Law and Development of Middle-Income Countries
In 1960, there were 101 middle-income countries. By 2008, only thirteen of these had become high-income countries. Why do so many middle-income countries fail to develop after a promising start, becoming mired in the so-called middle-income trap? This interdisciplinary volume addresses the special challenges that middle-income countries confront from both a theoretical and a practical perspective. It is the first volume that addresses law and development issues in middle-income countries from the perspective of political, administrative, and legal institutions and policies. The goal is to provide international development agencies and domestic policy makers with feasible recommendations to address the wide range of technically, politically, and socially complex issues that middle-income countries face.
- First study of law and development in middle-income countries, focusing on political and legal institutions and regulatory regimes in MICs
- Examines why so many middle-income countries (MICs) fail to develop after a promising start, becoming mired in the 'middle-income trap'
- Most chapters are explicitly comparative, with authors drawing on the experiences of countries in Europe, the Latin America and Asia, while others are case studies of one or two countries
Product details
February 2014Hardback
9781107028159
400 pages
235 × 158 × 25 mm
0.67kg
6 b/w illus. 1 colour illus. 1 map 28 tables
Available
Table of Contents
- 1. Introduction Randall Peerenboom
- Part I. The Politics of Development in MICs:
- 2. The politics of law and development in middle-income countries Tom Ginsburg
- 3. When does 'politics' get in the way of development?: The developmental state, good governance, and liberal democratic change in Malaysia and Singapore Surain Subramaniam
- Part II. MICs in a Globalized Economy:
- 4. The rise of middle-income countries in the international trading system Gregory Shaffer and Charles Sutton
- 5. The middle intellectual property powers Peter Yu
- 6. Growing wealth in East Asian MICs with transnational production regimes John Gillespie
- Part III. Good Governance and the Rule of Law in MICs:
- 7. Law and development in Central and Eastern Europe: neoliberal development state and its problems Bojan Bugaric
- 8. Judicial intervention in civic-military relations: evidence from Colombia and Mexico Julio Rios-Figueroa and MarÃa Fernanda Gómez Abán
- 9. The prospect for anti-corruption law in middle-income countries Kevin Davis
- 10. The delivery of justice in middle-income countries Juan Botero
- Part IV. Socio-Economic Challenges in MICs:
- 11. The role of courts and constitutions in the new politics of welfare in Latin America Daniel Brinks and William Forbath
- 12. The judicialization of health care: symptoms, diagnosis, and prescriptions César RodrÃguez-Garavito
- 13. Nascent protections in emerging giants: struggles to judicialize labor rights in China and Indonesia William Hurst
- 14. Environmental challenges in MICs: a comparison of enforcement in Brazil and China Benjamin van Rooij and Lesley K. McAllister
- Part V. International Donor Strategies for MICs:
- 15. The UN and governance in middle-income countries: a Vietnam case study Nick Booth
- 16. Law and development in MICs: conclusion Randall Peerenboom and Tom Ginsburg.