The New ImperialismPeople around the world are confused and concerned. Is it a sign of strength of or of weakness that the US has suddenly shifted from a politics of consensus to one of coercion on the world stage? What was really at stake in the war on Iraq? Was it all about oil and, if not, what else was involved? What role has a sagging economy played in pushing the US into foreign adventurism and what difference does it make that neo-conservatives rather than neo-liberals are now in power? What exactly is the relationship between US militarism abroad and domestic politics? These are the questions taken up in this compelling and original book. Closely argued but clearly written, David Harvey, a leading social theorist of his generation, builds a conceputal framework to expose the underlying forces at work behind these momentous shifts in US policies and politics. The compulsions behind the projection of US power on the world as a 'new imperialism' are here, for the first time, laid bare for all to see. 'David Harvey has written a profound, and profoundly disturbing, book. For thirty years his writings have taken aim at the complacent conviction that what exists works. Harvey is a scholarly radical. |
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accumulation by dispossession activity American Arendt Arrighi assets Biopiracy Britain British Bush administration capital accumulation capitalistic logic century China commodities competition consumerism countries crises crisis crucial debt devaluation dominance dynamics East and South-East economic effect empire empire lite entails Europe European example expanded reproduction fictitious capital finance capital flows forces foreign forms geographical geopolitical global economy hegemony imperialism imperialist infrastructures institutions interests internal investment Iran Iraq Iraqi Japan Korea labour power liberal logics of power London Marx ment Middle East military molecular processes monopoly movements mulation neo-conservative neo-liberal political power primitive accumulation processes of capital production profitable regime change region relations role Saudi Saudi Arabia shift social sort South Korea South-East Asia Soviet space spatial spatio-temporal fixes struggles sumerism surplus capital Taiwan territorial logic threat tion trade United University Press York Zed Books