
The Illicit Global Economy and State Power 0208th Edition
Author(s): Peter Andreas (Author, Editor), Jennifer Clapp (Author), H Richard Friman (Author), Eric Helleiner (Author), Louise Shelley (Author), William O. Walker III (Author), Richard H. Friman (Editor)
- Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
- Publication Date: 18 Feb. 1999
- Edition: 0208th
- Language: English
- Print length: 218 pages
- ISBN-10: 0847693031
- ISBN-13: 9780847693030
Book Description
Editorial Reviews
Review
Here, finally, is a book that analyzes the dark side of globalization, the connection between markets and crime. The Illicit Global Economy and State Power offers persuasive arguments that, through deregulation, states are central to the spreading of global crime that at the same time they also seek to fight. This book offers an essential political perspective that helps reframe the Panglossian view of globalization. — Peter J. Katzenstein, Cornell University
The contributors to this book provide a number of useful studies of transnational crime and governmental response. But The Illicit Global Economy and State Power best succeedes in demonstrating that the political economy of crime remains indispensable to understanding the selectivity of politically legitimated economic behavior. This volume contributes to a fuller and more nuanced picture of the “state of the state” in the international political economy. — William Sites, University of Chicago ―
Social Service ReviewThis is a solid contribution. ―
Progress In Human GeographyAn important volume that addresses several pressing issues at once. ―
Crime, Law and Social ChangeThe Illicit Global Economy and State Power could not have come at a better time. Friman and Andreas provide a compelling perspective on recent changes on the international scene leading to the creation of an environment ripe for the flourishing of international criminal activity. More professors of international relations should incorporate this book’s content into their courses. It facilitates students’ understanding of increasingly powerful nonstate actors―international criminals. — Pernilla M. Neal, Dickinson College
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