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1 |
ID:
077083
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Publication |
2007.
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Summary/Abstract |
As China continues to consolidate its leading positions in the global economy, Chinese organized crime is expected to broaden its presence in global criminal links. This is of tremendous concern for Russia and the world
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2 |
ID:
192635
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Publication |
New Delhi, Aryan Books International, 2021.
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Description |
viii, 470p.hbk
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Standard Number |
9788173056543
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Copies: C:1/I:0,R:0,Q:0
Circulation
Accession# | Call# | Current Location | Status | Policy | Location |
060448 | 338.54/GUR 060448 | Main | On Shelf | General | |
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3 |
ID:
130159
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4 |
ID:
126247
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5 |
ID:
185064
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Publication |
DelhI, Macmillan Education India Pvt Ltd, 2022.
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Description |
viii, 284p.hbk
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Standard Number |
9789354551765
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Copies: C:1/I:0,R:0,Q:0
Circulation
Accession# | Call# | Current Location | Status | Policy | Location |
060171 | 327.101/MAH 060171 | Main | On Shelf | General | |
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6 |
ID:
095465
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Publication |
2010.
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Summary/Abstract |
Near-term prospects for the region's economies are encouraging when one considers the enormous shocks of the recent crisis and the depth of the global downturn.
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7 |
ID:
144020
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Summary/Abstract |
Most observers expected the unusually deep recession to be followed by an unusually rapid recovery, with output and employment returning to trend levels relatively quickly. Yet even with the U.S. Federal Reserve [3]’s aggressive monetary policies, the recovery (both in the United States and around the globe) has fallen significantly short of predictions and has been far weaker than its predecessors [4]. Had the American economy performed as the Congressional Budget Office fore¬cast in August 2009—after the stimulus had been passed and the recovery had started—U.S. GDP today would be about $1.3 trillion higher than it is.
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8 |
ID:
144608
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Summary/Abstract |
When U.S. President Barack Obama [1] joined other global leaders at the G-20 summit in Turkey [2] in November 2015, the United States was in the final stages of a multiyear effort to secure the approval of a set of important reforms to the International Monetary Fund. The reforms, negotiated in 2010 with strong U.S. leadership, were designed to double the organization’s core financial resources to combat financial crises and to modernize its governance by increasing the voting shares of emerging-market economies [3] while maintaining a decisive U.S. voice. But their implementation had been on hold for several years, awaiting approval from Congress. Christine Lagarde, the IMF’s managing director, spoke for many when she opened the meeting in Turkey by saying she prayed that the United States would approve the reforms by the end of the year. Obama responded with a mix of levity and seriousness. “You don’t have to pray, Christine,” he said. “It will get done.”
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9 |
ID:
017974
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Publication |
Winter 2000.
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Description |
7-24
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10 |
ID:
068217
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11 |
ID:
069777
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12 |
ID:
146713
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Contents |
Popular protests in West Asia having rejected traditional political settings, aimed at carving out more just and inclusive dispensations. However, as the long term outcomes of these movements are still unknown, the sustenance of democratic ideals and the growth and prevalence of peace in the region are brought into question. There is also concern about energy supply disruptions affecting the global economy. This paper analyses the significance of Gulf oil from the geopolitical perspective and global energy security, given the diversity of producers today. Sanctions against Iran, the civil war in Syria, the sabotage of energy infrastructure in the region, all have global implications. This paper also highlights the volatility of the region, with civilian crises and external actors playing critical roles.
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13 |
ID:
134094
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Publication |
2014.
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Summary/Abstract |
It has been assumed, since the end of the Cold War, that globalization is irreversible and that technologies, cultures, and markets are spreading, merging, and interacting at an ever quicker pace. This is certainly true. But what if, in addition to globalizing, the world is also splitting into separate and antagonistic sub-worlds? Two of them in particular, which ironically came into existence and have been growing as free riders in the Western-shaped universe, now pose a threat to the West.
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14 |
ID:
094535
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Publication |
2010.
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Summary/Abstract |
The centre of gravity of the global economy has been shifting to Asia. The region's economic integration is an idea whose time has come and Asia could learn useful lessons from Europe. However, according to C Sheela Reddy it is likely to follow its own distinctive path and India could play a multifaceted role in this historic process. The diverse cultural, political and social context across the continent makes it difficult to "sell" the notion of supranational institutions to individual countries. Nonetheless, even as Asia accords priority to internal integration, it would remain strongly connected to the rest of the world.
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15 |
ID:
113288
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Publication |
2012.
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Summary/Abstract |
The basic foundations of today's framework for global economic governance were laid in the years following the Second World War. Reflecting the balance of economic power at the time, Asia did not play a major role in either designing the institutional architecture or setting the agenda for global economic governance. In more recent decades the centre of gravity of the global economy has shifted towards Asia, and this trend is likely to continue in the decades to come. Asia's growing economic weight enhances its potential to play a much stronger role in shaping twenty-first-century global economic governance. Realization of that potential will, however, depend upon how successfully Asia addresses five key challenges: rebalancing sources of growth; strengthening national governance; institutionalizing regional integration; providing political leadership; and adopting the global lingua franca-English. While the Asian policy-makers' ambition to play a bigger role in global economic governance is growing, their appetite for addressing the necessary policy challenges is not necessarily keeping pace with that growing ambition. This gap between ambition and action will need to be gradually closed-only then can Asia help itself in playing a bigger role in global economic governance.
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16 |
ID:
094032
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Publication |
2010.
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Summary/Abstract |
Drawing on Karl Polanyi's distinction between formal and substantive theory, this article argues that 'an Australian international political economy' could (and should) be erected on the historical study of Australia's substantive articulations with the global economy.
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17 |
ID:
114769
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18 |
ID:
128265
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Publication |
2014.
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Summary/Abstract |
The regime for international investment is extraordinary in public international law and controversial in many regions of the world. This article explores two aspects of this set of rules: its decentralization and the unusual powers it gives to private actors to invoke dispute settlement. Decentralization has contributed to a competitive environment for ratification of bilateral investment treaties (BITs) and has elevated the importance of dyadic bargaining power in the formation of the regime. Governments of developing countries are more likely to enter into BITs and tie their hands more tightly when they are in a weak bargaining position, which in turn is associated with economic downturns of the domestic economy. Once committed, investors have sued governments with surprising regularity, arguably contributing disproportionately to legal awards that favor the private corporate actors who have the power to convene the dispute settlement system. States have begun to push back, revising their obligations and attempting to annul arbitral awards. One of the conclusions is that it is important not only to consider whether BITs attract capital-which has been the focus of nearly all the empirical research on BIT effects-but also to investigate the governance consequences of the international investment regime generally.
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19 |
ID:
186792
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20 |
ID:
092930
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Publication |
2009.
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Summary/Abstract |
This study of global financial flows and offshore financial centres (OFCs) draws on the concept of nomadology as developed by Gilles Deleuze and Felix Guattari to argue that OFCs not only facilitate the circulation of global capital, but also serve to create the means for identity arbitrage. This concept highlights the use of the offshore in order to benefit from the variety of preferential measures offered to foreign firms and investment capital. State sovereignty authorises legislation by regimes to attract and regulate foreign investment. International banking statistics are examined for indications of the use of and impact from exploiting the offshore to establish a different national identity in pursuit of the greatest available return on investment. The paper concludes that the design of legislation by onshore states is just as complicit in the positive and negative effects of the offshore economy as are the small sovereign economies that host an OFC.
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