9781845422974-184542297X-The Disappearing State?: Retrenchment Realities in an Age of Globalisation

The Disappearing State?: Retrenchment Realities in an Age of Globalisation

ISBN-13: 9781845422974
ISBN-10: 184542297X
Author: Francis G. Castles
Publication date: 2007
Publisher: Edward Elgar Publishing
Format: Hardcover 296 pages
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Book details

ISBN-13: 9781845422974
ISBN-10: 184542297X
Author: Francis G. Castles
Publication date: 2007
Publisher: Edward Elgar Publishing
Format: Hardcover 296 pages

Summary

The Disappearing State?: Retrenchment Realities in an Age of Globalisation (ISBN-13: 9781845422974 and ISBN-10: 184542297X), written by authors Francis G. Castles, was published by Edward Elgar Publishing in 2007. With an overall rating of 4.0 stars, it's a notable title among other books. You can easily purchase or rent The Disappearing State?: Retrenchment Realities in an Age of Globalisation (Hardcover) from BooksRun, along with many other new and used books and textbooks. And, if you're looking to sell your copy, our current buyback offer is $0.3.

Description

`Most comparative research on public expenditure retrenchment has concentrated on the welfare state. This exciting and innovative volume takes a new approach. It focuses instead on non-social programmes such as education, defence and economic affairs, demonstrates that this is where the real cost-cutting has taken place and shows, paradoxically, that these cuts have made social spending more politically salient in the public expenditure calculus. This is a book which extends the reach of our understanding of modern public policy at the same time as it extends our knowledge of the reach of the modern state.'
- Stephan Leibfried, University of Bremen, Germany

`In this volume, Frank Castles and his team of experts continue the myth-busting process begun in Castles's 2004 analysis of welfare state crisis. Their combination of statistical sophistication and theoretical reflection on the political economy of public expenditure slices straight through the myriad misplaced assumptions regarding the decline of the state, globalization, "races to the bottom" and welfare retrenchment. This book makes compulsory reading for all social scientists.'
- Martin Rhodes, University of Denver, US

`I like simple sentences, cross-country collaborations, great graphs, and compelling conclusions. Here, remarkably, we have a book with all four. This is vibrant writing on a topic - the long reach of state spending - that figures in everyone's lives. It is hard to know whether the book will be more gripping for the Prime Minister or for high-brow professors of economics and political science.'
- Andrew Oswald, University of Warwick, UK

Whilst the prevailing orthodoxy of the expenditure retrenchment literature
is that globalisation and neo-liberal ideas are leading to a downsizing of
the state, empirical research - basing its conclusions on patterns of
welfare state spending - does not support such a view. This book brings a
new perspective to bear by looking at what has been happening to other
areas of the state's activity.

Edited by Francis G. Castles, a leading authority in the field, and
bringing together an outstanding group of British, German and American
scholars, it examines trends in non-social or `core' spending on public
administration, defence, public order, education, economic affairs and
debt financing and in the regulatory ordering of the economic sphere. The
book not only opens up new areas of comparative public policy research,
but also demonstrates clearly that there have been real reductions in the
reach of state in some areas, although patterns of causation are more
complex and varied than generally presumed by the retrenchment literature.

The research findings reported in The Disappearing State? provide pivotal,
relevant and challenging core material for advanced undergraduate and
postgraduate courses in public and social policy, political economy and
the sociology of the modern state.

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