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ID087857
Title ProperHow to solve the many-state problem
Other Title Informationa reply to the debate
LanguageENG
AuthorCallinicos, Alex
Publication2009.
Summary / Abstract (Note)This article responds to the debate provoked by the author's 'Does capitalism need the state system?' (Cambridge Review of International Affairs, 20:4 2007, 533-549) and his exchanges with Justin Rosenberg (Cambridge Review of International Affairs, 21:1 2008, 77-112). It is divided into three parts. The first restates the issues, situating them in the context of a growing Marxist preoccupation with the international in recent years, and contrasts the 'high road'-Rosenberg's attempt to use Trotsky's concept of uneven and combined development to provide a transhistorical perspective on intersocietal relations-with Callinicos's own preferred 'low road' of more focused analysis centred on the prevailing mode(s) of production. The second addresses the fundamental criticisms addressed to him by Hannes Lacher, Benno Teschke and John M Hobson, all of whom deny that there is a necessary relation between capitalism and the interstate system. The third considers the more specific comments offered by Neil Davidson, Gonso Pozo-Martin, and Jamie Allinson and Alex Anievas, before concluding with an appeal for a move off the terrain of abstract theory to more empirical studies that can test the relative value of rival conceptual constructions.
`In' analytical NoteCambridge Review of International Affairs Vol. 22,No. 1; Mar 2009: p89-105
Journal SourceCambridge Review of International Affairs Vol. 22,No. 1; Mar 2009: p89-105
Key WordsMany - State Problem ;  Debate ;  Transhistorical Perspective ;  Intersocietal Relations


 
 
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