“…As has been noted repeatedly in the literature on economic globalization [76,83], this development was to some extent sanctioned, if not initiated, by the political system itself. Yet, over time it spawned a distinct type and layer of order that increasingly defies political control (see [27,86]) and/ or turns what used to be seen as the central agents of policymaking into policy takers [12] whose Bscripts^for action (in such fields as norm making, agenda-setting, even policy formulation and implementation) are crafted by a diffuse but authoritative Bworld polity^ [60] comprising global (Bworldr ather than Binternational^; see [49]) governance organizations, law courts, corporations and business associations, NGOs, think tanks, advocacy networks, professional associations, expert epistemic communities, social movements, and others (see, e.g., [10,17,24,38]). In short, many of the policies perceived and portrayed by national governments as resulting from their sovereign right to govern without interference from the outside must in fact be viewed as being exogenously driven, a condition that applies even to the most powerful states.…”