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Producing globalisation

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Producing globalisation attempts to scrutinise the nature of the interplay between globalisation and national institutional settings. Rather than taking globalisation as a given, this book explores...
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  • 07 January 2010
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How can we study globalisation in a way that transcends the material/ideational rift? How has globalisation resonated and/or dominated in different national contexts? What role has been played by national political economies and domestic institutions in this process?

Producing globalisation attempts to scrutinise the nature of the interplay between globalisation and national institutional settings. Rather than taking globalisation as a given, this book explores how concrete political actors produced the phenomenon of globalisation. Such an approach aims to bring human agency and its importance to the forefront of theory and practice in world politics and economics. The analysis is based on two case-studies, Greece and Ireland. By examining and comparing the discourses, policies and strategies of key, national institutional actors in these two countries, Producing globalisation offers new insights into the emergence of globalisation as a hegemonic discourse, as well as into the theory of hegemonic discourse itself. Thus the author invites us to think differently both about the nature of globalisation and the nature of the hegemonic within international political economy.

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Price: £85.00
Pages: 208
Publisher: Manchester University Press
Imprint: Manchester University Press
Publication Date: 07 January 2010
ISBN: 9780719078446
Format: Hardcover
BISACs:

POLITICAL SCIENCE / Globalization, Comparative politics, Globalization

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Andreas Antoniades is Director of the Centre for Global Political Economy and Lecturer in the Department of International Relations at the University of Sussex

Introduction
Part I: Theory and agents
1. Hegemonic discourse communication: theory and methodology
2. Greece and Ireland as social agents in the 1990s

Part II: Institutional reproduction and social transformation: the hegemonic discourse of globalisation in action, 1995-2001
3. The globalisation discourse in Greece
4 . The globalisation discourse in Ireland

Part III: Conclusions
5. Different facets of globalisation discourse
6. Explaining facets of the hegemonic: political economy, domestic institutions and beyond
Epilogue
Bibliography