The Fabian Society challenged leading thinkers and campaigners to break the deadlock in the globalisation debate. This analysis and advocacy is required reading for anyone who wants to know how a more just world can be created. Rather than simply apportioning the blame for world poverty, the Fabian Globalisation Group produced a manifesto for real change.
The book puts forward a set of solutions to the problems facing the world that combines new multilateral institutions with tougher corporate regulation and a more progressive attitude towards migration.
- The book was launched at a Fabian debate in Edinburgh, on the eve of the Make Poverty History march, with International Development Secretary Hilary Benn and Justin Buhanga of African Diaspore: Voices for African Development
The members of the Fabian Globalisation Group are:
- Craig Bennett – Senior Campaigner on Corporate Accountability at Friends of the Earth
- Bob Deacon – Professor of International Social Policy at the University of Sheffield
- John Evans – General Secretary of the Trade Union Advisory Committee of the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development
- Ricardo Gottschalk – Fellow in the Institute of Development Studies at the University of Sussex
- Stephany Griffith-Jones – Professorial Fellow in the Institute of Development Studies at the University of Sussex
- David Held – Graham Wallas Professor of Political Science at the London School of Economics
- Alan Hudson – Committee Specialist for the International Development Select Committee of the House of Commons (writing in a personal capacity)
- Russell King – Professor and Co-Director of the Sussex Centre for Migration Research at the University of Sussex
- Adam Lent – Co-ordinator of the Fabian Globalisation Group
- James B. Quilligan – Director of the Brandt 21 Forum
- Martin Shaw – Professor of International Relations and Politics at the University of Sussex
- Mark Thomson – Research Officer in the Sussex Centre for Migration Research at the University of Sussex
"An important contribution to the globalisation debate – rich in ideas and policy implications"
—Noreena Hertz
Buy Just World for £11.95, plus £1 p+p. ISBN: 1842774557
Telephone the Fabian Society bookshop on 020 7227 4900, email
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