Description
Leonard Seabrooke argues that they key to understanding ‘change’ in international finance in the last forty years rests with US structural power. He demonstrates for the reader how structural power draws from embedded state-societal relations and how the US promotion of ‘direct financing’ has encouraged Britain, Japan, and Germany to ‘catch-up’ to US-led innovations. In drawing considerably on multidisciplinary insight, the book will benefit all those who wish to understand more about ‘change’ in the international political economy. LEONARD SEABROOKE works in Government and International Relations, School of Economics and Political Science, at the University of Sydney, and has taught international political economy at the School of Political and International Studies, Flinders University. He is currently researching a comparative historical analysis of the sources of international financial power in the late-nineteenth and late-twentieth centuries.




