"This volume is a fresh inquiry into the idea of global governmentality. Bringing much needed clarity to a notoriously ambiguous concept, leading scholars explore its analytical purchase in a variety of contexts, thereby adding important insights into the modalities of power in contemporary world politics. Highly recommended to anyone interested in the dark side of global governance." - Jens Bartelson, Professor of Political Science, Lund University, Sweden."If crisis is the midwife of governmentality, then the need for innovative analytical approaches is pressing. This stimulating collection brings together leading International Relations scholars who engage with the concept of governmentality to imagine globality in new and distinctive ways. The insights into how governing thought and governing practice shape understandings of the world will greatly enhance debates within both International Relations and the wider social sciences. These insights also exemplify the critical conceptual approaches desperately needed for a new era." - Wendy Larner, Te Herenga Waka – Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand. "This innovative and timely collection of essays demonstrates the importance of exploring how the macro-level of politics and globality is deeply intertwined with the micro-level of individual and group practices. Michel Foucault's concept of governmentality is put to excellent use in analysing a wide variety of settings in which the specificity of globality is highlighted. This volume is a valuable resource for scholars of International Relations as well as many other social scientists." - Peter Miller, London School of Economics and Political Science, UK."An indispensable contribution to our understanding of global power dynamics. The contributors to this volume link the concept of governmentality to a diverse set of theoretical approaches to produce a set of creative engagements with existing and emerging forms of governance in a range of historical and geographical settings. They challenge our understandings of global institutions and policies as well as of the concept of governmentality itself. A brilliant read and a must for any engagement with global politics." - Thomas Diez, University of Tuebingen, Germany.