What Is In A Rim?

What Is In A Rim?

Author: Arif Dirlik

Publisher: Routledge

Published: 2021-11-28

Total Pages: 301

ISBN-13: 1000009858

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In this volume, scholars question the current euphoria over the rapid growth of the Pacific rim - as an economic region and as a political ideal. They suggest that much of the discourse on the region is highly ideological, focusing on its potential for capitalist development while ignoring the limitations of such development, its human costs and consequences. This critique of the idea of a Pacific rim also seeks to redress the balance by focusing on the region in terms of human interactions.


International Policy Institutions Around the Pacific Rim

International Policy Institutions Around the Pacific Rim

Author: Ramón Bahamonde

Publisher: Lynne Rienner Pub

Published: 1998

Total Pages: 317

ISBN-13: 9781555877958

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This compendium identifies the approximately 300 key institutional resources on international political and economic affairs available throughout the Pacific Basin. Organized by country/region, the directory highlights each institution's background and objectives, programmes and publications.


Energy and the Wealth of Nations

Energy and the Wealth of Nations

Author: Charles A.S. Hall

Publisher: Springer

Published: 2018-03-05

Total Pages: 507

ISBN-13: 3319662198

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In this updated edition of a groundbreaking text, concepts such as energy return on investment (EROI) provide powerful insights into the real balance sheets that drive our “petroleum economy.” Hall and Klitgaard explore the relation between energy and the wealth explosion of the 20th century, and the interaction of internal limits to growth found in the investment process and rising inequality with the biophysical limits posed by finite energy resources. The authors focus attention on the failure of markets to recognize or efficiently allocate diminishing resources, the economic consequences of peak oil, the high cost and relatively low EROI of finding and exploiting new oil fields, including the much ballyhooed shale plays and oil sands, and whether alternative energy technologies such as wind and solar power can meet the minimum EROI requirements needed to run society as we know it. For the past 150 years, economics has been treated as a social science in which economies are modeled as a circular flow of income between producers and consumers. In this “perpetual motion” of interactions between firms that produce and households that consume, little or no accounting is given of the flow of energy and materials from the environment and back again. In the standard economic model, energy and matter are completely recycled in these transactions, and economic activity is seemingly exempt from the Second Law of Thermodynamics. As we enter the second half of the age of oil, when energy supplies and the environmental impacts of energy production and consumption are likely to constrain economic growth, this exemption should be considered illusory at best. This book is an essential read for all scientists and economists who have recognized the urgent need for a more scientific, empirical, and unified approach to economics in an energy-constrained world, and serves as an ideal teaching text for the growing number of courses, such as the authors’ own, on the role of energy in society.


US Department of State Dispatch

US Department of State Dispatch

Author:

Publisher:

Published: 1990

Total Pages: 552

ISBN-13:

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Contains a diverse compilation of major speeches, congressional testimony, policy statements, fact sheets, and other foreign policy information from the State Dept.