Sovereign Debt Diplomacies
Rethinking Sovereign Debt from Colonial Empires to Hegemony
Herausgeber: Penet, Pierre; Flores Zendejas, Juan
Sovereign Debt Diplomacies
Rethinking Sovereign Debt from Colonial Empires to Hegemony
Herausgeber: Penet, Pierre; Flores Zendejas, Juan
- Gebundenes Buch
- Merkliste
- Auf die Merkliste
- Bewerten Bewerten
- Teilen
- Produkt teilen
- Produkterinnerung
- Produkterinnerung
Sovereign Debt Diplomacies revisits the meaning of sovereign debt in relation to colonial history and postcolonial developments.
Andere Kunden interessierten sich auch für
- Chris Jochnick / Fraser A. Preston (eds.)Sovereign Debt at the Crossroads117,99 €
- Lex RieffelRestructuring Sovereign Debt53,99 €
- Christoph YewSovereign Debt Crisis and International Financial Architecture18,95 €
- Sovereign Debt and Debt Restructuring271,99 €
- Sebastian PoschSovereign Debt and its Implications on Growth27,99 €
- Mark SchopfSovereign debt default and financial crisis in Argentina 200118,95 €
- Malte ViethIceland 2008. From a Banking Crisis to a Sovereign Debt Crisis17,95 €
-
-
-
Sovereign Debt Diplomacies revisits the meaning of sovereign debt in relation to colonial history and postcolonial developments.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Hurst & Co.
- Seitenzahl: 372
- Erscheinungstermin: 11. Mai 2021
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 241mm x 157mm x 25mm
- Gewicht: 635g
- ISBN-13: 9780198866350
- ISBN-10: 0198866356
- Artikelnr.: 61150434
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- 06621 890
- Verlag: Hurst & Co.
- Seitenzahl: 372
- Erscheinungstermin: 11. Mai 2021
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 241mm x 157mm x 25mm
- Gewicht: 635g
- ISBN-13: 9780198866350
- ISBN-10: 0198866356
- Artikelnr.: 61150434
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- 06621 890
Juan Flores Zendejas has a PhD in Economics from Sciences Po Paris. Before joining the Department of History, Economics, and Society at the University of Geneva as an Associate Professor in 2008, Flores Zendejas held a tenure-track position at the University Carlos III in Madrid (Spain). He has been invited professor in other universities in Mexico, Spain, Uruguay, and Switzerland. He has also worked for the Mexican Government and as external consultant to the Mexican Senate, to the private sector, and to the OECD. Flores Zendejas works on financial crises and sovereign defaults in a long-term perspective, and on the economic history of Latin America. Pierre Pénet holds a PhD in Sociology from Northwestern University and Sciences Po Paris (2014). He is a CNRS researcher at the École Normale Supérieure Paris-Saclay (IDHES) and a former Fellow at the Paris Institute for Advanced Study (2019-20). His expertise straddles the boundaries of economic sociology and the history of quantification. He has worked extensively on topics of credit rating agencies, the European debt crisis, austerity pro- grammes, and the legal doctrine of odious debt. His work has been published by the British Journal of Sociology, European Journal of Sociology, Poetics, Sociologie du Travail, etc. His forthcoming book on financial prophecies will study the economists who claim to have predicted the 2008 financial crisis.
* Introduction: Sovereign Debt Diplomacies
* 1: Pierre Pénet And Juan Flores Zendejas: Rethinking Sovereign Debt
from Colonial Empires to Hegemony
* Section 1. Imperial Solutions to Sovereign Debt Crises (1820-1933)
* 2: Juan Flores Zendejas And Felipe Ford Cole: Sovereignty and Debt in
19th Century Latin America
* 3: Ali Coskun Tunçer: Foreign Debt and Colonisation in Egypt and
Tunisia (1840-1882)
* 4: Nicolas Degive And Kim Oosterlinck: Independence and the Effect of
Empire: The Case of 'Sovereign Debts' issued by British Colonies
* Section 2. Debt Disputes in The Age Of Financial Repression: When
Repayment Takes A Backseat (1933-1970s)
* 5: Gustavo Del Angel And Lorena Perez: The Fortune of Geopolitical
Conditions in Debt Diplomacy: Mexico's Long Road to the 1942 Foreign
Debt Settlement
* 6: Laura De La Villa: The Multilateral Principle-Based Approach to
the Restructuring of German Debts in 1953
* 7: Juan Flores Zendejas, Pierre Pénet, and Christian Suter: The
Revenge of Defaulters: Sovereign Defaults and Interstate Negotiations
in the Post-War Financial Order
* Section 3. Postcolonial Transitions and the Hopes for a New
International Economic Order (1960s-1980s)
* 8: Grégoire Mallard: We Owe You Nothing: Decolonization and Sovereign
Debt Obligations in International Public Law
* 9: Michael Waibel: Decolonization and Sovereign Debt: A Quagmire
* 10: Quentin Deforge And Benjamin Lemoine: Third World Project and the
Battles of Debt: Macro Financial Agenda versus Technical Assistance
at UNCTAD
* Section 4. The Legalisation of Sovereign Debt Disputes Between Wish
and Reality (1990s-Present)
* 11: Giselle Datz: Placing Contemporary Sovereign Debt: The Fragmented
Landscape of Legal Precedent and Legislative Preemption
* 12: Mitu Gulati And Ugo Panizza: Maduro Bonds
* 13: Anusha Chari And Ryan Leary: Contract Provisions, Default Risk,
and Bond Prices: Evidence from Puerto Rico
* Concluding Remarks: (Neo)Colonialism, (Neo)Imperialism, and Hegemony
* 1: Pierre Pénet And Juan Flores Zendejas: Rethinking Sovereign Debt
from Colonial Empires to Hegemony
* Section 1. Imperial Solutions to Sovereign Debt Crises (1820-1933)
* 2: Juan Flores Zendejas And Felipe Ford Cole: Sovereignty and Debt in
19th Century Latin America
* 3: Ali Coskun Tunçer: Foreign Debt and Colonisation in Egypt and
Tunisia (1840-1882)
* 4: Nicolas Degive And Kim Oosterlinck: Independence and the Effect of
Empire: The Case of 'Sovereign Debts' issued by British Colonies
* Section 2. Debt Disputes in The Age Of Financial Repression: When
Repayment Takes A Backseat (1933-1970s)
* 5: Gustavo Del Angel And Lorena Perez: The Fortune of Geopolitical
Conditions in Debt Diplomacy: Mexico's Long Road to the 1942 Foreign
Debt Settlement
* 6: Laura De La Villa: The Multilateral Principle-Based Approach to
the Restructuring of German Debts in 1953
* 7: Juan Flores Zendejas, Pierre Pénet, and Christian Suter: The
Revenge of Defaulters: Sovereign Defaults and Interstate Negotiations
in the Post-War Financial Order
* Section 3. Postcolonial Transitions and the Hopes for a New
International Economic Order (1960s-1980s)
* 8: Grégoire Mallard: We Owe You Nothing: Decolonization and Sovereign
Debt Obligations in International Public Law
* 9: Michael Waibel: Decolonization and Sovereign Debt: A Quagmire
* 10: Quentin Deforge And Benjamin Lemoine: Third World Project and the
Battles of Debt: Macro Financial Agenda versus Technical Assistance
at UNCTAD
* Section 4. The Legalisation of Sovereign Debt Disputes Between Wish
and Reality (1990s-Present)
* 11: Giselle Datz: Placing Contemporary Sovereign Debt: The Fragmented
Landscape of Legal Precedent and Legislative Preemption
* 12: Mitu Gulati And Ugo Panizza: Maduro Bonds
* 13: Anusha Chari And Ryan Leary: Contract Provisions, Default Risk,
and Bond Prices: Evidence from Puerto Rico
* Concluding Remarks: (Neo)Colonialism, (Neo)Imperialism, and Hegemony
* Introduction: Sovereign Debt Diplomacies
* 1: Pierre Pénet And Juan Flores Zendejas: Rethinking Sovereign Debt
from Colonial Empires to Hegemony
* Section 1. Imperial Solutions to Sovereign Debt Crises (1820-1933)
* 2: Juan Flores Zendejas And Felipe Ford Cole: Sovereignty and Debt in
19th Century Latin America
* 3: Ali Coskun Tunçer: Foreign Debt and Colonisation in Egypt and
Tunisia (1840-1882)
* 4: Nicolas Degive And Kim Oosterlinck: Independence and the Effect of
Empire: The Case of 'Sovereign Debts' issued by British Colonies
* Section 2. Debt Disputes in The Age Of Financial Repression: When
Repayment Takes A Backseat (1933-1970s)
* 5: Gustavo Del Angel And Lorena Perez: The Fortune of Geopolitical
Conditions in Debt Diplomacy: Mexico's Long Road to the 1942 Foreign
Debt Settlement
* 6: Laura De La Villa: The Multilateral Principle-Based Approach to
the Restructuring of German Debts in 1953
* 7: Juan Flores Zendejas, Pierre Pénet, and Christian Suter: The
Revenge of Defaulters: Sovereign Defaults and Interstate Negotiations
in the Post-War Financial Order
* Section 3. Postcolonial Transitions and the Hopes for a New
International Economic Order (1960s-1980s)
* 8: Grégoire Mallard: We Owe You Nothing: Decolonization and Sovereign
Debt Obligations in International Public Law
* 9: Michael Waibel: Decolonization and Sovereign Debt: A Quagmire
* 10: Quentin Deforge And Benjamin Lemoine: Third World Project and the
Battles of Debt: Macro Financial Agenda versus Technical Assistance
at UNCTAD
* Section 4. The Legalisation of Sovereign Debt Disputes Between Wish
and Reality (1990s-Present)
* 11: Giselle Datz: Placing Contemporary Sovereign Debt: The Fragmented
Landscape of Legal Precedent and Legislative Preemption
* 12: Mitu Gulati And Ugo Panizza: Maduro Bonds
* 13: Anusha Chari And Ryan Leary: Contract Provisions, Default Risk,
and Bond Prices: Evidence from Puerto Rico
* Concluding Remarks: (Neo)Colonialism, (Neo)Imperialism, and Hegemony
* 1: Pierre Pénet And Juan Flores Zendejas: Rethinking Sovereign Debt
from Colonial Empires to Hegemony
* Section 1. Imperial Solutions to Sovereign Debt Crises (1820-1933)
* 2: Juan Flores Zendejas And Felipe Ford Cole: Sovereignty and Debt in
19th Century Latin America
* 3: Ali Coskun Tunçer: Foreign Debt and Colonisation in Egypt and
Tunisia (1840-1882)
* 4: Nicolas Degive And Kim Oosterlinck: Independence and the Effect of
Empire: The Case of 'Sovereign Debts' issued by British Colonies
* Section 2. Debt Disputes in The Age Of Financial Repression: When
Repayment Takes A Backseat (1933-1970s)
* 5: Gustavo Del Angel And Lorena Perez: The Fortune of Geopolitical
Conditions in Debt Diplomacy: Mexico's Long Road to the 1942 Foreign
Debt Settlement
* 6: Laura De La Villa: The Multilateral Principle-Based Approach to
the Restructuring of German Debts in 1953
* 7: Juan Flores Zendejas, Pierre Pénet, and Christian Suter: The
Revenge of Defaulters: Sovereign Defaults and Interstate Negotiations
in the Post-War Financial Order
* Section 3. Postcolonial Transitions and the Hopes for a New
International Economic Order (1960s-1980s)
* 8: Grégoire Mallard: We Owe You Nothing: Decolonization and Sovereign
Debt Obligations in International Public Law
* 9: Michael Waibel: Decolonization and Sovereign Debt: A Quagmire
* 10: Quentin Deforge And Benjamin Lemoine: Third World Project and the
Battles of Debt: Macro Financial Agenda versus Technical Assistance
at UNCTAD
* Section 4. The Legalisation of Sovereign Debt Disputes Between Wish
and Reality (1990s-Present)
* 11: Giselle Datz: Placing Contemporary Sovereign Debt: The Fragmented
Landscape of Legal Precedent and Legislative Preemption
* 12: Mitu Gulati And Ugo Panizza: Maduro Bonds
* 13: Anusha Chari And Ryan Leary: Contract Provisions, Default Risk,
and Bond Prices: Evidence from Puerto Rico
* Concluding Remarks: (Neo)Colonialism, (Neo)Imperialism, and Hegemony