Globalization between the Cold War and neo-imperialism /
This work contains an Introduction by Harry F. Dahms. It includes contents such as: Periodizing Globalization: From Cold War Modernization to the Bush Doctrine Robert J. Antonio and Alessandro Bonanno; Recognizing Empire: Alienation, Authority, and Delusions of Grandeur David Norman Smith; Corporate...
Clasificación: | Libro Electrónico |
---|---|
Otros Autores: | , |
Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
Amsterdam ; Oxford :
Elsevier JAI,
2006.
|
Colección: | Current perspectives in social theory ;
v. 24. |
Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Cover
- Contents
- Editorial Board
- List of Contributors
- Introduction: ''Globalization between the Cold War and Neo-Imperialism''
- Notes
- References
- Periodizing Globalization: From Cold War Modernization to the Bush Doctrine
- Neoliberal Globalization and the Cold War System
- Cold War Modernization Theory and the Winding Down of the Long Postwar Expansion
- The Rise of the Post-Cold War System: Globalization as American--Led Modernization
- Phase 1: Crisis of the Cold War System and Neoconservative Mobilization
- Phase 2: The Reagan Revolution: Money Culture and Victorious Neoliberalism
- Phase 3: The New World Order: Neoliberalism on the Road to Global Hegemony
- Phase 4: Globalization and ''Third Way'' Politics: Neoliberalism with a Human Face?
- Progressive Modernization Redux: the new Economy as Dawn of the Post-Cold War Era
- After the Cold War Era: A Global Stockholder's Republic
- Gathering Clouds of Post-Cold War era Modernization
- Neoliberalism with an Iron Fist: U.S. Hyperpower and Imperium
- After the Post-Cold War Era: Regime Change in the USA & Permanent War Redux
- New Rome's Legitimacy Crisis: Geopolitics and the Globalization System
- The Stockholders' Empire Under Siege
- Beyond Arrogant Exceptionalism: Recovering Americana's ''Spiritual Side''
- Notes
- References
- Recognizing Empire: Alienation, Authority, and Delusions of Grandeur
- After Empire?
- The Spirit of Power Politics
- The State Unbound
- Power Disenchanted
- Enchantment Reborn
- A Unipolar World
- Denial and Celebration of Empire
- The Unilateral Mentality
- Pax Americana
- What the people give, They can take away
- Alienation, Empire, and Consent100
- Authority in Question
- Conceptual Roots of Empire
- Sovereignty and Alienation
- Not Two Swords, A Double-Edged Sword
- Alienation as the Free Act of the People
- The Prince Unbound
- In the Beginning was the Sword
- The Good Cannot Be Good
- The Outsized Executive
- Machiavelli in the White House
- Herrschaft und Knechtschaft
- Master of All He Surveys
- The Machiavellian Temptation
- The Will to Power
- Recognition Denied
- Notes
- Corporate Warriors: The State and Changing forms of Private Armed Force in America*
- Building the Local State: Capitalist Flexibility and Irregular Armed Force
- Independent Militias: Early Industrialists as Corporate Warriors
- Private Industrial Police: Mobilizing Corporate Warriors through the Market
- Building a Massive Warfare State
- The New Corporate Warrior in the Private Military Industry
- Private Military Firms and Global Security
- Nation States and the Use of Force
- The U.S. in the Global Military Services Industry
- Theorizing the rise of the New Corporate Warrior
- The Silverstein Thesis
- The Singer Thesis
- The Weakness of the U.S. State as a Weakness in Singer's Argument
- Conclusions and Implications
- Notes
- Acknowledgment
- References
- Books and Journal Articles
- Press and Web Sources
- From Exceptionalism to Imperialism: Culture, Character, and America.