Global Restructuring, State, Capital and Labour: Contesting Neo-Gramscian Perspectives

Werner Bonefeld, Andreas Bieler, Peter Burnham, Adam David Morton

Research output: Book/ReportBook

Abstract

This book provides a critical engagement between distinct historical materialist approaches that have played a crucial role in shaping post-positivist International Relations theory. The volume debates the merits and shortcomings of neo-Gramscian and Open Marxist perspectives and analyses the crisis of globalization from these contesting approaches. This dialogue reveals an extensive coverage of themes linked to political theory, philosophy, historical sociology, state theory, European politics, uneven development, neoliberal globalization and resistance. Definition is given to these themes through a focus on state, capital and labour; elements so often absent from mainstream International Relations and International Political Economy.

In contrast to conventional accounts, gloablization is discussed as a process of state formation and shows that neo-liberal transformation depends on the recomposition of state-capital-labour relations. The outome of this recomposition is open-ended and the volume's theoretical perspectives, in their own way, examine the underlying reasons for this uncertainty.

Original languageEnglish
Place of PublicationLondon
PublisherPalgrave
Number of pages235
ISBN (Print)9781403992321
Publication statusPublished - 2006

Publication series

NameInternational Political Economy Series
PublisherPalgrave

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