ABSTRACT

This exciting new text adopts a challenging question-led approach to the major issues facing global society today, in order to investigate the nature and complexity of global change. Among other things it looks at the future of the state, the environment, the international political economy, war and global rivalries, and the role of international law and the UN in the post-Cold War world. The book devises a readily comprehensible "change map", which both incorporates a wide range of the fundamental concepts of international relations theory and suggests a number of new concepts capable of assisting the investigation of global change. This new framework is deployed to look closely at real world issues in order to isolate the crucial factors which determine whether or not mass hunger, for example, or enviromental abuse, can be eliminated.

chapter 2|9 pages

The American pivot

chapter 3|27 pages

Can the state survive?

chapter 5|23 pages

Global environmental problems

chapter 7|22 pages

An end to global poverty?

chapter 9|18 pages

The future of European integration

chapter 10|14 pages

Global rivalries and the causes of war

chapter 11|22 pages

The control of war