Crisis of the Twenty-First Century

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Adrian Campbell
Afghan National Security Forces
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Amedeo Policante
Argentine Geographers
Athenian Empire
atlantic
austerity
automatic-update
B01=Mark Edward
B01=Matthew Johnson
B01=Russell Foster
Bojan Savic
Britain's Nuclear Weapons
Britain’s Nuclear Weapons
British Antarctic Territory
Bull's Distinction
Bull’s Distinction
Callum McCormick
Category1=Non-Fiction
Category=JP
Christopher J. Hewer
comparative analysis of modern empires
Constantinos Koliopoulos
COP=United Kingdom
crisis
Current UK Policy
David J. Keeling
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Dodds Klaus
Dominic Alessio
Eliga H. Gould
empire
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Falkland Islands
global governance theory
Imperial Actors
imperial power dynamics
international relations
international relations research
Koutsoukis Alexandros
Language_English
Las Malvinas
Malvinas Dispute
Michael A. Reynolds
NATO Force
NATO's Security
NATO’s Security
Neil Davidson
Neville Morley
Nineteenth Century Imperial Power
Organization Of American States
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political economy austerity
postcolonial studies
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Provincial Reconstruction Teams
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Ronaldo Munck
Russell Foster
Simon Philpott
softlaunch
south
South Atlantic
South Atlantic Islands
sovereignty
territorial acquisition history
Translatio Imperii
UK Overseas Territory
UN
United States
Vice Versa
Watson's Definition
Watson’s Definition
Yannis A. Stivachtis

Product details

  • ISBN 9781032926070
  • Weight: 440g
  • Dimensions: 174 x 246mm
  • Publication Date: 14 Oct 2024
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
  • Language: English
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Empire is one of the oldest forms of political organisation and has dominated societies in all parts of the world. Yet, despite the emergence of nation-states in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, and the apparent end of empire with the breakup of European colonial regimes and the Soviet Union in the twentieth century, empire remains powerful in the modern world. The EU’s accession policies, the United States’ War on Terror, China’s economic developments in Africa, among others, draw accusations of imperial agendas. Empire is no stranger to crisis but, in recent years, the effects of global austerity have forced states, both powerful and weak, to adapt, with varying degrees of success and failure. The confusions, contradictions, and contestations which emerge from imperial crisis point to a vital question – how is Austerity changing Empire and how will this shape tomorrow’s world?

This book was published as a special issue of Global Discourse.

Russell Foster is a Fellow of the Royal Geographical Society and a PhD student at Newcastle University. His work concerns the EU as a modern empire. He is the author of ‘Tabula Imperii Europae: A Cartographic Approach to the Current Debate on the European Union as Empire’, published in Geopolitics.

Matthew Johnson is a Lecturer and British Academy Postdoctoral Fellow in Politics, Philosophy and Religion at the University of Lancaster. He is interested in the evaluation of culture and the effect of forms of intervention on wellbeing. He has authored Evaluting Culture (Palgrave) and edited The Legacy of Marxism (Continuum).

Mark Edward is an independent researcher. He completed his PhD in politics at Newcastle University and is interested in popular culture and world politics, with a focus on future practices of consumerism represented in film.