Reconciling Economic Imperatives with Social Priorities: the Global Compact

Feb 25, 2000

Paper presented at the Carnegie Council in February 2000.

Globalization has increasingly disconnected one single element— networks of production and finance—from what had been an overall system of institutional relations, and sent it off on its own spatial and temporal trajectory. This has produced disequillibria in the world political economy, which will persist unless and until the strictly economic sphere is embedded once more in broader frameworks of shared values and institutionalized practices.

You may also like

JAN 8, 2026 Article

A Conversation with Carnegie Ethics Fellow Denver Barrows

This conversation features Denver Barrows, a senior manager at Amazon, scaling electric vehicle infrastructure.

DEC 18, 2025 Podcast

Embracing Empathy and Responsible Power, with Dr. Claire Yorke

Dr. Claire Yorke joins "Values & Interests" to discuss how empathy can be used to build inclusive power structures, while avoiding the trap of blind idealism.

Joel Rosenthal and Avril Haines. CREDIT: Bryan Goldberg Photography.

DEC 15, 2025 Video

The Ethics of Decision-Making in National Security

Drawing from her career in public service, Avril D. Haines, former director of national intelligence, offered key insights into the importance of values, how to ...

No traducido

Este contenido aún no ha sido traducido a su idioma. Puede solicitar una traducción haciendo clic en el botón de abajo.

Solicitar traducción