Joseph A. Camilleri and Jim Falk, Worlds in Transition: Evolving Governance across a Stressed Planet, Cheltenham, UK: Edward Elgar, 2009, xxii + 670 pp.
Joseph A. Camilleri, Majid Tehranian and Kamal Malhotra, Reimagining the Future: Towards Democratic Governance, Melbourne: La Trobe University, Department of Politics, 2000, xxxiii+101 pp.
Joseph A Camilleri and George Myconos, ‘WTO: The Competitive Dynamic of Globalisation at Work’, Law in Context, Volume 21, 2003, Special issue: Balancing Act: Law, Policy and Politics in Globalisation and Global Trade.
While financial analysts assess the global financial crisis in terms of stock market indexes and currency values, the real impact is being borne by the millions of people who are being pushed further into poverty as we approach the new millennium.
Directed six-year international research project on Democratizing Global Governance (1997-2003). The project attracted over $350 000 in external grants, and resulted in the publication of two books and some 18 papers in internationally refereed journals.
A series of 10-week and 6-week courses offered each year with the aim of developing better community understanding of the dynamics of a rapidly globalising world and Australia's place in it.
Each year the course attracted between 35 and 70 participants, most of them working in education, government, the professions, media, and religious and community organisations, as well as a number of students.
Joseph A. Camilleri, “The Advanced CapitalistState and the Contemporary World Crisis’ in Culture Ideology and World Order, edited by R.B.J. Walker, Boulder, Co., Westview Press, 1984, pp. 70-96.
Joseph A. Camilleri, 'Impoverishment and the Nation State', in Fen Osler Hampson and Judith Reppy (eds.), Earthly Goods: Environmental Change and Social Justice, Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 1996, pp. 122-153.