For more than half a century, the United States has led the world in developing major technologies that drive the modern economy and underpin its prosperity. In America, Inc., Linda Weiss attributes the U.S. capacity for transformative innovation to the strength of its national security state, a complex of agencies, programs, and hybrid arrangements that has developed around the institution of permanent defense preparedness and the pursuit of technological supremacy. She examines how that complex emerged and how it has evolved in response to changing geopolitical threats and domestic political constraints, from the Cold War period to the post-9/11 era.Weiss focuses on state-funded venture capital funds, new forms of technology procurement by defense and security-related agencies, and innovation in robotics, nanotechnology, and renewable energy since the 1980s. Weiss argues that the national security state has been the crucible for breakthrough innovations, a catalyst for entrepreneurship and the formation of new firms, and a collaborative network coordinator for private-sector initiatives. Her book appraises persistent myths about the military-commercial relationship at the core of the National Security State. Weiss also discusses the implications for understanding U.S. capitalism, the American state, and the future of American primacy as financialized corporations curtail investment in manufacturing and innovation.
Inhaltsverzeichnis
1. The National Security State and Technology Leadership
The U.S. Puzzle
The Argument
Re-viewing the NSS–Private Sector Relationship
Existing Accounts: Discounting, Sidelining, Civilianizing the State
The Approach of This Book
New Thinking on the American State
2. Rise of the National Security State as Technology Enterprise
Emergence (1945–1957)
Growth: The Sputnik Effect (1958–1968)
Crisis: Legitimation and Innovation Deficits (1969–1979)
Reform and Reorientation: Beginnings (1980–1989)
Reform and Reorientation: Consolidation (1990–1999)
Re-visioning (2000–2012)
3. Investing in New Ventures
Geopolitical Roots of the U.S. Venture Capital Industry
Post–Cold War Trends: New Funds for a New Security Environment4. Beyond Serendipity: Procuring Transformative Technology
Technology Procurement versus R&D: The Activist Element of Government Purchasing
Spin-Off and Spin-Around—Serendipitous and Purposeful
Breaching the Wall: Edging Toward Military-Commercial (Re-)Integration
5. Reorienting the Public-Private Partnership
Structural Changes in the Domestic Arena
Reorientation: The Quest for Commercial Viability
Beyond a Military-Industrial Divide: Innovating for Both Security and Commerce
6. No More Breakthroughs?
Post-9/11 Decline of the NSS Technology Enterprise?
Nanotechnology: A Coordinated Effort
Robotics: The Drive for Drones
Clean Energy: From Laggard to Leader?
Caveat: A Faltering NSS Innovation Engine?
7. Hybridization and American Antistatism
The Significance of Hybridization
An American Tendency?
Nature of the Beast: Neither ‚Privatization‘ nor ‚Outsourcing‘
Innovation Hybrids
8. Penetrating the Myths of the Military-Commercial Relationship
Four Myths Laid Bare
Serendipitous Spin-Off
Hidden Industrial Policy
Wall of Separation and Military-Industrial Complex
R&D Spending Creates Innovation Leadership
The Defense Spending Question: In Search of the Holy Grail?
9. Hybrid State, Hybrid Capitalism, Great Power Turning Point
Comparative Institutions and Varieties of Capitalism
The American State
Great Power Turning Point
Über den Autor
Linda Weiss is Professor Emeritus of Comparative Politics at the University of Sydney. She is the author of The Myth of the Powerless State, also from Cornell, and coeditor most recently of Developmental Politics in Transition: The Neoliberal Era and Beyond.