Depictions of globalization commonly recite a story of a market unleashed, bringing Big Macs and iPhones to all corners of the world. Human society appears as a passive observer to a busy revolution of an invisible global market, paradoxically unfolding by its own energy. Sometimes, this market is thought to be unleashed by politicians working on the surface of an autonomous state. This book rejects both perspectives and provides an analytically rich alternative to conventional approaches to globalization. By the 1980s, an enduring corporate coalition advanced in nearly synonymous terms free trade, tax cuts, and deregulation. Highly networked corporate leaders and state officials worked in concert to produce the trade policy framework for neoliberal globalization. Marshalling original network data and a historical narrative, this book shows that the globalizing corporate titans of the late 1960s aligned with economic conservatives to set into motion this vision of a global free market.
See more
Current price
€98.99
Original price
€109.99
Save 10%
Delivery/Collection within 10-20 working days
Product Details
Weight: 590g
Dimensions: 160 x 235mm
Publication Date: 26 Sep 2016
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Publication City/Country: United Kingdom
Language: English
ISBN13: 9781107133969
About Derek Y. DarvesMichael C. Dreiling
Michael Dreiling is a Professor of Sociology at the University of Oregon specializing in political and environmental sociology. He is the author of two books and numerous research articles and is currently working on a comparative study of energy industry networks. Awarded Distinguished University Teaching in 2009 the Martin Luther King Jr Distinguished Service Award in 2010 and numerous leadership awards in 2015 Professor Dreiling is also active in the nonprofit world to promote nonviolence environmental care and an economy that is fair for all. A Bold Peace - a feature documentary film coproduced with Matthew Eddy - depicts that vision of a better world. Derek Darves holds a PhD in sociology from the University of Oregon where he focused on organizational theory quantitative methods religion and power structure research. Currently he works as a research manager and statistical analyst for a pension fund in New York City. An ordained Episcopal Priest he has contributed to several empirical reports on trends within the Episcopal Church and serves part-time at a variety of churches in the dioceses of Newark and New York.