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Cunliffe Philip

    Taking Control: Sovereignty and Democracy After Br exit
    Cosmopolitan Dystopia
    The New Twenty Years' Crisis
    • The New Twenty Years' Crisis

      • 168pages
      • 6 heures de lecture

      The liberal order is decaying. Will it survive, and if not, what will replace it? On the eightieth anniversary of the publication of E.H. Carr's The Twenty Years' Crisis, 1919-1939, Philip Cunliffe revisits this classic text, juxtaposing its claims with contemporary debates on the rise and fall of the liberal international order.

      The New Twenty Years' Crisis
    • Cosmopolitan Dystopia

      • 224pages
      • 8 heures de lecture

      Cosmopolitan Dystopia evaluates cosmopolitan liberalism and shows In their effort to avoid the terrible fate of twentieth century utopias, cosmopolitan liberals have nonetheless created a new global dystopia of permanent war and authoritarian power embodied in 'sovereignty as responsibility'. -- .

      Cosmopolitan Dystopia
    • The British political system is running on empty. Its ruling elite has emerged from the long Brexit crisis apparently just as clueless and incompetent as it was before. Why is this, and what can the British people do to truly ‘take control’? Taking Control argues that neither side in the Brexit debate really understood the European Union or what was involved in reclaiming Britain’s sovereignty. The EU is neither a supranational nanny state, nor an internationalist peace project. It is the means by which Europe’s elites transformed their own states in order to rule the void where representative politics used to be. Leaving the EU was a necessary but not sufficient step towards closing the yawning chasm between rulers and ruled. This book makes the democratic case for national sovereignty, arguing for a radical, forward-looking reconstitution of the British nation-state and the evolution of new forms of representative democracy. It is essential reading for anyone who wonders why British politics is so dysfunctional, and wants to do better.

      Taking Control: Sovereignty and Democracy After Br exit