An Anticlassical political-economic analysis : a vision for the next century

Bibliographic Information

An Anticlassical political-economic analysis : a vision for the next century

Yasusuke Murakami ; translated with an introduction by Kozo Yamamura

Stanford University Press , Cambridge University Press, 1996

Uniform Title

Han koten no seiji keizaigaku

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Note

Translation of: Han koten no seiji keizaigaku

Description and Table of Contents

Description

In his final work, one that distills decades of research and thought, a distinguished economic thinker turned social scientist and philosopher confronts three crucial questions facing the world at the end of the century: How and in what form can a harmonious and stable post-cold war world order be created? How can the world maintain the economic performance necessary for the well-being of people while minimizing international economic conflicts and further deterioration of the world's environment? What must be done to safeguard the freedoms of all peoples? In attempting to answer these questions, Murakami criticizes classical political-economic analysis and offers his own "anticlassical" analyses and visions for the next century. By classical political-economic analysis, Murakami refers to analyses of power politics based on the nation-state system and to classical and neoclassical economic analysis which holds that unimpeded competition and free trade are fundamental bases for increasing wealth for the benefit of all. Murakami's anticlassical stance takes the form of a new, intellectually integrated and reasoned concept called "polymorphic liberalism," which argues that traditional "progressivism"-the belief that humans have an ultimate unique path on which they will reach an ideal social and political-economic system-can no longer meet today's challenges.

Table of Contents

Translator's preface Translator's introduction 1. On progress 2. Nationalism and transnationalism 3. The theory of hegemonic stability: a compromise between economic liberalism and nationalism 4. The demise of the classical belief 5. An economics of decreasing cost 6. Developmentalism as a system 7. The increasing complexity of the international economy A scenario for a new international system: the rules for polymorphic liberalism 9. Developmentalism, heterogeneity, and parliamentary politics 10. Understanding 'understanding' Afterword Notes Index.

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Details

  • NCID
    BA44503771
  • ISBN
    • 0804735190
  • Country Code
    us
  • Title Language Code
    eng
  • Text Language Code
    eng
  • Original Language Code
    jpn
  • Place of Publication
    Stanford, Calif,Cambridge
  • Pages/Volumes
    476 p
  • Size
    24cm
  • Classification
  • Subject Headings
  • Uniform Title ID
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