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Journal cover: Corporate Governance

Corporate Governance

ISSN: 1472-0701

Online from: 2001

Subject Area: Business Ethics and Law

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Montesquieu for the twenty-first century: factoring civil society and business into global governance


Document Information:
Title:Montesquieu for the twenty-first century: factoring civil society and business into global governance
Author(s):Atle Midttun, (Professor based at the Norwegian School of Management, Oslo, Norway)
Citation:Atle Midttun, (2010) "Montesquieu for the twenty-first century: factoring civil society and business into global governance", Corporate Governance, Vol. 10 Iss: 1, pp.97 - 109
Keywords:Governance, Politics
Article type:Research paper
DOI:10.1108/14720701011021148 (Permanent URL)
Publisher:Emerald Group Publishing Limited
Acknowledgements:The author is grateful to Hilde Nordbø for assistance with interviews and preparing much of the EITI material, and to Jonas Moberg and Anders Tunold Kråkenes; the EITI secretariat, Sefton Darby; former DFID and World Bank and Alan Dethridge, former VP External Affairs, Exploration and Production, Shell, for comments on the final version.Received 20 June 2009Revised 15 September 2009Accepted 10 October 2009
Abstract:

PurposeThis paper sets out to argue for rethinking governance through the prism of Montesquieu's model of checks and balances within state powers. It aims to explore the parallel between the eighteenth century concept of division of power and the current need to engage and balance the powers of the state, industry/markets and civil society in governance for global sustainability. It also takes Montesquieu's doctrine of balance of powers beyond static checks and balances into more dynamic innovation.

Design/methodology/approachThis is a conceptual paper that translates seventeenth and eighteenth century state theory into twenty-first century governance. It also explores how models from innovation may be applied to discuss dynamic aspects of governance.

FindingsDrawing on the product-cycle model, the paper shows how governance entrepreneurship may be explored and understood in innovation terms. The paper explores extractive industries' transparency initiative (EITI) as an illustration of governance innovation to address a gross governance and market failure in the extractive industries – the “resource curse”, particularly in developing countries. It shows how much of EITI's remarkable success in building institutional support is due to actors expanding from their traditional domains into new complementary roles. Each of the three powers – civil society, business, and politics – has exploited their comparative advantages in bringing the governance project forward.

Originality/valueGiven the limitation of conventional governance models, the originality/value of the paper lie in its launch of new supplementary governance approaches and their application to the EITI case.



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