Social Forces, States and World Orders: Beyond International Relations Theory
Keywords:
State , civil society , structures, hegemony , social forcesCopyright (c) 2013 Robert W. COX
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Abstract
In this article, Cox poses how through the development of International Relations theory different perspectives on state and civil society had face each other. He continues presenting how Critical approaches, inspired firstly by Marxism, continuing with concepts as hegemony and counterhegemony, and then through World System theories, serves to retake material power relevance on new world orders creation processes. Cox proposes the ideologically, theoretical and practical differentiation between the pax britannica and pax americana taking both as specific historical processes, engenders of different social, political and economical structures. Moreover, emphasizes on the various practices of production internationalization through different actors as state agencies, interstate agencies, multinational corporations managing classes, and international institutions, among others, in order to produce the basic structures that form and generate late-Twentieth Century power forces.