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Rising Powers, Shrinking Planet:

The New Geopolitics of Energy
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1 Review
Macmillan, Mar 31, 2009 - History - 352 pages

"Klare’s superb book explains, in haunting detail, the trends that will lead us into a series of dangerous traps unless we muster the will to transform the way we use energy."—Bill McKibben

Oil recently hit $140 a barrel, and it is still climbing. Unlike the oil shocks of the 1970s, this dizzying leap is not the product of an OPEC embargo or a sudden flare-up in the Middle East. Rather, it is a harbinger of a permanent new structure of world power, one in which market forces and military strength matter far less than the scarcity of vital natural resources.

Now in paperback, Rising Powers, Shrinking Planet surveys the energy-driven dynamic that is reconfiguring the international landscape: Russia, the battered Cold War loser, is now the arrogant broker of Eurasian energy, and the United States, once the world’s superpower, must now compete with the emerging "Chindia" juggernaut for finite and diminishing resources. Forecasting a future of surprising new alliances and explosive danger, Michael T. Klare, the preeminent expert on resource geopolitics, argues that the only route to survival in our radically altered world lies through international cooperation.

  

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Review: Rising Powers, Shrinking Planet: The New Geopolitics of Energy

User Review  - Matthew - Goodreads

Frustrating and at times infuriating, especially the massive sums of financial and military "aid" to energy supplier nations that play all sides to their own benefit. Out tax $$ go to support second ... Read full review

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Contents

I
1
II
9
III
32
IV
63
V
88
VI
115
VII
146
VIII
177
IX
210
X
238
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About the author (2009)

Michael T. Klare is the author of fourteen books, including Resource Wars, Blood and Oil, Rising Powers, Shrinking Planet and The Race for What's Left. A regular contributor to Harper's, Foreign Affairs, and the Los Angeles Times, he is the defense analyst for The Nation and the director of the Five College Program in Peace and World Security Studies at Hampshire College in Amherst.