Includes bibliographical references (p. [166]-181) and index.
Contents:
Machine generated contents note: 1 Introduction 1 -- Social critique and democratizing projects 2 -- Toward transformative politics 10 -- Plan of the book 15 -- 2 Americanism, Fordism, and hegemony 19 -- Americanism and world order ideology 19 -- Fordism and hegemony 23 -- The political ambiguities of Fordism in America 28 -- Restructuring capitalism; contesting hegemony 31 -- 3 The hegemonic project of liberal globalization 42 -- Globalization in question? 43 -- The ideology of liberal globalization: displacing politics -- from the economy 49 -- 4 From liberal globalization to global democratization 65 -- (Re)politicizing the global economy: NAFTA 65 -- GATT 77 -- Democracy and the emerging critique of globalization 78 -- Globalization and the political economy of gender 85 -- 5 Fear and loathing in the New World Order 94 -- Defending American exceptionalism: far-right critiques of globalization 95 -- Mainstreaming far-right ideology? 110 -- Tensions and possibilities of post-Fordist common sense 117 -- 6 Competition or solidarity? The new populism and the ambiguities of common sense 119 -- The ambiguities of populism cum conspiracism 119 -- Populist Inc. 120 -- 7 The New World Order: passive revolution or transformative process? 132 -- Fear and loathing in reverse: the global power bloc and -- the new populism 132 -- Responses to the new populism: "globalization with a human face" 143 -- A New World Order: (r)evolutionary change? 153.
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