
Contents
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Globalization: Different This Time Around, but the Same Too Globalization: Different This Time Around, but the Same Too
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The First Globalization’s Emergence: Technology and Politics The First Globalization’s Emergence: Technology and Politics
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The Second Globalization: Multinational Corporations and Cross-Border Services The Second Globalization: Multinational Corporations and Cross-Border Services
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Capital and Globalization Capital and Globalization
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Institutions and Globalization: Rule by International Organizations? Institutions and Globalization: Rule by International Organizations?
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Globalization’s Challenges: The Commons, Geopolitics, Legitimacy Globalization’s Challenges: The Commons, Geopolitics, Legitimacy
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Geopolitics: From World War II’s Grand Bargain to the Thucydides Trap? Geopolitics: From World War II’s Grand Bargain to the Thucydides Trap?
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China and the West: Like Germany versus Britain around the Turn of the Twentieth Century? China and the West: Like Germany versus Britain around the Turn of the Twentieth Century?
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France and Britain’s Long-Eighteenth-Century Struggle: A Strategic and Ideological Contest France and Britain’s Long-Eighteenth-Century Struggle: A Strategic and Ideological Contest
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Four Scenarios Four Scenarios
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“International Relations” on International Relations “International Relations” on International Relations
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The Power of Old Ideas: Hobbesian, Lockean-Grotian, and Kantian Theories The Power of Old Ideas: Hobbesian, Lockean-Grotian, and Kantian Theories
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The State and International “Anarchy” The State and International “Anarchy”
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Legitimacy: History and Civilizations Legitimacy: History and Civilizations
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History and Vindicatory Genealogies History and Vindicatory Genealogies
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Legitimacy and Civilizational Competition Legitimacy and Civilizational Competition
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Economics versus Political Theory? Economics versus Political Theory?
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Structure of the Book Structure of the Book
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1 Introduction: Geopolitics and Legitimacy in a Globalized World
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Published:November 2022
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Abstract
This chapter introduces the correlation between international monetary affairs and geopolitics. The first globalization, during the period leading up to World War I, reintroduced controls over trade, immigration, and flows of capital. However, changes surrounding labor-intensive production and communication technology happened after the Second World War and globalization. Moreover, Thomas Hobbes, John Locke, and Immanuel Kant's intellectual legacies help further the understanding of how globalization influenced geopolitics and the legitimacy of international regimes and organizations. The chapter tackles the issues of globalization concerning the commons, geopolitics, and legitimacy. It also details the structure of Global Discord by looking into the concepts of history, political economy, geopolitics, political theory, and policy diagnosis and prescription.
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