In recent years there has been an increased popular and scholarly consideration of the appropriateness of the concept of “empire” to refer to US power, reflecting a widespread view that the US is even more dominant in world affairs today than in the past. This article examines US foreign economic policy in this context, and argues that US structural economic power has been declining rather than increasing. The Bush administration’s foreign economic policy has been characterized by a linking of economic policy to political goals, and by a shift away from multilateralism. Given US structural economic weaknesses and its integration with the global economy, these policies are consistent with those one would expect from a declining hegemon, and ...
The end of the Cold War which took place at the turn of the 1980s and the 1990s caused the political...
An important driver of relative decline in America’s international standing is the failure of its po...
This article elaborates the changing nature of American hegemony in international relations, and as...
This paper traces the ‘securitisation’ of US foreign economic policy since the advent of the Bush ad...
Is the United States inevitably in decline? After the foreign policy controversies of the George W. ...
The United States, with its historical background of exceptionalism, rose to power in the twentieth ...
This article traces the "securitization" of U.S. foreign economic policy in the administration of Ge...
This paper traces the ‘securitisation’ of US foreign economic policy since the advent of the Bush ad...
This chapter surveys George W. Bush's economic policies and the United State's economic performance ...
The global financial and economic crisis is the defining force shaping contemporary international po...
This article traces the "securitization" of U.S. foreign economic policy in the administration of Ge...
In this article the author analyses the rise of the unilateralist imperial project of the George W. ...
It has been argued that the George W. Bush administration in the United States instituted a signific...
America’s economic strength has long underwritten its leading role in world affairs. The buoyant tax...
Many aspects of the hegemony status of the United States of America are hidden behind a veil of secr...
The end of the Cold War which took place at the turn of the 1980s and the 1990s caused the political...
An important driver of relative decline in America’s international standing is the failure of its po...
This article elaborates the changing nature of American hegemony in international relations, and as...
This paper traces the ‘securitisation’ of US foreign economic policy since the advent of the Bush ad...
Is the United States inevitably in decline? After the foreign policy controversies of the George W. ...
The United States, with its historical background of exceptionalism, rose to power in the twentieth ...
This article traces the "securitization" of U.S. foreign economic policy in the administration of Ge...
This paper traces the ‘securitisation’ of US foreign economic policy since the advent of the Bush ad...
This chapter surveys George W. Bush's economic policies and the United State's economic performance ...
The global financial and economic crisis is the defining force shaping contemporary international po...
This article traces the "securitization" of U.S. foreign economic policy in the administration of Ge...
In this article the author analyses the rise of the unilateralist imperial project of the George W. ...
It has been argued that the George W. Bush administration in the United States instituted a signific...
America’s economic strength has long underwritten its leading role in world affairs. The buoyant tax...
Many aspects of the hegemony status of the United States of America are hidden behind a veil of secr...
The end of the Cold War which took place at the turn of the 1980s and the 1990s caused the political...
An important driver of relative decline in America’s international standing is the failure of its po...
This article elaborates the changing nature of American hegemony in international relations, and as...