1st Edition

Restructuring Hegemony in the Global Political Economy The Rise of Transnational Neo-Liberalism in the 1980s

Edited By Henk W Overbeek Copyright 1993

    Since the late 1970s, the spread of Neo-liberalism and the failure of socialist economies and systems in Eastern Europe have resulted in a practically unchallenged hegemony of international capital across the globe. Neo-liberalism is now the dominant ideology, legitimizing the privatisation of state-controlled economies and the substitution of the market for social provision and basic welfare.
    In Restructuring Hegemony in the Global Political Economy the authors argue that this process began with the defeat of the New International Economic Order, the Euro-Communist ascendency in Western Europe, the overthrow of the Allende government in Chile, and culminated in the collapse of practical socialism. They assert that the victory of neo-liberalism is now so complete that its radical features have come to be accepted as the new normality.

    List of figures, List of tables, Preface Henk Overbeek, Notes on contributors, 1 RESTRUCTURING CAPITAL AND RESTRUCTURING HEGEMONY: NEO-LIBERALISM AND THE UNMAKING OF THE POST-WAR ORDER, 2 THE SOVEREIGNTY OF CAPITAL IMPAIRED: SOCIAL FORCES AND CODES OF CONDUCT FOR MULTINATIONAL CORPORATIONS, 3 CHILE: THE LABORATORY EXPERIMENT OF INTERNATIONAL NEO-LIBERALISM, 4 NEO-LIBERALISM AND THE DISMANTLING OF CORPORATISM IN AUSTRALIA, 5 ATLANTICISM AND EUROPEANISM IN BRITISH FOREIGN POLICY, 6 TRANSNATIONALISM IN SPAIN: THE PARADOXES OF SOCIALIST RULE IN THE 1980s, 7 NEO-LIBERALISM IN GERMANY? THE ‘WENDE’ IN PERSPECTIVE, 8 THE NEO-LIBERAL EXPERIMENT AND THE DECLINE OF THE BELGIAN BOURGEOISIE, 9 CANADA IN THE CRISIS: TRANSFORMATIONS IN CAPITAL STRUCTURE AND POLITICAL STRATEGY, 10 NEO-LIBERALISM AND THE SHIFT TOWARDS A US-CENTRED TRANSNATIONAL HEGEMONY, Index

    Biography

    Henk Overbeek is Senior Lecturer in International Relations at the University of Amsterdam. He has specialized in the international dimensions of British politics.