Capital and the state system: a class act
2007; Taylor & Francis; Volume: 20; Issue: 4 Linguagem: Inglês
10.1080/09557570701680647
ISSN1474-449X
Autores Tópico(s)Political and Economic history of UK and US
ResumoThis paper is set up as a critique of Alex Callinicos's Callinicos, Alex. 2007. Does capitalism need the state system?. Cambridge Review of International Affairs, 20(4): 533–549. [Taylor & Francis Online] , [Google Scholar] contribution, 'Does capitalism need the state system?' It challenges his understanding of the relationship between capitalism and the state system and the theory of imperialism, before presenting an alternative view that conceives the connection between capitalism and the state system as embodied in the formation of a transnational capitalist class holding power in an English-speaking, liberal Atlantic core or 'heartland', facing a series of 'contender states', which developed under state auspices. This constellation has to be analysed in its own right by applying the method of historical materialism to it, rather than confining that method to the analysis of capital and then bringing in state-centric International Relations. Today, the rise of China as the new contender illustrates how the combined process has evolved. The response to China comes from the larger constellation of the West and not just from the United States: the capitalist class acts to ensure the sovereignty of capital in the process.
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