Listing 1 - 10 of 5643 | << page >> |
Sort by
|
Choose an application
This innovative survey of international political economy, built around a carefully selected set of nonacademic readings, not only reviews the traditional analytic narratives, but also critiques the rationalist bias of the discipline and documents the transition from international to world political economy.
Choose an application
Introduces new approaches to international political economy in the Anglo-North American tradition, as well as alternative syntheses being developed in Africa, Australia, Japan, and Latin America.
Choose an application
The authors explore the dynamics and complexities involved in the intertwined processes of democratization and economic liberalization in Asia, the Middle East, and Eastern Europe.
Choose an application
Challenging and revising traditional perspectives with new evidence, this collection addresses the new international role of the Pacific Basin nations and the political and economic forces that are influencing their growth and stability.
Choose an application
The authors examine the role of agriculture in global free trade and the multiple factors causing the GATT negotiations to continue to deadlock over agricultural issues.
Choose an application
Confronting the corrosive influence that war economies typically have on the prospects for peace in war-torn societies, this study critically analyzes current policy responses and offers a thought-provoking foundation for the development of more effective peacebuilding strategies. The authors focus on the role played by trade in precipitating and fueling conflict, with particular emphasis on the regional dynamics that are created by war economies. Their analysis highlights the darker side of the commitment to deregulation, open markets, and the expansion of trade routes that are key features of globalization. In each of three case studies—-Sierra Leone, Afghanistan, and Bosnia—they examine the nature of the war economy, the regional networks developed to support it, its legacies, and the impact of initiatives to transform it. That transformation, they argue, a process central to the transition from violent conflict to sustainable peace, can best be achieved through approaches that recognize critical regional factors.
Choose an application
Concentrating on change as it affects societies on the periphery of the world system, the authors address forces both in the international environment of those societies and in domestic regimes and offer alternative methodological approaches to the study of change.
Choose an application
Responding to increasing protectionism in trade and to the mutual opportunities that may exist in more harmonious trade relations between the United States and the developing countries, this book addresses the role of the developing countries in the international trading system and the role and nature of U.S. policy in relation to that system.
Choose an application
The authors examine the impact of economic integration in Europe and Latin America on both the relationship between the two regions and the trilateral relationship among Europe, Latin America, and the United States.
Choose an application
How do liberal democracies produce citizens who are capable of governing themselves? In considering this question, Barbara Cruikshank rethinks central topics in political theory, including the relationship between welfare and citizenship, democracy and despotism, and subjectivity and subjection. Drawing on theories of power and the creation of subjects, Cruikshank argues that individuals in a democracy are made into self-governing citizens through the small-scale and everyday practices of voluntary associations, reform movements, and social service programs. She argues that our empowerment is a measure of our subjection rather than of our autonomy from power. Through a close examination of several contemporary American "technologies of citizenship"-from welfare rights struggles to philanthropic self-help schemes to the organized promotion of self-esteem awareness-she demonstrates how social mobilization reshapes the political in ways largely unrecognized in democratic theory. Although the impact of a given reform movement may be minor, the techniques it develops for creating citizens far extend the reach of govermental authority. Combining a detailed knowledge of social policy and practice with insights from poststructural and feminist theory, The Will to Empower shows how democratic citizens and the political are continually recreated.
Listing 1 - 10 of 5643 | << page >> |
Sort by
|