Competition in world politics : knowledge, strategies and institutions / Daniela Russ, James Stafford.
Material type:![Text](/opac-tmpl/lib/famfamfam/BK.png)
- text
- computer
- online resource
- 3839457475
- 9783839457474
- Competition, International
- Geopolitics
- International economic relations
- Power (Social sciences) -- Economic aspects
- Technology and state
- International Organizations; Technology; Trade; Nationalism; Rankings; Politics; Society; Globalization; Political Sociology; International Relations; Global History; Sociology
- SOCIAL SCIENCE / Sociology / General
- Competition, International
- Geopolitics
- International economic relations
- Power (Social sciences) -- Economic aspects
- Technology and state
- 300
- HF1414
Includes bibliographical references.
Introduction / Daniela Russ, James Stafford -- Status in early modern and modern world politics : competition or conflict? / Ramy Youssef -- Network power Europe and competition at the U.N. Human Rights Council / Anatoly Boyashov -- Social mobility in the global order : rising powers and the convertibility of capitals / Katja Freistein, Thomas Müller -- The civilizing force of national competition : U.S. nationalist reasoning in the mid-to-late nineteenth century / Johannes Nagel, Tobias Werron -- 'Free trade' and the varieties of eighteenth-century state competition / James Stafford -- The development of neoliberal measures of competitiveness / Dieter Plehwe -- Competing powers : engineers, energetic productivism, and the end of empires / Daniela Russ, Thomas Turnbull -- Diplomacy and artificial intelligence in global political competition / Didzis Kļaviņš -- Small, smart, powerful? : Small states and the competition for cybertech superiority in the digital age / Madeleine Myatt -- Between strategic autonomy and international norm-setting : the E.U.'s emergent 'cyber-sanctions' regime / Yuliya Miadzvetskaya -- Competition during Covid-19 / Heidi Tworek.
"The 'return of great power competition' between (among others) the US, China, Russia and the EU is a major topic in contemporary public debate. But why do we think of world politics in terms of 'competition'? Which information and which rules enable states and other actors in world politics to 'compete' with one another? Which competitive strategies do they pursue in the complex environment of modern world politics? This cutting-edge edited collection discusses these questions from a unique interdisciplinary perspective. It offers a fresh account of competition in world politics, looking beyond its military dimensions to questions of economics, technology, and prestige."-- Overview, DeGruyter.com.
Online resource; title from PDF (De Gruyter, viewed July 21, 2021).
Open Access EbpS
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