Title: Two hegemonies: Britain 1846-1914 and the United States 1941-2001
Abstract: Introduction - The Pax Britannica and hegemony: precedent, antecedent or just another history?, Patrick Karl O'Brien. The rise and decline of Britain: Mercantilism, war and the rise of British power, Francois Crouzet Free-trade cosmopolitanism in Britain, 1846-1914, Anthony Howe Wealth, power and empire - the protectionist movement in Britain, 1880-1914, Peter J. Cain British retardation, 1900-1980, Sidney Pollard Hegemony and decline - Britain and the United States, Andrew Gamble British economic decline, 1900-1980, Correlli Barnett The decline of Great Britain - reality or optical distortion?, Wolfgang J. Mommsen. The origins and exercise of hegemony: The rise of Robert Gilpin The nature of US economic leadership - a historical and comparative view, Angus Maddison The historical vicissitudes of US productivity leadership - deferred catch-up, the waning of exceptionalism, and convergence, Moses Abramovitz and Paul A. David Reflections on hegemony in the post-war era, David P. Calleo Hegemony theory, unilateral trade liberalisation and the 1996 US Farm Bill, Geoffrey Allen Pigman The American Century as hegemonic cycle, Peter J. Taylor. Concepts and theories of hegemony: Two hegemonies or one? - A historical-sociological critique of hegemonic stability theory, John M. Hobson Anglo-American cultural hegemony - from the mid-19th to the late 20th centuries, Christopher Coker National size and international power - a demographic perspective on hegemony, S. Ryan Johansson Three hegemonies, Immanuel Wallerstein.
Publication Year: 2002
Publication Date: 2002-01-01
Language: en
Type: book
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Cited By Count: 115
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