What determines the flow of labor and capital in this new global
information economy? Who has the capacity to coordinate this new system,
to create some measure of order? What happens to territoriality and
sovereignty, two fundamental principles of the modern state? And who
gains rights and who loses rights?
Losing Control? examines the rise of private transnational legal codes
and supranational institutions, such as the World Trade Organization and
universal human rights covenants, and shows that though sovereignty
remains an important feature of the international system, it is no
longer confined to the nation-state. Other actors gain rights and a kind
of sovereignty by setting some of the rules that used to be within the
exclusive domain of states. Saskia Sassen tracks the emergence and the
making of the transformations that mark our world today, among which is
the partial denationalizing of national territory. Two arenas in
particular stand out in the new spatial and economic order by their
capacity to set their own rules: the global capital market and the
series of codes and institutions that have mushroomed into an
international human rights regime. As Sassen shows, these two
quasi-legal realms now have the power and legitimacy to demand action
and accountability from national governments, with the ironic twist that
both depend upon the state to enforce their goals. From the economic
policy shifts forced by the Mexico debt crisis to the recurring battles
over immigration and refugees around the world, Losing Control?
incisively analyzes the events that have radically altered the landscape
of governance in an era of increasing globalization.