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Showing 1 - 5 of 5 matches in All Departments
This is a study in the political economy of the multinational enterprise. It looks at the internationalization in the 1980s of the 12 leading French and German owned multinational enterprises (MNEs) in chemicals and electronics, who form part of a "European Challenge" in international competition in technology. The book examines how and why the internationalization of these MNEs has interacted with their "embeddedness" in the domestic structures of their home countries (France and Germany) particularly in terms of their power relationships with home governments and financial institutions. The primary themes are: the MNE's roles as political actors; domestic government policy vis-a-vis the MNE's; MNE financial relationship with banks in France and Germany; and MNE political activity at the level of the European Union, especially evident in technology policy.
This book makes an innovative link between classical liberalism and
questions of international economic order. The author begins with
an outline of classical liberalism as applied to domestic economic
order. He then surveys the classical liberal tradition from the
Scottish Enlightenment to modern thinkers like Knight, Hayekn and
Viner. Finally, he brings together the insights of thinkers in this
tradition to provide a synthetic overview of classical liberalism
and international economic order.
This timely book brings fresh analysis to the important issue of trade policy reform in emerging markets. The subject matter and its significance are comprehensively introduced with a review of developing country liberalization since the 1980s providing an analytical framework for the seven country case studies that follow. The case studies (Australia, Brazil, Chile, India, Malaysia, New Zealand, and South Africa) cover a wide variety of political, historical and economic issues, but all make clear the important role that crisis, or the threat of it, plays in meaningful trade policy reform. This is of particular relevance in the current global financial crisis. These studies, together with the conclusions which are drawn from them, show how important the trade liberalization agenda remains in the 21st century. Written by a combination of both experts and practitioners, this highly topical book will make productive reading for policy makers concerned with trade policy in developed and developing countries, as well as scholars working in trade policy. Postgraduate students studying international business, international relations, economics, politics, and international law should not be without this book.
Return to Sri Lanka is the story of a twenty-first-century reconciliation between Sally, now an academic and political adviser, and the land of his birth. A travel memoir with deep political concerns, Return to Sri Lanka is a book full of spellbinding beauty and moving insight, from a writer who is a native, a tourist, both and neither.
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