Mark Beeson / Kim Hyuk-Rae / Richard Robison (eds.)
Politics and Markets in the Wake of the Asian Crisis
Herausgeber: Beeson, Mark; Kim, Hyuk-Rae; Jayasuriya, Kanishka
Mark Beeson / Kim Hyuk-Rae / Richard Robison (eds.)
Politics and Markets in the Wake of the Asian Crisis
Herausgeber: Beeson, Mark; Kim, Hyuk-Rae; Jayasuriya, Kanishka
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The contributors to this book argue vigorously that processes of globalisation are driven by complex political forces and that it is not enough to look at economic factors in isolation.
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The contributors to this book argue vigorously that processes of globalisation are driven by complex political forces and that it is not enough to look at economic factors in isolation.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 392
- Erscheinungstermin: 21. Oktober 1999
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 233mm x 156mm x 21mm
- Gewicht: 635g
- ISBN-13: 9780415220576
- ISBN-10: 0415220572
- Artikelnr.: 25684095
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 392
- Erscheinungstermin: 21. Oktober 1999
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 233mm x 156mm x 21mm
- Gewicht: 635g
- ISBN-13: 9780415220576
- ISBN-10: 0415220572
- Artikelnr.: 25684095
Richard Robison is Professor of Asian and International Politics, and Director of the Asia Research Centre, Murdoch University, Australia; he is the author and editor of many books, including, most recently, The Political Economy of Southeast Asia. Mark Beeson is Lecturer in International Politics at Griffith University, Australia. Kanishka Jayasuriya is Senior Research Fellow at the Asia Research Centre, Murdoch University; Routledge recently published his Law, Capitalism and Power in Asia: The rule of law and legal institutions. Hyuk-Rae Kim is Professor in the Department of Korean Studies, Yonsei University, Korea.
Part I The end of Asian capitalism? 1 Introduction: interpreting the crisis
2 Comment: crisis and the developmental state in East Asia 3 The financial
crisis in Southeast Asia 4 State power and economic strength revisited:
what's so special about the Asian crisis? Part II Crisis of the
developmental state 5 The state, structural rigidity, and the end of Asian
capitalism: a comparative study of Japan and South Korea 6 Fragility or
continuity? Economic governance of East Asian capitalism 7 The dilemma of
market liberalization: the financial crisis and the transformation of
capitalism 8 A meltdown with 'Chinese characteristics'? 9 The Asian crisis
and the perils of enterprise association: explaining the different outcomes
in Singapore, Taiwan and Korea Part III Crisis of oligarchic capitalism 10
Surviving the meltdown: liberal reform and political oligarchy in Indonesia
11 Thailand's capitalism before and after the economic crisis 12 Economic
nationalism and its discontents: Malaysian political economy after July
1997 13 The Philippines: the making of a neo-classical tragedy Part IV
Regional and international context of the crisis 14 The international
relations of the Asian economic crisis: a study in the politics of
resentment 15 Moral (and other) hazards: the IMF and the systemic Asian
crisis 16 Australia in the shadow of the Asian crisis Part V Conclusion:
scenarios for East Asia 17 Authoritarian liberalism, governance and the
emergence of the regulatory state in post-crisis East Asia
2 Comment: crisis and the developmental state in East Asia 3 The financial
crisis in Southeast Asia 4 State power and economic strength revisited:
what's so special about the Asian crisis? Part II Crisis of the
developmental state 5 The state, structural rigidity, and the end of Asian
capitalism: a comparative study of Japan and South Korea 6 Fragility or
continuity? Economic governance of East Asian capitalism 7 The dilemma of
market liberalization: the financial crisis and the transformation of
capitalism 8 A meltdown with 'Chinese characteristics'? 9 The Asian crisis
and the perils of enterprise association: explaining the different outcomes
in Singapore, Taiwan and Korea Part III Crisis of oligarchic capitalism 10
Surviving the meltdown: liberal reform and political oligarchy in Indonesia
11 Thailand's capitalism before and after the economic crisis 12 Economic
nationalism and its discontents: Malaysian political economy after July
1997 13 The Philippines: the making of a neo-classical tragedy Part IV
Regional and international context of the crisis 14 The international
relations of the Asian economic crisis: a study in the politics of
resentment 15 Moral (and other) hazards: the IMF and the systemic Asian
crisis 16 Australia in the shadow of the Asian crisis Part V Conclusion:
scenarios for East Asia 17 Authoritarian liberalism, governance and the
emergence of the regulatory state in post-crisis East Asia
Part I The end of Asian capitalism? 1 Introduction: interpreting the crisis
2 Comment: crisis and the developmental state in East Asia 3 The financial
crisis in Southeast Asia 4 State power and economic strength revisited:
what's so special about the Asian crisis? Part II Crisis of the
developmental state 5 The state, structural rigidity, and the end of Asian
capitalism: a comparative study of Japan and South Korea 6 Fragility or
continuity? Economic governance of East Asian capitalism 7 The dilemma of
market liberalization: the financial crisis and the transformation of
capitalism 8 A meltdown with 'Chinese characteristics'? 9 The Asian crisis
and the perils of enterprise association: explaining the different outcomes
in Singapore, Taiwan and Korea Part III Crisis of oligarchic capitalism 10
Surviving the meltdown: liberal reform and political oligarchy in Indonesia
11 Thailand's capitalism before and after the economic crisis 12 Economic
nationalism and its discontents: Malaysian political economy after July
1997 13 The Philippines: the making of a neo-classical tragedy Part IV
Regional and international context of the crisis 14 The international
relations of the Asian economic crisis: a study in the politics of
resentment 15 Moral (and other) hazards: the IMF and the systemic Asian
crisis 16 Australia in the shadow of the Asian crisis Part V Conclusion:
scenarios for East Asia 17 Authoritarian liberalism, governance and the
emergence of the regulatory state in post-crisis East Asia
2 Comment: crisis and the developmental state in East Asia 3 The financial
crisis in Southeast Asia 4 State power and economic strength revisited:
what's so special about the Asian crisis? Part II Crisis of the
developmental state 5 The state, structural rigidity, and the end of Asian
capitalism: a comparative study of Japan and South Korea 6 Fragility or
continuity? Economic governance of East Asian capitalism 7 The dilemma of
market liberalization: the financial crisis and the transformation of
capitalism 8 A meltdown with 'Chinese characteristics'? 9 The Asian crisis
and the perils of enterprise association: explaining the different outcomes
in Singapore, Taiwan and Korea Part III Crisis of oligarchic capitalism 10
Surviving the meltdown: liberal reform and political oligarchy in Indonesia
11 Thailand's capitalism before and after the economic crisis 12 Economic
nationalism and its discontents: Malaysian political economy after July
1997 13 The Philippines: the making of a neo-classical tragedy Part IV
Regional and international context of the crisis 14 The international
relations of the Asian economic crisis: a study in the politics of
resentment 15 Moral (and other) hazards: the IMF and the systemic Asian
crisis 16 Australia in the shadow of the Asian crisis Part V Conclusion:
scenarios for East Asia 17 Authoritarian liberalism, governance and the
emergence of the regulatory state in post-crisis East Asia