How to Run the World

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How to Run the World Page 25

by Parag Khanna


  Many current foreign service officers, State Department personnel, and other distinguished American diplomats have provided valuable insights for this book. I’d particularly like to thank Richard Holbrooke, Helena Finn, Rudi Lohmeyer, Farah Pandith, Bill Whelen, Steve Hill, Greg Behrman, Ashley Bommer, Jared Cohen, Nazneen Ash, Adnan Kifayat, Amar Bakshi, and Tad Brown.

  The following experts on the role of corporations were extremely helpful: John Ruggie, Georg Kell, Marketa Evans, Clare O’Brien, Raj Kumar, Diana Farrell, Christine Bader, Salil Tripathi, Earl Dos Santos, Sara Agarwal, Eric Nonacs, Brad Ryder, Peter Kellner, Jonathan Auerbach, Hans Vries, and Pamela Hartigan.

  On civil society matters, I received exceptional insights from Ricken Patel, Daisy Khan, Paul Reynault, Karen Tse, Premal Shah, Henrik Lund, Bill Abrams, Mark Suzman, Peter Bell, and Tony Pipa.

  For their expertise on India-related trends I am grateful to Kiran Pasricha, Anwarul Hoda, Ashok Ummath, Jayanta Roy, T. Vishwanath, Ajay Khanna, Shashi Tharoor, and Ameet Mehta.

  On the issue of conflict management, particularly related to Afghanistan, I am grateful for the insights of Stan McChrystal, Carne Ross, Paul van Zyl, Rick Ponzio, Barney Rubin, Ellen Laipson, Clare Lockhart, Seema Patel, Joshua Gardner, Chris Hanson, Mary Ann Callahan, John Schweiger, Michelle Parker, Chris Eaton, Brian Fawcett, Christine Fair, Anja de Beer, Hamish Nixon, Paula Kantor, Meloney Lindberg, Joanna Nathan, Tilly Reed, Rory Stewart, Masuda Sultan, Humayun Hamidzada, Saad Mohseni, Aaron Tallaferino, Ashok Parameswaran, Cathy Silverstein, Espen Eide, Robert Kaplan, Carter Page, Jonathan Paris, Greg Mortenson, Christiane Leitinger, Paula Newberg, Verena Ringler, Srilal Pereira, David Hoffman, Ramesh Thakur, Melissa Payson, Mosharraf Zaidi, and Matthew Arnold.

  For their insights on matters relevant to the environment, global public health, poverty, and human rights, I am indebted to Jose-Maria Figueres, John Hafner, Ulrich Adamheit, Vijay Vaitheeswaran, Terry Taminen, Bill Hinchberger, Kate Taylor, Esha Chhabra, Paul Meyer, Laurie Garrett, Alejandro Jadad, Ilona Kickbusch, Devi Sridhar, K. J. Singh, Emilie Filmer-Wilson, Joerg Schimmel, Sanjay Reddy, Nenad Rava, David Morrison, and Sarah Leah Whitson.

  As before, I have been guided by a dream team made up of my editor, Will Murphy, at Random House and my agent, Jennifer Joel, at International Creative Management. I am forever grateful for having them in my corner for this second book and hopefully for many projects to come.

  Without my family I could never run my own world. My father, Sushil, once again deserves special thanks for reading and editing the entire manuscript several times, as do my mother, Manjula, brother, Gaurav, and sister-in-law, Anu, for their constant love and support. Much of this book was written in the presence of my two constant companions, both at home and abroad: my lovely and brilliant wife, Ayesha, and our adorable baby daughter, Zara.

  Notes

  Chapter One: Mega-diplomacy

  1. Toynbee, Civilization on Trial, 23.

  2. Ridley, The Origins of Virtue, 264.

  Chapter Two: The New Diplomats

  1. John Newhouse, “Diplomacy, Inc.” Foreign Affairs, May/June 2009.

  2. Bono, Speech to Global Business Council for HIV/AIDS, Berlin, Germany, April 21, 2004.

  3. George Soros, “The People’s Sovereignty,” Foreign Policy, January/February 2004, 66–67.

  Chapter Three: The (Fill-in-the-Blank) Consensus

  1. C. K. Prahalad, “Twenty Hubs and No HQ,” strategy+business, Spring 2008.

  2. WTO Statistics Database, available at http://stat.wto.org/Home/WSDBHome.aspx?Language=E; UN Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD) 2008 World Investment Report, available online at http://www.unctad.org/en/docs/wir2008_en.pdf.

  Chapter Four: Peace Without War

  1. Greg Mills and Jeffrey Herbst, “There Is No Congo,” Foreign Policy, March/April 2009.

  Chapter Five: The New Colonialism: Better Than the Last

  1. “A Plan for Action: A New Era of International Cooperation for a Changed World: 2009, 2010 and Beyond” (report of the Managing Global Insecurity project, Brookings Institution, Washington, D.C., September 2008).

  Chapter Six: Terrorists Pirates, Nukes

  1. Jones and Libicki, How Terrorist Groups End.

  2. Jeffrey Gettleman, “The Most Dangerous Place in the World,” Foreign Policy, March/April 2009.

  Chapter Seven: Getting Rights Right

  1. Bernard Condon, “Babble Rouser,” Forbes, August 2008.

  Chapter Eight: By Any Means Necessary

  1. BBC World Debate, Tianjin, China, October 2008.

  2. Jan Ross, “Ein Stossdaempfer mit tausand Federn,” Die Zeit, March 26, 2009.

  3. Jehangir S. Pocha, “One Sun in the Sky: Labor Unions in the People’s Republic of China,” Georgetown Journal of International Affairs, Winter/Spring 2007, 11.

  4. Harry G. Broadman, “China and India Go to Africa,” Foreign Affairs, March/April 2008.

  5. Michael Ross, “Blood Barrels,” Foreign Affairs, May/June 2008, 7.

  Chapter Nine: The Case Against Poverty

  1. Tom Mitchell, “An Army Marching to Escape Medieval China,” Financial Times, April 16, 2009.

  2. Sixty-five percent of BRAC’s revenue is generated from its own programs and 30 percent from direct private support.

  3. “Just Good Business: Survey of Corporate Social Responsibility,” The Economist, January 19, 2008, 4.

  4. Josh Ruxin, “Doctors Without Orders,” Democracy, Summer 2008.

  5. Tahir Andrabi, Jishnu Das, C. Christine Fair, and Asim Ijaz Khwaja, “The Madrasa Myth,” ForeignPolicy.com, June 2009.

  6. G. Pascal Zachary, “Inside Nairobi, the Next Palo Alto?” The New York Times, July 20, 2008.

  7. Pritchett, Let Their People Come, 85.

  8. Mukul G. Asher and Amarendu Nandy, “Remittances: Maximizing India’s Strategic Leverage,” Pragati, June 2007.

  9. Jason DeParle, “Western Union Empire Moves Migrant Cash Home,” The New York Times, November 22, 2007.

  10. Ibid., “A Good Provider Is One Who Leaves,” The New York Times Magazine, April 22, 2007.

  Chapter Ten: Your Planet, Your Choice

  1. Scott Borgerson, “Sea Change,” Atlantic Monthly, December 2008, 88–89.

  2. Ted Nordhaus and Michael Shellenberger, “Scrap Kyoto,” Democracy, Summer 2008.

  3. Lydia Polgreen, “Mali’s Farmers Discover a Weed’s Potential Power,” The New York Times, September 9, 2007.

  4. Adapted from SustainAbility, http://www.sustainability.com.

  5. Benedict Kingsbury, Nico Krisch, and Richard Stewart, “The Emergence of Global Administrative Law,” Law and Contemporary Problems 68 (Summer/Autumn 2005).

  Chapter Eleven: The Next Renaissance

  1. Beck and Grande, Cosmopolitan Europe, 2–10; Charles Sabel and Jonathan Zeitlin, “Learning from Difference: The New Architecture of Experimentalist Governance in the EU,” European Law Journal 14, no. 3 (May 2008): 271–327.

  2. Jamais Cascio, “The Next Big Thing: Resilience,” Foreign Policy, May/June 2009.

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