Editorial Reviews
Review
Foreign Affairs : Can cooperation increase if there is no hegemony? Yes, says Professor Keohane in this outstanding book. . . . The author's painstaking consideration of difficulties and objections should show how often narrow assumptions and obscurantist jargon have led to loose thinking and worse policy conclusions.
R. J. Barry Jones Political Studies : [T]he 'state-of-the-art' publication on the influential, and somewhat controversial, idea of 'regime' in the study of international political economy. The concept is provided with its most thoroughgoing, cogent and stimulating defence.
Barry Buzan International Affairs : This is vital and powerful stuff. It makes a major contribution towards breaking the destructive polarization between realism and idealism which for far too long has obscured intellectual middle ground of real importance to policy-making.
James E. Alt Journal of Economic Literature : This book takes a major step toward bringing economic reasoning and understanding of politics to bear on questions of international political economy.
Political Studies : From review of Princeton's original edition: "The 'state of the art' publication on the influential, and somewhat controversial, idea of 'regime' in the study of international political economy.
Review
The 'state of the art' publication on the influential, and somewhat controversial, idea of 'regime' in the study of international political economy.
After Hegemony
After Hegemony,Robert O. Keohane,Princeton University Press,0691022283,1945-,1965-,General,History - General History,International - Economics,International Relations - General,International economic relatio,International economic relations,Political Science,Politics/International Relations,World politics,Economics,International economics,POLITICS & GOVERNMENT,Political Science / International Relations,Political Science and International Relations
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