
Sovereignty Through Interdependence
Harry Gelber(Author)
Kluwer Law International (Publisher)
1st Edition
Published on 1. April 1997
Book
Hardback
368 pages
978-90-411-0946-0 (ISBN)
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Description
Is it true that the forces of technology and interdependence have undermined the sovereignty of modern states? This book argues powerfully that the opposite is true: that over the past quarter century the major industrial states - the US, Britain, France, Germany and Japan - have mostly used these forces, often in novel ways, to pursue national purposes. The nation-state framework has, over that period, remained the basis of legitimate political authority and law. There has been a huge increase in the scope, incidence and detail of state regulation to manage, among other things, both the domestic economy and the effects of transnational flows. International management almost invariably depends upon state consent. The power of the state has never, anywhere, been absolute and its methods of management have always been changeable. But there is no evidence that its managerial effectiveness has, overall, been less in 1995 than in 1975 or 1965.
This book therefore takes strong issue with much of the literature on interdependence and international organisation which has appeared in recent times. It is especially useful for those trying to understand the larger framework within which business must operate or the sources of authority for anyone's plan to manage problems of financial or population flows, of transnational conservation problems or of trade. The book will also be of particular use in graduate and senior undergraduate courses in international relations or organisation.
This book therefore takes strong issue with much of the literature on interdependence and international organisation which has appeared in recent times. It is especially useful for those trying to understand the larger framework within which business must operate or the sources of authority for anyone's plan to manage problems of financial or population flows, of transnational conservation problems or of trade. The book will also be of particular use in graduate and senior undergraduate courses in international relations or organisation.
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
Zuidpoolsingel
Netherlands
Target group
College/higher education
Professional and scholarly
Research
Product notice
sewn/stitched
Cloth over boards
Dimensions
Height: 236 mm
Width: 155 mm
Thickness: 25 mm
Weight
862 gr
ISBN-13
978-90-411-0946-0 (9789041109460)
Schweitzer Classification
Content
Introduction.
1. Background: The Growth of the Nation-State.
Challenges:
2. Information and Economics.
3. Politics and Strategy.
Responses:
4. Structures, Institutions and Decision-Making.
5. The State and Nationalism.
6. The State and Regulation.
7. The State and the Economy.
8. The Nation-State and the External World.
9. The EU: An Exception?
10. Conclusions.
11.
Appendix: Control by Numbers?
Index.
1. Background: The Growth of the Nation-State.
Challenges:
2. Information and Economics.
3. Politics and Strategy.
Responses:
4. Structures, Institutions and Decision-Making.
5. The State and Nationalism.
6. The State and Regulation.
7. The State and the Economy.
8. The Nation-State and the External World.
9. The EU: An Exception?
10. Conclusions.
11.
Appendix: Control by Numbers?
Index.