Contemporary critical theorising on US Empire tends to diverge in two ways. First, more traditional approaches tend to foreground the national basis of the USA's imperial project and the subsequent ongoing inter-imperial rivalry inherent between rival capitalist states and regions. A second ‘global-capitalist’ approach rejects the notion of US Empire and instead posits the transcendence of a nationally based imperialism in favour of an increasingly transnationally orientated state and global ruling class. I argue that both accounts fail in their singularity to capture the nature and role of the US state within a global political economy. Instead, I argue that the US state has long been both subject to and demonstrative of a dual national an...
The widespread embrace of imperial terminology across the political spectrum during the past three y...
The American Empire Debate (AED) erupted in the late 1990s and prompted a research agenda among Amer...
In a recent issue of Foreign Affairs, Alex Motyl posed the question, "Do past empires hold lessons f...
Theories of a “new imperialism ” assume that world capitalism in the 21st century is still made up o...
Current debates surrounding the invasion, occupation and ongoing conflict in Iraq, and indeed the en...
The left needs a new theorization of imperialism, one that will transcend the limitations of the old...
Hardt and Negri in Empire argue that ”Imperialism is over.” On the contrary, others argue that not o...
This article analyses the US state-capital nexus at the heart of an American imperialism currently r...
Recent theorisations of the world economic order have at least cleared away the fog created by the '...
Abstract This article examines the relationship between European states and the informal American em...
From the classical maxim that "empires are forged by war" to the notion of "hybrid wars", "aestheti...
The widespread political expression of hyper-nationalist sentiment against globalization has its roo...
Th e dynamics of the emerging transnational stage in world capitalism cannot be understood through t...
This paper describes how the forces of the United States Empire are key elements in describing the m...
“Globalization” and “empire” are the dominant meta-narratives of 1990s and 2000s successively. The l...
The widespread embrace of imperial terminology across the political spectrum during the past three y...
The American Empire Debate (AED) erupted in the late 1990s and prompted a research agenda among Amer...
In a recent issue of Foreign Affairs, Alex Motyl posed the question, "Do past empires hold lessons f...
Theories of a “new imperialism ” assume that world capitalism in the 21st century is still made up o...
Current debates surrounding the invasion, occupation and ongoing conflict in Iraq, and indeed the en...
The left needs a new theorization of imperialism, one that will transcend the limitations of the old...
Hardt and Negri in Empire argue that ”Imperialism is over.” On the contrary, others argue that not o...
This article analyses the US state-capital nexus at the heart of an American imperialism currently r...
Recent theorisations of the world economic order have at least cleared away the fog created by the '...
Abstract This article examines the relationship between European states and the informal American em...
From the classical maxim that "empires are forged by war" to the notion of "hybrid wars", "aestheti...
The widespread political expression of hyper-nationalist sentiment against globalization has its roo...
Th e dynamics of the emerging transnational stage in world capitalism cannot be understood through t...
This paper describes how the forces of the United States Empire are key elements in describing the m...
“Globalization” and “empire” are the dominant meta-narratives of 1990s and 2000s successively. The l...
The widespread embrace of imperial terminology across the political spectrum during the past three y...
The American Empire Debate (AED) erupted in the late 1990s and prompted a research agenda among Amer...
In a recent issue of Foreign Affairs, Alex Motyl posed the question, "Do past empires hold lessons f...