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Showing 1 - 18 of 18 matches in All Departments
Informed by world-systems analysis, this book examines the shifting patterns of accommodation and resistance to the offshore world, with a particular focus on Mauritius as a critical but underappreciated offshore node mediating foreign investment into India and Africa. Drawing on a large pool of financial data and elite interviews, the authors present the first detailed comparative study of the Mauritius–India and Mauritius–Africa offshore relationships. These relationships serve as indicative test cases of the contemporary global tax reform agenda and its promise to rein in offshore finance. Whereas India’s economic power and multilateral track record have enabled it to actively shape this agenda and implement it in a robust manner, most African countries have found themselves either unable to meet its stringent criteria or unwilling to do so out of fear that it might discourage investment. Its impact on offshore financial centers has likewise been limited. A few of the least sophisticated ones appear to have fallen by the wayside, but the rest have either remained largely unaffected, or, like Mauritius, succeeded in consolidating their operations and surviving the current round of regulatory headwinds. The findings suggest that the contemporary global tax reform agenda has thus far not only failed to make good on its promise but also actually reinforced numerous existing power hierarchies. The Uneven Offshore World is written in an accessible style and aimed at readers without specialized knowledge of tax issues.
Informed by world-systems analysis, this book examines the shifting patterns of accommodation and resistance to the offshore world, with a particular focus on Mauritius as a critical but underappreciated offshore node mediating foreign investment into India and Africa. Drawing on a large pool of financial data and elite interviews, the authors present the first detailed comparative study of the Mauritius-India and Mauritius-Africa offshore relationships. These relationships serve as indicative test cases of the contemporary global tax reform agenda and its promise to rein in offshore finance. Whereas India's economic power and multilateral track record have enabled it to actively shape this agenda and implement it in a robust manner, most African countries have found themselves either unable to meet its stringent criteria or unwilling to do so out of fear that it might discourage investment. Its impact on offshore financial centers has likewise been limited. A few of the least sophisticated ones appear to have fallen by the wayside, but the rest have either remained largely unaffected, or, like Mauritius, succeeded in consolidating their operations and surviving the current round of regulatory headwinds. The findings suggest that the contemporary global tax reform agenda has thus far not only failed to make good on its promise but also actually reinforced numerous existing power hierarchies. The Uneven Offshore World is written in an accessible style and aimed at readers without specialized knowledge of tax issues.
In a world of continuing financial volatility, this book critically evaluates the oft-cited claim that US firms and the US government attempt to open emerging markets in economic distress and acquire valuable industrial and financial assets. Focusing particularly on Korea and Thailand, the author examines the degree of market opening, the roles US actors played in this process and the level of foreign firm activity in the years after the Asian crisis. Justin Robertson finds surprisingly little coherence between the strategies of US firms and US policy-makers. At the same time, the book downplays European investments, concluding instead that the decade since the Asian crisis has reaffirmed strengths of US capital, particularly in some of the most important sectors of the global economy. Investment banking, private equity and subcontracting are significant new features of US-Asia economic relations. Providing a sophisticated understanding of US interests in Asia, especially in terms of the politics of finance capital, and including a wealth of empirical data on the US and Asian political economies, this book will be invaluable for students and scholars of international political economy and Asian economics and politics.
This volume explores the foreign policy environment facing
developing nations and their particular foreign policy-making
structures and processes. By defining foreign policy broadly to
incorporate the activities of a range of state actors and non-state
actors, the book broadens the range of analytical frameworks for
studying foreign policy-making in developing nations. Thus, the
actions of small groups of elites, international institutions and
transnational networks are seen to be part of foreign
policy-making, as well as the traditional operations of foreign
ministries.
In a world of continuing financial volatility, this book critically evaluates the oft-cited claim that US firms and the US government attempt to open emerging markets in economic distress and acquire valuable industrial and financial assets. Focusing particularly on Korea and Thailand, the author examines the degree of market opening, the roles US actors played in this process and the level of foreign firm activity in the years after the Asian crisis. Justin Robertson finds surprisingly little coherence between the strategies of US firms and US policy-makers. At the same time, the book downplays European investments, concluding instead that the decade since the Asian crisis has reaffirmed strengths of US capital, particularly in some of the most important sectors of the global economy. Investment banking, private equity and subcontracting are significant new features of US-Asia economic relations. Providing a sophisticated understanding of US interests in Asia, especially in terms of the politics of finance capital, and including a wealth of empirical data on the US and Asian political economies, this book will be invaluable for students and scholars of international political economy and Asian economics and politics.
This volume explores the foreign policy environment facing
developing nations and their particular foreign policy-making
structures and processes. By defining foreign policy broadly to
incorporate the activities of a range of state actors and non-state
actors, the book broadens the range of analytical frameworks for
studying foreign policy-making in developing nations. Thus, the
actions of small groups of elites, international institutions and
transnational networks are seen to be part of foreign
policy-making, as well as the traditional operations of foreign
ministries.
'A writer of fierce and vivid imagination. The Tangle, like Holdstock's classic Mythago Wood and Catlin's The Voorh, taps the deep resonances of the wild wood in the English soul, revering even the stones as living minds, possessed of souls and ancient memories. Visceral stuff from this promising new star of dark fantasy' Michael Moorcock Justin Robertson's debut novel is a trans- dimensional trip into the mysterious knot of nature; a journey into the 'brilliant darkness' where the timeless divine spirit of the 'Tangle' weaves its spell and all mankind's hubris is rendered insignificant by the radically non-human force of phantom ecology. Salvation, revelation and a terrible reckoning dwell in the ancient roots ... A time travelling account of what occurs when unknowable frontiers are breached and humanity finds itself, once again, lost in the woods, THE TANGLE invites us into a grotesque world of eco-horror, echoing with the spirit of writers such as Saki, Ballard, M R James, Ursula Le Guin, Brian Catling and Thomas Ligotti.
Four witches get familiar with their new home on Mount Olympus while the Goddess of magic, Hecate, sends them on a dangerous quest to find the sun god, Apollo, before everything freezes over.
Over a long period of time...Four warrior kings were chosen by the Gods of Olympus. Their quest was to enter the realm of the Underworld, destroy it, and seal off the only way out. Panic settles in when the Titans escape, the Gods lose their God-hood, and a threat comes from Asgard. Then it becomes an all out battle between the Norse Gods and the Olympian Gods! Zeus vs Odin! Loki vs Hades! Zeus vs Thor! Poseidon vs Loki! Who will destroy all and rule both Asgard and Olympus!? Find out when you read this action packed adventure! This book is the final chapter of all my previous books. It is where all the characters come together in one story.
Two astronomers, James and Kate discover a new planet, which turns out to be an atmosphere of a whole new universe; Olympus. Created by the Gods of Olympus, it contains four planets and a sun, which is actually Apollo. The Skratches are people that live on Mechta, one of the planets in Olympus. Find out more about the Skratches when you take a wild ride on this epic journey around this universe. Learn about new animals that James and Kate discover, and some weird monsters that live on the planets.
A teenager, his family, and friends fight horrifying beings and travel across the U.S. to get to safety. But the teenager's sister is held captive in a strange dark world. The boy must find a certain tool made by Hades in order to enter the world and save his sister.
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