Fr. 29.50

Is Globalization Over?

English · Paperback / Softback

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Description

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Looming trade wars and rising nationalism have stirred troubling memories of the 1930s. Will history repeat itself? Do we face the chaotic breakdown of the global economic system in the face of stagnation, protectionism and political tumult?
Jeremy Green argues that, although we face grave problems, globalization is not about to end. Setting today's challenges within a longer historical context, he demonstrates that the global economy is more interconnected than ever before and the costs of undoing it high enough to make a complete breakdown unlikely. Popular analogies between the 1930s and today are misleading. But the governing liberal ideology of globalisation is changing. It is mutating into a hard-edged nationalism that defends free markets while reasserting sovereignty and strengthening borders. This 'national liberalism' threatens a much more dangerous disintegration, fuelled by inequality and ecological crisis, unless we radically rethink the international status quo.
This brilliantly original account of the discontents of globalization is a must-read both for concerned citizens and students of global political economy.

List of contents

Contents
 
Chapter One
The crisis of globalization
 
Chapter Two
Globalization's four liberalisms
 
Chapter Three
Why we are not in the 1930s
 
Chapter Four
Neoliberalism unravelling
 
Chapter Five
Planning of the Anthropocene
 
Chapter Six
Global futures

About the author










Jeremy Green is Lecturer in International Political Economy and a Fellow of Jesus College, Cambridge

Summary

Looming trade wars and rising nationalism have stirred troubling memories of the 1930s. Will history repeat itself? Do we face the chaotic breakdown of the global economic system in the face of stagnation, protectionism and political tumult?
Jeremy Green argues that, although we face grave problems, globalization is not about to end. Setting today's challenges within a longer historical context, he demonstrates that the global economy is more interconnected than ever before and the costs of undoing it high enough to make a complete breakdown unlikely. Popular analogies between the 1930s and today are misleading. But the governing liberal ideology of globalisation is changing. It is mutating into a hard-edged nationalism that defends free markets while reasserting sovereignty and strengthening borders. This 'national liberalism' threatens a much more dangerous disintegration, fuelled by inequality and ecological crisis, unless we radically rethink the international status quo.
This brilliantly original account of the discontents of globalization is a must-read both for concerned citizens and students of global political economy.

Product details

Authors Jeremy Green, Green Jeremy
Publisher Polity Press
 
Languages English
Product format Paperback / Softback
Released 31.10.2019
 
EAN 9781509535453
ISBN 978-1-5095-3545-3
No. of pages 154
Dimensions 139 mm x 216 mm x 14 mm
Subjects Social sciences, law, business > Business > Economics

Globalisierung, Weltpolitik, Politikwissenschaft, Volkswirtschaftslehre, Political Science, Politische Ökonomie, Economics, Ökonomie der Globalisierung, Economics of Globalization, Global politics, Political Economics

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