@inbook{10.2307/j.ctt7st6p.14, ISBN = {9780691096414}, URL = {http://www.jstor.org/stable/j.ctt7st6p.14}, abstract = {In the year sinceAll Politics Is Globalwas published in hardcover, the salience of regulatory issues in world politics has not abated. Within the academy, there has been a new recognition that regulatory issues have penetrated the traditional negotiating arenas of the global political economy. As Cornelia Woll and Alvaro Artigas observe, “Empirical analysis shows that domestic regulatory policies and international economic policies are no longer independent of each other, as previous models generally assumed.”¹ Recent research has demonstrated the ways in which organized economic interests will advocate for regulatory standards to act as a substitute for more overt}, bookauthor = {Daniel W. Drezner}, booktitle = {All Politics Is Global: Explaining International Regulatory Regimes}, pages = {221--230}, publisher = {Princeton University Press}, title = {Afterword to the Paperback Edition}, year = {2007} }