EU and US Regulatory Power Under Strain? Emerging Countries and the Limits of External Governance
Version
Published
Date Issued
2017
Author(s)
Type
Article
Language
English
Abstract
The EU and the US are at the origin of most international institutions and rules for both trade and finance, and both have long exported their preferred policies to the rest of the world. Today, this hegemonic position is increasingly challenged by the rise of new centres of economic power such as China, India and Brazil. This introductory article introduces the ‘supply-and-demand model of regulatory power’ guiding this Special Issue and, drawing on the latter’s contributions, illustrates the interplay between EU/US regulatory outreach and emerging economies’ domestic politics in explaining the embracement or rejection of EU/US trade-related agendas.
Subjects
JA Political science (General)
JZ International relations
Publisher DOI
Journal
European Foreign Affairs Review
ISSN
1384-6299
Volume
22
Publisher
Kluwer Law International
Submitter
Serrano, Omar Ramon
Citation apa
Serrano, O. R., Krizic, I., & Lavenex, S. (2017). EU and US Regulatory Power Under Strain? Emerging Countries and the Limits of External Governance. In European Foreign Affairs Review (Vol. 22). Kluwer Law International. https://doi.org/10.24451/arbor.20141
Note
European Foreign Affairs Review
Volume 22, Special Issue (2017) pp. 1 – 17
Volume 22, Special Issue (2017) pp. 1 – 17
