The Conservative Challenge to Globalization: Anglo-American Perspectives
Cover -- Half-title -- Title page -- Copyright information -- Table of contents -- Acknowledgements -- 1 Introduction -- What are globalization and anti-globalization? -- What is conservatism? -- The structure of the book -- 2 The three waves of globalization theory: revisiting the debate in the light of conservative analyses -- The hyper-globalization thesis: political economy and culture -- Global sceptics -- From global transformationalism to globalization as discursive neoliberalism -- Neoliberalism and globalization -- Conclusion -- 3 A fourth wave of globalization: from the third way to conservative (anti-)globalization -- Globalization and the developed world -- Globalization and the developing world -- The problem with "actually existing globalization" -- Conclusion: the failure of globalization as context, but not explanation, for the rise of conservative (anti-)globalization -- 4 British conservatism and the international: free trade, the Anglosphere and Brexit -- Conservatism in the nineteenth century: landed interest, free trade, one nation and empire -- Conservatism, 1880 to 1945: decline, empire and war -- Britain after 1945: the end of empire, Atlanticism, Europe and multiculturalism -- Thatcherism and Euroscepticism -- Conservative Euroscepticism and the question of Brexit -- Conclusion: Brexit, the "peculiarities of the English" and neoliberalism -- 5 US conservativism: Trumping globalization? -- Conservatism in America (and elsewhere) before 1945 -- American conservatism after 1945 -- Paleoconservatism and anti-globalization -- Paleoconservatism and Trump -- Conclusion: contemporary American conservatism, neoliberalism and globalization -- 6 Conservatism, populism and the liberal state: a critique -- British and American conservativism and globalization: summary, differences and similarities.