Vinod K. Aggarwal Volgorde van de boeken
Vinod K. Aggarwal is een vooraanstaand academicus wiens werk de ingewikkelde relatie tussen zaken, politiek en internationale economische samenwerking onderzoekt. Zijn onderzoek duikt in de complexiteit van mondiale markten, institutioneel ontwerp en strategische besluitvorming in een veelzijdige wereld. Aggarwals onderscheidende aanpak biedt diepgaande inzichten in de krachten die de internationale handel en het beleid vormgeven.




- 2014
- 2012
Linking Trade and Security
- 252bladzijden
- 9 uur lezen
- 2011
Responding to a Resurgent Russia
- 141bladzijden
- 5 uur lezen
In this volume, a set of issue and country experts tackle the questions surrounding the challenges of a resurgent Russia for the world order as well as for relations between the European Union and the United States. Following a brief introduction laying out the circumstances of Russia’s rise, the book proceeds in three sections. In the first, Russian scholars tackle the topic of how a newly resurgent Russia sees the world. The second section examines Russia’s role in the contemporary global political economy in terms of trade and financial flows and nuclear energy. The third section looks at American and European responses to Russia, and the conclusion draws together the findings from each of the chapters and presents some broad propositions regarding Russia’s rise and the challenges that it presents for the US, EU and the international order in the years to come. The implications of this collection are very broad and far-reaching, with ramifications for each of the players involved as well as for the development and refinement of general international relations theories concerning global conflict and cooperation, making the book relevant for both policy-makers and scholars of international relations, Russian studies, and international political economy.
- 2008
Northeast Asia
Ripe for Integration?
Can regional mechanisms better institutionalize the increasing complexity of economic and security ties among the countries in Northeast Asia? As the international state system undergoes dramatic changes in both security and economic relations in the wake of the end of the Cold War, the Asian financial crisis, and the attack of 9/11, this question is now at the forefront of the minds of both academics and policymakers. Still, little research has been done to integrate the analysis of security and economic analysis of changes in the region within a broader context that will give us theoretically-informed policy insights. Against this backdrop, this book investigates the origins and evolution of Northeast Asia's new institutional architecture in trade, finance, and security from both a theoretical and empirical perspective.