Routledge Advances in International Political Economy
About the Book Series
International political economy is emerging as an increasingly important subdiscipline of international relations. This cutting edge series examines the latest arguments and research in this field including:
- Liberalist, Realist and Marxist thought
- the interaction of politics and economics in the global economy
- states versus transnational corporations
In an increasingly interdependent world, this series sheds light on global trends from an international perspective.
Chinese Capitalism in a Global Era: Towards a Hybrid Capitalism
1st Edition
By Henry Wai-Chung Yeung
December 19, 2003
Chinese Capitalism in a Global Era examines the dynamic ways in which millions of ethinic Chinese in East and Southeast Asian economies organize their economic activities. It analyses how Chinese capitalism has changed under conditions of contemporary globalization and anticipates what the future ...
America's Trade Policy Towards Japan: Demanding Results
1st Edition
By John Kunkel
August 29, 2003
In a few years, the United States has gone from worrying about Japan's economic might to worrying about its meltdown. The rise and fall of America's 'results-oriented' trade policy towards Japan captures this turnaround.John Kunkel traces this Japan policy to a crisis in the institutions, laws and ...
Multilateralism and the World Trade Organisation: The Architecture and Extension of International Trade Regulation
1st Edition
By Rorden Wilkinson
February 05, 2001
This book explores the significance of the establishment of the World Trade Organisation (WTO), as well as some of the issues brought into sharper focus by the Seattle demonstrations of 1999. Located within the broader study of global governance, Multilateralism and the World Trade Organisation ...
Globalization and Social Change
1st Edition
Edited
By Johannes Dragsbaek Schmidt, Jacques Hersh
January 29, 2001
Globalization and Social Change challenges conventional thinking regarding the inevitability of globalization. Rather than seeing globalization as 'the end station of capitalism', it presents the development of this phenomenon as a disruptive and conflicting process....






