasing incidences of fraud and unethical behavior. An Ethical Turn in Governance: The Call for a New Development Narrative posits that the intensification of this crisis is compatible with the root cause of capitalist modernization with its rapid and disorientating changes. To mitigate the accompanying effects, a call is made for [re]conceptualization of the search for a solution through incorporating and strengthening the value of an ethical consciousness in our thinking and policies of governance. The idea is an urgent possibility, perhaps even a controversial and ambitious proposal, for countries to begin imagining how it might be brought about and what it would look like. The central aim and o

      Trade Review

      There are rising governance concerns in many Caribbean Community (CARICOM) countries. Broome, who has in-depth expertise in regional governance efforts, argues that a lack of focus on ethical consciousness has hindered the development of a regional framework and stifled enthusiasm for new initiatives. He identifies a number of failed and vulnerable states that have not achieved sustainable institutional capacity, curbed corruption or reduced crime, or lifted people out of poverty. Broome asserts that Caribbean countries have often adopted corporatist and consumerist approaches to engage in the global economy. As a political theorist, he is critical of management science for neglecting ethical approaches to governance, and the field of development ethics is not focused enough on corruption problems. Broome offers an ethical institutional framework to shift scholarship, as much as applied governance, toward combating what he calls an epistemological and ontological crisis. The chapter notes provide context for readers unfamiliar with the historical details of CARICOM countries, but the book is probably most useful to scholars already well versed in Caribbean governance issues. The text may also be relevant to those studying other developing regions and to critics of neoliberalism. Highly recommended. Researchers and faculty.

      * Choice Reviews *

      Table of Contents

      Chapter 1: The Vulnerability of Governance in the Caribbean: Threats to sustainability

      Chapter 2: What’s in an Ethical Turn?

      Chapter 3: The Intellectual Bias Against Ethics

      Chapter 4: Whence We’ve come: The Systemic Dimensions of Modernization

      Chapter 5: Modernization and Its Institutional Manifestations on The Liberal Democratic State

      Chapter 6: The Unintended Consequences (Paradoxes) of Good Governance

      Chapter 7: The Paradox of Democracy: When Democracy Can Undermine Good Governance

      Chapter 8: Conclusion: Governing Without Government?

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