Global Politics ProjectNATIONAL GOVERNMENT & MULTILEVEL GOVERNANCE        The terms government and governance can seem the same, but there’s a big difference between them. Government is a term which refers to the formal and institutional processes which operate at the national level to maintain order and facilitate collective action. Government is based on the system of hierarchies.  Whereas, governance is a much more complex term and despite it doesn’t have a settled meaning, it is considered the various ways through which social life is coordinated. The term governance became popular in the end of 20th century, when the globalization and capitalism became stronger. It led to decrease of the government’s portion in the governance. The growth of the neo-liberalism changed the policy making process. Instead of only the government making the policies, certain groups and organizations got involved in the policy making process and this is called a policy network.

 At the time of the US/EU meetings in Paris, for instance that was one of the first countries to announce that they would take a public stance against corruption, corruption was not allowed to happen in the region as the European Central Bank was established, although the UK government continued to be a very important member of this institution. The situation did not improve when it was announced that some members of the Global Politics Project (GPD) in Poland, Norway, Iceland, Poland, Russia, Germany, Slovakia, Bulgaria and the Czech Republic had a position on national sovereignty in the region.

The government for the first time officially said it will stand by the United Nations Resolution, which was held at St. Petersburg by the US, that states that they will support and strengthen international social and economic mechanisms to control corruption that are necessary to protect a democratic body, as this is what the United Nations Resolution was meant to do. This Resolution sets up a framework for how society and institutions in this region can contribute to bring about the development of an equitable and a level playing field. The fact that the EU and other countries are able to act together across the world is testament to how the GPD functioned. The GPD led an initiative of the G7 Summit to “increase the dialogue and cooperation between countries, to provide more international support to resolve common problems”.

 The government continues to support the European Commission. It is supported by the EU Council. It is supported by the European Parliament. To give more credibility to the European Commission, this government also put forward legislation with a new “Finance Bill to protect public sector workers”. In 2016 this law was the first time that parliament had passed one. So at the 2016 G7 Summit, if this law continues to receive overwhelming support from legislators, it has to be amended and it has to be backed up by a new law signed by the new Greek Parliament, which is also known as the PSB. The proposed law would ensure that only members of the European Commission are exempted from the provisions of the bill. In addition, the government can provide a new funding mechanism for the GPD, if necessary. The Government has also committed to increase the assistance provided by the GPD to the EU. That’s because under the new legislation, only the Member States of the European Central Bank (ECB) can lend or send money from the Euro Union bank to the Member States. This provision is one of several steps taken to bolster the economic viability of the GPD. The GPD announced that in 2015, it received support from 27 countries with 5-14 million citizens. It got a total of $6.6 billion of that support at the 2012 summit and this amount increased to $3.5 billion at the 2013 summit. The GPD says its support was mainly motivated by the increase to the European Commission. It has said that it is also in the process of making more investments in human resources and for the development of public works so that Europe can benefit from a brighter future for us both now and in 2030. The government also said that its support to the EU Council was also extended to the European Commission in the ongoing talks to re-define the European Communities (EC) for the next five years. All of this is in addition to previous commitments to ensure that more member states follow its actions. In 2013, parliament unanimously adopted legislation to renew the new FPC for the next five years. The legislation is needed because of the high level of corruption

The transition from government to governance reflected not only in the complex ways through which social life is coordinated, but it also caused the government to stretch across the different levels. In other words, government is no longer considered as a set of institutions that take place on the national level. This phenomenon is called multi-level governance, which can be local, regional, global and a combination of several of them. The phenomenon Multi-level governance includes decentralization which is growth of the local autonomy by shifting power from national to regional authority, localization that is trend to favor the local authorities, devolution which is giving power to the regional authorities from the central body but the power is strongly controlled by the center.

1. What is the transition from government to governance?
1.1. Is a government a system or a body?
Governments are bodies that take decisions in collaboration with a central body to help regulate how the economy works. They tend to have much more administrative work, less government activity, and less accountability, giving them greater autonomy. They are part of the global economic order that was constructed as the dominant system within China, a system that started as a result of the World War I and as part of the “War on Poverty” during the 1950s. The majority of Chinese political leaders, from Mao Zedong to Mao Jing were either “political” or “religiously pro-Communist” (see below) – and they had their own ideas and goals – but they were not necessarily “progressive” in their politics. The Chinese Communist Party was based on the concept of “the people, their business and their religion” (1955) and the Party’s goal was the “protection of the people, through the rule of the law and the rule of law by the masses”.
The process by which the Chinese Communist Party rose from the “communist” elements of the Party to a “people’s party” was a series of decisions which culminated in a “three stage programme”. In this phase, the Party led by Mao Zedong established a socialist government, based on reforms of society, state ownership and the State owned enterprises, as well as creating and stabilizing new and innovative economic models within the Party and in the surrounding countryside. At the same time, it launched its national liberation struggle. It encouraged the masses to go further and have greater autonomy and power. “The people, their business and their religion” (1955).
In the 1980s and early 1990s, the Party took leadership of the Chinese People’s Liberation Army, which in turn led the People’s Liberation Army, the first national liberation army within a foreign state, to take over the country in 1979, followed by a series of national liberation camps. This was largely a reflection of the fact that the socialist government that emerged from the Soviet Union was based on a democratic system and a state based on a nationalistic constitution.
The new state, after overthrowing the previous communist government, and with the backing of the Chinese Communist Party, became the nationstate and started an independent state to develop what China calls the “two-stage programme”. It started by establishing the state in 1978 and was under the leadership of Deng Xiaoping since 1979. As part of his modernization plan, he laid the groundwork for the formation of a new state with the support of the People’s Liberation Army, but that was when he realised that there was no more time for the People’s Republic.
2. Is the transformation of Chinese democracy a result of the economic reform of the 1950s, 1970s and 1990s
2.1. What is the transition into government?
Under the party’s leadership the government is based on a series of policies and institutions that have shaped China – the welfare state, the education system, the market economy and the social security system. We have mentioned these points before, but the transition into the Chinese state began in 2006

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