Melani Claire Cammett
Globalization and Business Politics in Arab North Africa
A Comparative Perspective
Melani Claire Cammett
Globalization and Business Politics in Arab North Africa
A Comparative Perspective
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Pre-economic liberalization relations between business and the state condition how groups organize before large-scale economic change.
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Pre-economic liberalization relations between business and the state condition how groups organize before large-scale economic change.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 286
- Erscheinungstermin: 1. Juli 2010
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 17mm
- Gewicht: 468g
- ISBN-13: 9780521156264
- ISBN-10: 0521156262
- Artikelnr.: 30518599
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 286
- Erscheinungstermin: 1. Juli 2010
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 17mm
- Gewicht: 468g
- ISBN-13: 9780521156264
- ISBN-10: 0521156262
- Artikelnr.: 30518599
Melani Cammett is Associate Professor of Political Science and Director of the Middle East Studies Program at Brown University. She specializes in the political economy of development and the Middle East. She earned her Ph.D. in 2002 from the Department of Political Science at the University of California at Berkeley and served as an Academy Scholar at the Harvard Academy for International and Area Studies from 2005-6 and 2007-8. Cammett has published scholarly articles in Studies in Comparative International Development, Comparative Politics, World Development, Global Governance, and other journals. She is also completing a new book entitled Servicing Sectarianism: Welfare and Politics in Weak States, which explores how ethnic and religious parties allocate welfare goods focusing on sectarian organizations in Lebanon and other countries in the Middle East and South Asia. Her research has received support from the Smith Richardson Foundation, US Institute of Peace, Academy Scholars Program at Harvard, Social Science Research Council, American Institute for Maghrib Studies, Salomon Faculty Research Grant at Brown University, and Institute for International Studies at the University of California at Berkeley. Cammett also holds an M.A.L.D. from the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy (1994), received a Fulbright Fellowship in Jordan, and has consulted for development policy organizations.
Part I. The Framework: 1. Rethinking globalization and business politics;
2. Globalization and integration in international apparel manufacturing
networks: the new politics of industrial development; Part II. The
Institutional Context: 3. Business and the state in Tunisia: statist
development, capital dispersion, and preemptive integration in world
markets; 4. Business in the state in Morocco: business penetration of the
state and the genesis of the 'fat cat'; Part III. Globalization and
Institutional Change: 5. Business as usual: state-sponsored
industrialization and business collective inaction in Tunisia; 6. Fat cats
and self-made men: class conflict and business collective action in
Morocco; 7. Globalization, business politics, and industrial policy in
developing countries.
2. Globalization and integration in international apparel manufacturing
networks: the new politics of industrial development; Part II. The
Institutional Context: 3. Business and the state in Tunisia: statist
development, capital dispersion, and preemptive integration in world
markets; 4. Business in the state in Morocco: business penetration of the
state and the genesis of the 'fat cat'; Part III. Globalization and
Institutional Change: 5. Business as usual: state-sponsored
industrialization and business collective inaction in Tunisia; 6. Fat cats
and self-made men: class conflict and business collective action in
Morocco; 7. Globalization, business politics, and industrial policy in
developing countries.
Part I. The Framework: 1. Rethinking globalization and business politics;
2. Globalization and integration in international apparel manufacturing
networks: the new politics of industrial development; Part II. The
Institutional Context: 3. Business and the state in Tunisia: statist
development, capital dispersion, and preemptive integration in world
markets; 4. Business in the state in Morocco: business penetration of the
state and the genesis of the 'fat cat'; Part III. Globalization and
Institutional Change: 5. Business as usual: state-sponsored
industrialization and business collective inaction in Tunisia; 6. Fat cats
and self-made men: class conflict and business collective action in
Morocco; 7. Globalization, business politics, and industrial policy in
developing countries.
2. Globalization and integration in international apparel manufacturing
networks: the new politics of industrial development; Part II. The
Institutional Context: 3. Business and the state in Tunisia: statist
development, capital dispersion, and preemptive integration in world
markets; 4. Business in the state in Morocco: business penetration of the
state and the genesis of the 'fat cat'; Part III. Globalization and
Institutional Change: 5. Business as usual: state-sponsored
industrialization and business collective inaction in Tunisia; 6. Fat cats
and self-made men: class conflict and business collective action in
Morocco; 7. Globalization, business politics, and industrial policy in
developing countries.