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Showing 1 - 6 of 6 matches in All Departments
Through an analysis of the general principles of Obama's foreign policy, LaIdi shows how Obama has charted a realist course in the Middle East, in Europe, in diplomacy, and in war.
Does Europe have the means to defend its own social model in a globalized world at a time when the United States, China, India and Russia are concerned by enhancing their national sovereignties and playing power politics? Would Europe, who would never be a "super state," be able to impose norms over force? That is the main question this book addresses in a very original way.
Can Europe defend its social model in a globalized world when the US, China, India and Russia are enhancing their national sovereignties and playing power politics? This original and informative book addresses such questions and considers if Europe, although it is not a 'super state', would be able to impose norms over force.
The dynamic that currently underlies global social change is the
product of forces that are not of a single type or origin. As a
consequence, that change is experienced as a process that uproots
individuals but gives no guidance for the future, that destroys but
does not reconstruct, that prescribes action but provides no
reassurance. The radical uncertainty it engenders is an
understandable source of anxiety: the rich countries are
increasingly worried about competition from low-wage economies,
while the wretched of the earth suspect their precarious existences
will come under even greater pressure. Within each nation, the
constantly growing gap between winners and losers exacerbates these
fears. The Great Disruption is at its height.
The dynamic that currently underlies global social change is the
product of forces that are not of a single type or origin. As a
consequence, that change is experienced as a process that uproots
individuals but gives no guidance for the future, that destroys but
does not reconstruct, that prescribes action but provides no
reassurance. The radical uncertainty it engenders is an
understandable source of anxiety: the rich countries are
increasingly worried about competition from low-wage economies,
while the wretched of the earth suspect their precarious existences
will come under even greater pressure. Within each nation, the
constantly growing gap between winners and losers exacerbates these
fears. The Great Disruption is at its height.
Through an analysis of the general principles of Obama's foreign policy, LaIdi shows how Obama has charted a realist course in the Middle East, in Europe, in diplomacy, and in war.
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