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In the this collection, International Governance, Regimes, and
Globalization, the writers explore international relations and
globalization by using specific examples from Beijing and Taipei.
In December 1949, when China was politically divided the People's
Republic of China (PRC) central government was in control of most
resources, tangible and intangible. For that reason, our unit of
analysis has to be the state, meaning a government or a politically
organized body. With the rise of civil society at both national and
international levels, applying the international/global governance
theory should be closer to reality, because we have to look at both
the state and non-state-sponsored dimensions, which are more
complex and complicated. Indeed, international/global governance
could become a new school of thought and will continue to expand as
academics explore. For example, neo-liberalism primarily focuses on
market and contract. When people buy and sell something, they are
in a market. In other words, politics is the superstructure of
economics or as Karl Marx said what prevails in economy will
ultimately prevail in politics. In a sense, subscribers to this
school of thought are Marxian. However, the study of
international/global governance embraces the non-state sponsored
dimension. Hence, it is broader than that of the neo-liberalism
school of thought.
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