International Institutions and Global Governance Program

Rising Powers and Global Governance

Project Expert

Miles Kahler
Miles Kahler

Senior Fellow for Global Governance

About the Project

The largest emerging economies—China, India, Brazil, among others—were the economic stars of the last decade. With growing economic weight came demands for a larger role in major global governance institutions. These rising powers also demonstrated their ability to promote or veto global negotiations in issue areas from trade to climate change. Although their economic growth has recently slowed, these emerging economies will exert growing influence on the architecture of global governance. Given their deepening integration into the international economy, they could become "responsible stakeholders," stalwart supporters of the existing rules of the game. In the absence of institutional reforms, such as changes in IMF and World Bank governance, rising powers could challenge the existing order, creating their own parallel or alternative institutions. Finally, demands from their citizens for economic and social advancement could point to a future of limited global engagement and free riding on the existing rules of the game. I am exploring these alternative futures in articles and a book-length study. I also convene a roundtable series on Rising Powers and Global Governance to explore these issues.

No publications were found for this project.

More from this Program

 

Project
In the past two decades, and at an accelerating pace during the past ten years, global governance has witnessed innovations that diverge from the model of formal, intergovernmental organizations. Non…

 

Project
The Council of Councils is a CFR initiative connecting leading foreign policy institutes from around the world in a common conversation on issues of global governance and multilateral cooperation. Th…