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Real World Globalization (23rd edition)

Real World Globalization (23rd edition)

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Edited by Elizabeth T. Henderson, Jawied Nawabi, Abhilasha Srivastava, and the Dollars & Sense collective


Real World Globalization
 is an essential guide to the changing trends in global trade, investment, labor relations, and economic development. Its well-researched, clearly written articles are drawn from the pages of Dollars & Sense, the leading magazine of popular economics. They provide highly accessible analysis of global corporations, international institutions and “free trade” agreements, globalization and conditions of labor, international debt, environmental and resource issues, and alternatives to dominant policies and institutions.

This 23rd edition is thoroughly revised and updated, with new articles on climate change, labor struggles, and the global economy.

Its distinguished list of contributors includes James M. Cypher, Gerald Epstein, Jayati Ghosh, Arthur MacEwan, John Miller, Thomas Palley, Robert Pollin, Vijay Prashad, and many others.

Praise for Real World Globalization:

“As textbooks become more conservative and less topical, I find that Dollars & Sense readers are more useful than ever in my undergraduate classes. They are jargon-free, up-to-date, and inexpensive, as well as consistently and thoughtfully progressive. I recommend them highly.” —ROBIN HAHNEL, American University

“The articles provide students with access to current economic issues, along with a progressive framework. The writing is always good. Students always find them to-the-point, and learn a lot from them.” —BILL GANLEY, State University of New York–Buffalo

“Real World Globalization is an indispensable tool for understanding the social impacts of the new global economy, both domestically and internationally, and is written in a language and style that’s accessible yet without compromise of rigor or principle.” —GERALD SUSSMAN, Portland State University

TABLE OF CONTENTS:

  • CHAPTER 1—CRITICAL PERSPECTIVES ON GLOBALIZATION
    • 1.1 The Global Economy: Background for Today
      Arthur MacEwan
    • 1.2 Neoliberalism as Neocolonialism
      Jayati Ghosh
    • 1.3 The Pandemic and the Global Economy
      Jayati Ghosh
    • 1.4 Inequality in the World
      Arthur MacEwan
    • 1.5 Globalization in Crisis
      John Miller

  • CHAPTER 2—INHERENT CRISES OF CAPITALISM
    • 2.1 The “Emerging Economies” Today
      An Interview with Jayati Ghosh
    • 2.2 “Secular Stagnation” Continues
      John Miller
    • 2.3 German Wage Repression
      John Miller
    • 2.4 “Everything Is Connected to Everything Else”
      Arthur MacEwan
    • 2.5 Covid-19 and Catastrophe Capitalism
      John Bellamy Foster and Intan Suwandi, as edited and abridged by the Dollars & Sense Collective
    • 2.6 Unnatural Disaster
      Débora Nunes

  • CHAPTER 3—CORPORATE POWER AND THE GLOBAL ECONOMY
    • 3.1 Control the Vampire Companies
      Jayati Ghosh
    • 3.2 Monopoly Everywhere
      Armağan Gezici
    • 3.3 If Corporations Are People, What Kind of People Are They?
      Geoff Schneider
    • 3.4 Ensuring Fairer International Corporate Taxation
      Anis Chowdhury and Jomo Kwame Sundaram
    • 3.5 Multinationals and Oil Companies Are Imposing Their Greed on the People of Mozambique
      Vijay Prashad

  • CHAPTER 4—INTERNATIONAL TRADE AND INVESTMENT
    • 4.1 The Gospel of Free Trade
      Arthur MacEwan
    • 4.2 Weaponizing Free Trade Agreements
      Anis Chowdhury and Jomo Kwame Sundaram
    • 4.3 Comparative Advantage
      Ramaa Vasudevan
    • 4.4 The United States Has Given Protectionism a Bad Name
      William G. Moseley
    • 4.5 Local, or Far Away?
      Arthur MacEwan

  • CHAPTER 5—INTERNATIONAL FINANCE
    • 5.1 SWIFT, the U.S. Dollar, and the Global Political Economy of Trade
      Bill Barclay
    • 5.2 Inflation Targeting and Neoliberalism
      An Interview with Gerald Epstein
    • 5.3 Credit Squeeze
      Justin Villamil
    • 5.4 Cryptocurrency Will Not Liberate Us
      Hadas Thier
    • 5.5 Is the World Cup Worth It?
      Saurav Sarkar

  • CHAPTER 6—INTERNATIONAL INSTITUTIONS
    • 6.1 The International Monetary Fund and World Bank
      The Dollars & Sense Collective
    • 6.2 The World Trade Organization
      The Dollars & Sense Collective
    • 6.3 The European Union and the Eurozone
      The Dollars & Sense Collective
    • 6.4 Schizophrenia at the International Monetary Fund
      Jayati Ghosh

  • CHAPTER 7—LABOR IN THE GLOBAL ECONOMY
    • 7.1 The Globalization Clock
      Thomas Palley
    • 7.2 Globalization and the End of the Labor Aristocracy
      Jayati Ghosh
    • 7.3 Transnational Capital and Transnational Labor
      An Interview with William K. Tabb
    • 7.4 Outsized Offshore Outsourcing
      John Miller
    • 7.5 Taylor's Digital Stopwatch
      Robert Ovetz
    • 7.6 No Friendship in Trade
      Sasha Breger Bush
    • 7.7 Brewing Inequality
      Saurav Sarkar
    • 7.8 Canadians Catch Strike Fever Too
      Barry Eidlin

  • CHAPTER 8—MIGRATION
    • 8.1 Walled Off From Reality
      John Miller
    • 8.2 “Migration Is a Form of Fighting Back”
      David Bacon
    • 8.3 Europe’s Refugee “Crisis”
      Jayati Ghosh
    • 8.4 Climate Change and the Immigration Debate
      Lyuba Zarsky
    • 8.5 Going Beyond Immigration Policy
      Timothy A. Wise
    • 8.6 As Honduras Collapses, Its People Are Forced to Flee
      Laura Carlsen
    • 8.7 Farmworkers Need Families, Not Deportation and Exploitation
      David Bacon and Anuradha Mittal

  • CHAPTER 9—CHALLENGES IN ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
    • 9.1 Measuring Economic Development: The “Human Development” Approach
      Alejandro Reuss
    • 9.2 Famine Myths
      William G. Moseley
    • 9.3 Land Reform: A Precondition for Sustainable Economic Development
      Jawied Nawabi
    • 9.4 Capital Flight from Africa: What Is to Be Done?
      James K. Boyce
    • 9.5 Another False Start in Africa with Green Revolution Myths
      Timothy A. Wise and Jomo Kwame Sundaram
    • 9.6 The Potential of Tax Reform in Latin America
      C.P. Chandrasekhar and Jayati Ghosh

  • CHAPTER 10—THE STATE, DEVELOPMENT, AND GLOBALIZATION
    • 10.1 What Ever Happened to Development?
      Jawied Nawabi
    • 10.2 Latin America Needs an Efficient Developmentist State
      An Interview with Matías Vernengo
    • 10.3 Confronting Neoliberalism at Last: Power vs. Policy in Gabriel Boric's Chile
      James M. Cypher
    • 10.4 Dangerous Inflection Point: Is China’s Growth Model Exhausted?
      Bill Barclay

  • CHAPTER 11—THE POLITICAL ECONOMY OF EMPIRE
    • 11.1 Colonialism, “Underdevelopment,” and the International Division of Labor
      Alejandro Reuss
    • 11.2 Does U.S. Prosperity Depend on Exploitation?
      Arthur MacEwan
    • 11.3 Puerto Rico’s Perfect Storm: Colonialization, Privatization, and Trump
      Arthur MacEwan
    • 11.4 “Tied” Foreign Aid
      Arthur MacEwan
    • 11.5 Haiti’s Fault Lines
      Marie Kennedy and Chris Tilly

  • CHAPTER 12—NATURAL RESOURCES AND THE ENVIRONMENT
    • 12.1 Can We Afford a Stable Climate?
      Frank Ackerman
    • 12.2 Solving the Climate Crisis with Nuclear Energy Won't Work
      Robert Pollin
    • 12.3 Is Economic Growth Ecologically Sustainable?
      Arthur MacEwan
    • 12.4 The Highway to Climate Hell
      John Miller
    • 12.5 Imperialism and Natural Resources
      Prabhat Patnaik
    • 12.6 Farmers Halt a Land-Grab in Mozambique
      Timothy A. Wise

  • CHAPTER 13—RESISTANCE AND ALTERNATIVES
    • 13.1 Equality, Solidarity, Sustainability
      An Interview with Jayati Ghosh
    • 13.2 After Horror, Change?
      John Miller
    • 13.3 The Buenaventura Civic Strike
      Patricia M. Rodriguez
    • 13.4 The Fight Against Mining Companies Goes Global
      Robin Broad and John Cavanagh
    • 13.5 A Battle over Copper in Colombia
      Austin Landis
    • 13.6 One Year After the New York Nurses’ Strike, What Comes Next?
      Nick French

Edition: 23rd
Date of publication: October 2024
ISBN: 978-1-939402-95-0
Pages: 394
Price: $55.00

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