This book provides a critical engagement between contending historical materialist approaches that have played a crucial role in shaping post-positivist International Relations theory. It analyzes globalization as a process of state formation and argues that its fate depends on the neo-liberal recomposition of labour relations. .
Inhoudsopgave
Globalization, the State and Class Struggle: An Introduction; A.Bieler , W.Bonefeld , P.Burnham & A.D.Morton PART I: GLOBAL RESTRUCTURING AND THEORETICAL PERSPECTIVES A Critical Theory Route to Hegemony, World Order and Historical Change: Neo-Gramscian Perspectives in IR; A.Bieler & A.D.Morton Neo-Gramscian Hegemony and the International Order; P.Burnham Social Constitution and the Spectre of Globalization; W.Bonefeld PART II: STATE, CAPITAL AND LABOUR European Integration and Eastward Enlargement: A Historical Materialist Understanding of Neo Liberal Restructuring in Europe; A.Bieler The Politics of Economic Management in the 1990s; P.Burnham Structural Change and Neoliberalism in Mexico: ‘Passive Revolution’ in the Global Political Economy; A.D.Morton Human Progress and Development; W.Bonefeld PART III: GLOBAL RESTRUCTURING: CONTESTING NEO-GRAMSCIAN PERSPECTIVES Globalization, the State and Class Struggle: A ‘Critical Economy’ Engagement with Open Marxism; A.Bieler & A.D.Morton Social Constitution and Critical Economy; W.Bonefeld Marx, Neo-Gramscianism and Globalization; P.Burnham Class Formation, Resistance and the Transnational: Beyond Unthinking Materialism; A.Bieler & A.D.Morton Bibliography
Over de auteur
ANDREAS BIELER is a Senior Lecturer in the School of Politics, University of Nottingham, UK. His book publications include
Globalization and Enlargement of the European Union and
The Struggle for a Social Europe: Trade Unions and EMU in Times of Global Restructuring.
WERNER BONEFELD teaches at the Department of Politics, University of York, UK and is an Associate Fellow at the Centre for Comparative Labour Studies, University of Warwick, UK. His most recent book publications include
Human Dignity: Social Autonomy and the Critique of Capitalism (with Kosmas Psychopedis) and
Revolutionary Writing.
PETER BURNHAM teaches in the Department of Politics and International Studies at the University of Warwick, UK. His publications include
The Political Economy of Postwar Reconstruction and
Remaking the Postwar World Economy .
ADAM DAVID MORTON is a Senior Lecturer in the School of Politics and International Relations at the University of Nottingham, UK. He is author of
Unravelling Gramsci: Hegemony and Passive Revolution in the Global Political Economy and co-editor (with Andreas Bieler) of
Images of Gramsci: Connections and Contentions in Political Theory and International Relations. He has also published in various journals, including
Bulletin of Latin American Research,
Third World Quarterly,
Millennium: Journal of International Studies,
Review of International Political Economy, and
New Political Economy.