The political economy of power : hegemony and economic liberalization
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
The political economy of power : hegemony and economic liberalization
(International political economy series)
Macmillan , St. Martin's Press, 1996
Repr., with alterations
- : uk : pbk
- : uk : hc
- : us : cloth
- : us : pbk
- Other Title
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The political economy of power : hegemony and economic liberalism
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Note
Includes bibliographical references (p. 191-198) and index
Description and Table of Contents
- Volume
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: uk : hc ISBN 9780333610688
Description
While contemporary academia has successfully exposed the negative effects of power - wars, expansionism, ideological impositions, exportation of domestic economic constraints - less attention is paid to the legitimacy of power exercised exclusionarily to reward only allies, even if not aggressively aimed to harm others. This book explores the exclusionary dimensions of the postwar liberal economic system created under US hegemonic leadership, limitations which deny the US-led postwar economic liberalism legitimacy as a public good and undermined its efficacy.
Table of Contents
List of Figures - List of Tables - Preface - Acknowledgement - Introduction - The Political Economy of Hegemony and Public Goods - Hegemonic Stability and Postwar Trade Liberalism - US Power and Restrictive Trade Practices, 1789-1970 - The Marshall Plan and US Hegemony: a Public or a Private Good? - American Hegemony and the Bretton Woods System - Evaluating US Hegemonic Experience - References - Index
- Volume
-
: uk : pbk ISBN 9780333664797
Description
While contemporary academia has successfully exposed the negative effects of power - wars, expansionism, ideological impositions, exportation of domestic economic constraints - less attention is paid to the legitimacy of power exercised exclusionarily to reward only allies, even if not aggressively aimed to harm others. This book explores the exclusionary dimensions of the postwar liberal economic system created under US hegemonic leadership, limitations which deny the US-led postwar economic liberalism legitimacy as a public good and undermine its efficacy.
Table of Contents
List of Figures - List of Tables - Preface - Acknowledgement - Introduction - The Political Economy of Hegemony and Public Goods - Hegemonic Stability and Postwar Trade Liberalism - US Power and Restrictive Trade Practices, 1789-1970 - The Marshall Plan and US Hegemony: a Public or a Private Good? - American Hegemony and the Bretton Woods System - Evaluating US Hegemonic Experience - References - Index
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