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Theory of the Global State : Globality as an Unfinished Revolution

Part of the Cambridge Studies in International Relations series
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This ambitious study rewrites the terms of debate about globalization.

Martin Shaw argues that the deepest meaning of globality is the growing sense of worldwide human commonality as a practical social force, arising from political struggle not technological change.

The book focuses upon two new concepts: the unfinished global-democratic revolution and the global-Western state.

Shaw shows how an internationalized, post-imperial Western state conglomerate, symbiotically linked to global institutions, is increasingly consolidated amidst worldwide democratic upheavals against authoritarian, quasi-imperial non-Western states.

This study explores the radical implications of these concepts for social, political and international theory, through a fundamental critique of modern 'national-international' social thought and dominant economistic versions of global theory.

Required reading for sociology and politics as well as international relations, Theory of the Global State offers a historical, theoretical and political framework for understanding state and society in the emerging global age.

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Product Details
Cambridge University Press
0521597307 / 9780521597302
Paperback / softback
327.1
30/11/2000
United Kingdom
English
xiii, 295p.
23 cm
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