ABSTRACT

Now that Soviet style socialism has collapsed upon itself and liberal capitalism offers itself as the natural, necessary and absolute condition of human social life on a worldwide scale, this book insists that the potentially emancipatory resources of a renewed, and perhaps reconstructed, historical materialism are more relevant in today's world than ever before. Rather than viewing global capitalism as an eluctable natural force, these essays seek to show how a dialectic of power and resistance is at work in the contemporary global political economy, producing and contesting new realities and creating conditions in which new forms of collective self determination become thinkable and materially possible. It will be vital, topical reading for anyone interested in international relations, international political economy, sociology and political theory.

chapter |13 pages

Editors' introduction

part I|95 pages

Globalization

chapter 2|19 pages

How many capitalisms?

Historical materialism in the debates about imperialism and globalization

chapter 3|16 pages

The search for relevance

Historical materialism after the Cold War

chapter 4|15 pages

The pertinence of imperialism

chapter 5|20 pages

A flexible Marxism for flexible times

Globalization and historical materialism

part II|77 pages

Historical materialism as a theory of globalization

chapter 8|18 pages

Making sense of the international system

The promises and pitfalls of contemporary Marxist theories of international relations

chapter 9|23 pages

The dialectic of globalisation

A critique of Social Constructivism

part III|112 pages

Historical materialism and the politics of globalization

chapter 12|27 pages

Historical materialism, globalization, and law

Competing conceptions of property

chapter 13|27 pages

The politics of ‘regulated liberalism'

A historical materialist approach to European integration