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The Cartel System of States: An Economic Theory International Politics
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Barnes and Noble
The Cartel System of States: An Economic Theory International Politics
Current price: $110.00
Barnes and Noble
The Cartel System of States: An Economic Theory International Politics
Current price: $110.00
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Size: Hardcover
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The people who live in border towns often have closer relations with people across their immediate borders than with people in the same country as them. Despite how intertwined these border communities often are, neither community can access the governmental institutions of the nation on the other side. Why are the citizens of neighboring regions that lie across an international border often subject to very different governance systems? More broadly, why can't public services be bought piecemeal, on an a-la-carte basis, with governments competing to provide higher quality services at the lowest cost in a marketplace for government services? These questions lie at the heart of modern International Relations.
In
, Avidit Acharya and Alexander Lee provide a powerful and field-shaping theory to address a fundamental issue in world politics: the character of the territorial nation-state. They contend that the modern territorial state system works as an economic cartel in which states have local, bounded monopolies in governing their citizens. States refuse to violate each other's monopolies, even when they could do so easily. Acharya and Lee examine what makes this system stable, when and how it emerged, how it spread, how it has been challenged, and what led it to be so resilient over time. Drawing from the centuries long process of modern state formation,
explains both how the present system of territorial statesby no means a foregone conclusion in retrospecttook over the world and how it might change in the future.