Privatization: NOMOS LX
Privatization: NOMOS LX
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Abstract
In Privatization, a distinguished interdisciplinary group of scholars in political science, law and philosophy examine the implications of transferring state-provided or state-owned goods and services to the private sector. The twelve essays in this volume consider how we should evaluate the decision to privatize, both with respect to the quality of outcomes that might be produced, and in terms of the effects of privatization on the core values underlying democratic decision-making. Privatization also affects the structure of governance in a variety of important ways, and these essays evaluate the consequences of privatization on the state. This new addition to the NOMOS series sheds new light on these highly salient questions of contemporary political life and institutional design.
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Front Matter
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Introduction
Melissa Schwartzberg
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Part I The Morality of Privatization
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1
Some (Largely) Ignored Problems With Privatization
Debra Satz
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2
In Defense of Accountability as a Lens to Perceive Privatization’s Problems: Some Examples From Military and Security Privatization
Laura A. Dickinson
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3
Why Privatization Matters: The Democratic Case Against Privatization
Alon Harel
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4
Privatization and the Ought/State Gap
Peter Jaworski
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5
Privatization Without Profit?
Chiara Cordelli
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6
Coercion and Privatization
Jessica Flanigan
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1
Some (Largely) Ignored Problems With Privatization
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Part II Privatization and the State
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7
Privatization as State Transformation
Henry Farrell
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8
Public-Sector Management is Complicated: Comment on Farrell
Joseph Heath
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9
Freedom, Responsibility, and Privatization
Eric Macgilvray
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10
Is Rule of Law an Equilibrium Without (Some) Private Enforcement?
Gillian K. Hadfield andBarry R. Weingast
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11
What Is Politics Without the State? A Reply to Hadfield and Weingast
Alex Gourevitch
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12
Privatizing War
Cécile Fabre
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7
Privatization as State Transformation
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End Matter
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