Implicating Empire
Over the past several years, while visible protests against the World Bank and the I.M.F. made front-page news, there has been a growing field of scholarship that looks at the role of globalization for national and international state identities. The first truism of globalization -- that we live in an increasingly interconnected world, one in which it is impossible to separate the fate of one nation from that of the others -- was dramatically illustrated on September 11, 2001, when the seemingly distant effects of a civil war in Afghanistan so murderously interrupted life in the United States. Implicating Empire is the first book to look at four crucial dimensions of globalization: first, its role vis-a-vis the current war; second, the impact of globalization on domestic U.S. policy; third, how globalization will necessarily alter national security, both in its definition as well as how it is pursued, and, finally, the future of globalization. Including original essays by Stanley Aronowitz, Ahmed Rashid, Tariq Ali, Manning Marable, Michael Hardt, and Ellen Willis, among others, Implicating Empire will set the agenda for how globalization is debated -- and resisted -- in the future.
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Implicating Empire
Over the past several years, while visible protests against the World Bank and the I.M.F. made front-page news, there has been a growing field of scholarship that looks at the role of globalization for national and international state identities. The first truism of globalization -- that we live in an increasingly interconnected world, one in which it is impossible to separate the fate of one nation from that of the others -- was dramatically illustrated on September 11, 2001, when the seemingly distant effects of a civil war in Afghanistan so murderously interrupted life in the United States. Implicating Empire is the first book to look at four crucial dimensions of globalization: first, its role vis-a-vis the current war; second, the impact of globalization on domestic U.S. policy; third, how globalization will necessarily alter national security, both in its definition as well as how it is pursued, and, finally, the future of globalization. Including original essays by Stanley Aronowitz, Ahmed Rashid, Tariq Ali, Manning Marable, Michael Hardt, and Ellen Willis, among others, Implicating Empire will set the agenda for how globalization is debated -- and resisted -- in the future.
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Implicating Empire

Implicating Empire

Implicating Empire

Implicating Empire

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Overview

Over the past several years, while visible protests against the World Bank and the I.M.F. made front-page news, there has been a growing field of scholarship that looks at the role of globalization for national and international state identities. The first truism of globalization -- that we live in an increasingly interconnected world, one in which it is impossible to separate the fate of one nation from that of the others -- was dramatically illustrated on September 11, 2001, when the seemingly distant effects of a civil war in Afghanistan so murderously interrupted life in the United States. Implicating Empire is the first book to look at four crucial dimensions of globalization: first, its role vis-a-vis the current war; second, the impact of globalization on domestic U.S. policy; third, how globalization will necessarily alter national security, both in its definition as well as how it is pursued, and, finally, the future of globalization. Including original essays by Stanley Aronowitz, Ahmed Rashid, Tariq Ali, Manning Marable, Michael Hardt, and Ellen Willis, among others, Implicating Empire will set the agenda for how globalization is debated -- and resisted -- in the future.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780786749928
Publisher: Basic Books
Publication date: 07/21/2009
Sold by: Hachette Digital, Inc.
Format: eBook
Pages: 216
File size: 888 KB

About the Author

Stanley Aronowitz is Distinguished Professor of Sociology at the Graduate Center, City University of New York.

Heather Gautney is a doctoral student at the Graduate Center. Both live in New York City.

Table of Contents

Preface and Acknowledgmentsix
The Debate About Globalization: An Introductionxi
Part ITerrorism and War
19/11: Racism in a Time of Terror3
2The Wen Ho Lee Affair: Between Race and National Security15
3Making Us Less Free: War on Terrorism or War on Liberty?31
4Fear, American Style: Civil Liberty After 9/1147
5The Globalization of Violence in the 21st Century: Israel, Palestine, and the War on Terror65
6Beyond Good and Evil: A Contribution to the Analysis of the War Against Terrorism83
7The Mass Psychology of Terrorism95
Part IIGlobalization, the State, and the Political Economy
8Globalization and Democracy109
9Over, Under, Sideways, Down: Globalization, Spatial Metaphors, and the Question of State Power123
10The Anti-Capitalist Movement After Genoa and New York133
11Race to the Bottom?151
12Time, Poverty, and Global Democracy159
13Global Capital and Its Opponents179
Part IIIThe Culture of Globalization and Resistance
14Globalization Today199
15Geography Financialized211
16Globalization, Trade Liberalization, and the Higher Education Industry229
17Vagabond Capitalism and the Necessity of Social Reproduction255
18On the Global Uses of September 11 and Its Urban Impact271
19Globalization and the Need for an Urban Environmentalism287
20Argentina and the End of the First World Dream309
21The Globalization Movement and the New New Left325
About the Authors339
Index343
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