The Global 1989: Continuity and Change in World Politics

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1989 signifies the collapse of Soviet communism and the end of the Cold War, a moment generally recognised as a triumph for liberal democracy and when capitalism became global. The Global 1989 challenges these ideas. An international group of prominent scholars investigate the mixed, paradoxical and even contradictory outcomes engendered by these events, unravelling the intricacies of this important moment in world  Read more...

Author(s): George Lawson, Chris Armbruster, Michael Cox
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Year: 2010

Language: English
Pages: xx+318

Machine generated contents note: Introduction: the 'what', 'when' and 'where' of the global 1989 George Lawson
Part I. What and When: 1. Back to the future of nineteenth-century western international thought? John M. Hobson
2. The return of primitive accumulation Saskia Sassen
3. What is left after 1989? William Outhwaite
Part II. Where: 4. Transatlantic relations in the shadow of the Cold War Michael Cox
5. Third world socialism: 1989 and after Fred Halliday
6. Towards a global Europe? Laure Delcour
7. Restoration and convergence: Russia and China since 1989 Aviezer Tucker
8. One world, many Cold Wars: 1989 in the Middle East Richard Saull
Part III. Continuity and Change: 9. One bright moment in an age of war, genocide and terror? On the revolutions of 1989 Chris Armbruster
10. A dangerous utopia: the military revolution from the Cold War to the war on terror Marc DeVore
11. From Berlin to Baghdad: learning the wrong lessons from the collapse of communism Barbara J. Falk
Conclusion: was there a global 1989? Arne Westad