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  1.  76
    Network Power and Globalization.David Singh Grewal - 2003 - Ethics and International Affairs 17 (2):89-98.
    With the celebratory view of globalization comes the charge that it represents a kind of empire. But power works in voluntary processes, such as learning English or joining the World Trade Organization. “Network power” may explain the dynamic that drives aspects of globalization.
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  2.  31
    Network power and global standardization: The controversy over the multilateral agreement on investment.David Singh Grewal - 2005 - Metaphilosophy 36 (1‐2):128-144.
    This essay examines the controversy over the attempt to establish rules governing global capital flows in the Multilateral Agreement on Investment (MAI), which became a target of “antiglobalization” activism. Making sense of the activists' concerns about the MAI requires understanding how the emergence of transnational standards in contemporary globalization constitutes an exercise in power. I develop the concept of “network power” to explain the way in which the rise of a single coordinating standard for global activity can be experienced as (...)
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  3. From the state of nature to the state of economy : Pufendorf on commerce and natural law.David Singh Grewal - 2022 - In Mark Somos & Anne Peters (eds.), The state of nature: histories of an idea. Boston: Brill Nijhoff.
     
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  4.  36
    Is Globalization Working?David Singh Grewal - 2006 - Ethics and International Affairs 20 (2):247-259.
    Two of the most creditable responses in the spate of pro-globalization literature are Why Globalization Works, by the financial journalist Martin Wolf, and In Defense of Globalization, by the economist Jagdish Bhagwati. This article is a review of these two books.
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  5.  29
    Inequality Rediscovered.Jedediah Purdy & David Singh Grewal - 2017 - Theoretical Inquiries in Law 18 (1):61-82.
    Widespread recognition that economic inequality has been growing for forty years in most of the developed world, and in fact has tended to grow across most of the history of modern economies, shows that the period 1945-1973, when inequality of wealth and income shrank, was a marked anomaly in historical experience. At the time, however, the anomalous period of equality seemed to vindicate a long history of optimism about economic life:that growth would overcome meaningful scarcity and usher in an egalitarian (...)
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