Drawing upon Karl Polanyi, and in a similar vein to John Ruggie, Cox and Gill see
the social purposes of the state being subordinated
to the market logics of capitalism,
disembedding the economy from society, and producing a complex world order of increasing tension between principles of territoriality and interdependence(Cox 1993: 260-3; Gill 1996). Some of the consequences of this economic globalization are, as Cox(1999) and Gill 1996) note, the polarization of rich and poor increasing social anomie, a stunted civil society and, as a result, the rise of exclusionary (extreme right,xenophobic and racist groups)
Drawing
Drawing upon Karl Polanyi, and in a similar vein to John Ruggie, Cox and Gill see the social purposes of the state being subordinated to the market logics of capitalism, disembedding the economy from society, and producing a complex world order of increasing tension between principles of territoriality and interdependence(Cox 1993: 260-3; Gill 1996). Some of the consequences of this economic globalization are, as Cox(1999) and Gill 1996) note, the polarization of rich and poor increasing social anomie, a stunted civil society and, as a result, the rise of exclusionary (extreme right,xenophobic and racist groups)Drawing
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