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Showing 1 - 4 of 4 matches in All Departments
This book examines the gendered structures of global financial markets. It maps out crucial economic, cultural and socio-historical processes which excluded women from (formal) financial activities in Britain and then on a global scale. The author argues that, with the contemporary deepening of financial markets, there has been a resultant shift as women are targeted world-wide as an emerging market for credit and finance, which has crucial implications for increased levels of insecurity and risk.
When the United States and Britain invaded Iraq in 2003 it seemed
as if they also tore up the fabric of global governance of the
world economy. But this governance was already contested and the
world economy, the contributors argue, is in crisis. The chapters
in this collection address the question of whether and how the
"imperial turn" taken by the US and Britain has affected the
"governance" structures of the global political economy in the
areas of world economy, property relations, corporate social
responsibility, migration, and security.
This book explores the gendered nature of the historical emergence of modern finance markets and their expansion to a now global scale. It analyses the ways in which women were and still are marginalized in terms of financial activity and associated structures of power which play a critical role in shaping the contemporary global political economy.
When the United States and Britain invaded Iraq in 2003 it seemed as if they also tore up the fabric of global governance of the world economy. But this governance was already contested and the world economy, the contributors argue, is in crisis. The chapters in this collection address the question of whether and how the 'imperial turn' taken by the US and Britain has affected the 'governance' structures of the global political economy in the areas of world economy, property relations, corporate social responsibility, migration, and security.
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