Description |
1 online resource : illustrations (black and white) |
Series |
International political economy series |
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International political economy series.
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Contents |
Chapter 1: Geoeconomics in a changing global order -- Chapter 2: Balancing dependence: The quest for autonomy and the rise of corporate geoeconomics -- Chapter 3: European Strategic Autonomy: New Agenda, Old Constraints -- Chapter 4: European foreign policy think tanks and "strategic autonomy": making sense of EU's role in the world of geoeconomics -- Chapter 5: The EU as a Geoeconomic Actor? A review of recent European trade and investment policies -- Chapter 6: Geoeconomics and national production regimes: On German exportism and the integration of economic and security policy -- Chapter 7: The geoeconomics of Chinese bank expansion into the European Union -- Chapter 8: Moving forward: Understanding the geoeconomic decade of the 2020s |
Summary |
This book brings together researchers from different analytical perspectives for the study of contemporary geoeconomics to create a broader and more useful catalogue of conceptual tools, empirical entry points, and case studies around the subject. The distinctive contribution this book offers is its firm rooting in International Political Economy and the hitherto under-researched geoeconomics dynamics of Europe. Many existing accounts of geoeconomics have been developed in International Relations and often reproduce some of the state-centric and static assumptions of the discipline. Recent scholarship furthermore tends to focus on the US-China rivalry, thus discounting the role of other global powers in shaping geoeconomics. As a first collective contribution to the topic in the field of International Political Economy, the book stands to become a major reference point in the field for the coming years. Interest in geoeconomics as well as in related concepts like weaponized interdependence or emerging new rivalries has been on the rise in recent years and will be one of the key research areas in the coming decade of transition and change in Europe and beyond. Chapters 1, 2, 5 and 7 are available open access under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License via link.springer.com. Milan Babic is Assistant Professor of Global Political Economy at Roskilde University. Adam D. Dixon is Associate Professor of Globalization and Development at Maastricht University and Principal Investigator of the ERC-funded SWFsEUROPE project. Imogen T. Liu is a Ph.D. Candidate at Maastricht Universi |
Notes |
Print version record |
Subject |
Geopolitics -- Economic aspects -- Europe
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Economic history
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International economic relations
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SUBJECT |
Europe -- Economic conditions.
http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85045668
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Europe -- Foreign economic relations
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Subject |
Europe
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Form |
Electronic book
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Author |
Babić, Milan, 1990- editor.
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Dixon, Adam D., editor.
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Liu, Imogen T., editor
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ISBN |
9783031019685 |
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3031019687 |
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