Available Formats
Questioning Geopolitics: Political Projects in a Changing World-System
By (Author) Georgi M. Derluguian
By (author) Scott L. Greer
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
30th August 2000
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
International relations
International economics
327
Hardback
264
The authors of this work reject the notion that globalization is an analytically useful term. Rather, globalization is seen merely as the framework of the current political debate on the future of world power. Some of the other ideas advanced by the authors include: the explicit prediction that East Asia is not going to become the centre of the world; the contention that the USSR collapsed for the same reasons that nearly brought down the United States in 1973; and the notion that the regional economic networks that are emerging from under the modern states are in fact rather old formations. The articles in the volume are organized around three main themes. Part 1 explores both the changing patterns of global power from the viewpoint of geopolitics and the Gramscian approach to the study of international relations. Part 2 further develops the debate among a number of eminent historians and sociologists - both the apologists for and the opponents of globalization are challenged in new and unexpected ways. Part 3 traces the emergence of several regional economic networks and explores the ambiguous problems of security and identity posed by the old-new transborder formations.
.,."in the hands of a thougtful instructor, this volume might make a very useful graduate seminar textbook on global political economy precisely by forcing students to ask methodological questions concerning the various assumptions that structure each chapter's approach."-Contemporary Sociology
...in the hands of a thougtful instructor, this volume might make a very useful graduate seminar textbook on global political economy precisely by forcing students to ask methodological questions concerning the various assumptions that structure each chapter's approach.-Contemporary Sociology
Theoretically rich and stylistically impeccable, this book sharply challenges much established wisdom and makes invaluable reading for students.-Journal of Peace Research
"Theoretically rich and stylistically impeccable, this book sharply challenges much established wisdom and makes invaluable reading for students."-Journal of Peace Research
..."in the hands of a thougtful instructor, this volume might make a very useful graduate seminar textbook on global political economy precisely by forcing students to ask methodological questions concerning the various assumptions that structure each chapter's approach."-Contemporary Sociology
GEORGI M. DERLUGUIAN is Assistant Professor of Sociology at Northwestern University. In the last decade his research focus has shifted from early modern Portuguese exploration to patterns of state collapse and guerrilla mobilization in Mozambique, Karabagh, and Chechnya. SCOTT L. GREER is a doctoral candidate in political science at Northwestern University, currently writing a dissertation on regionalism and the politics of territorial government in Western Europe. His research includes studies of French politics and the politics of health care.