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The corporation as an institution of global governance

In: Handbook of the International Political Economy of the Corporation

Author

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  • Christopher May

Abstract

This chapter makes a simple argument: given the manner in which global corporations work with their global supply and/or value chains, an approach that merely understands this as the management of a complex set of relationships misses something important about their characteristic political economy. The chapter sets out an alternative approach that suggests there is some utility to understanding corporations as having a governance function across their networks, and links that suggestion to existing accounts of global governance. The author suggests that issues of legitimate authority and even a form of democratic deficit will illuminate corporate practices more thoroughly than approaches that just look at supply chain management as a product of efficiency maximization. The chapter therefore argues that global corporations can be usefully regarded for analytical purposes as institutions of global governance themselves.

Suggested Citation

  • Christopher May, 2018. "The corporation as an institution of global governance," Chapters, in: Andreas Nölke & Christian May (ed.), Handbook of the International Political Economy of the Corporation, chapter 22, pages 349-364, Edward Elgar Publishing.
  • Handle: RePEc:elg:eechap:16821_22
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