
- English
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About this book
This important book discusses the political economy of world order and the basic ideological and ontological grounds upon which the emergent global order is based. Starting from a Maori perspective it examines the development of international law and the world order of nation states. In engaging with these issues across macro and micro levels, the international arena, the national state and forms of regionalism are identified as sites for the reshaping of the global politico/economic order and the emergence of Empire. Overarching these problematics is the emergence of a new form of global domination in which the connecting roles of militarism and the economy, and the increase in technologies of surveillance and control have acquired overt significance.
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Information
Table of contents
- Cover
- Critical praise for this book
- Title Page
- Copyright
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Dedication
- List of Abbreviations
- Foreword
- Introduction
- 1 • Of Order and Being: Towards an Indigenous Global Ontology
- 2 • Indigenous Peoples and the World Order of Sovereign States
- 3 • Shaping the Liberal International Order
- 4 • Contested Sites: State Sovereignty and Indigenous Self-Determination
- 5 • Global Hegemony and the Construction of World Government
- 6 • Globalization, Regionalism and the Neoliberal State: Local Engagement in New Zealand
- 7 • Global Governance and the Return of Empire
- Conclusion • The Spiral Turns. Crisis and Transformation: An Indigenous Response
- Epilogue • Writing as Politics
- Index