The Political Economy of a Plural World: Critical Reflections on Power, Morals and Civilization

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

The Political Economy of a Plural World: Critical Reflections on Power, Morals and Civilization The Political Economy of a Plural World ‘For thirty years Robert Cox has been at the forefront of developing a criti- cal international political economy of modern world capitalism. A seminal thinker with an immense following, his work in the past has rarely been any- thing less than challenging. A dissident in a world where intelligent dissent is in short supply, here once again in a set of superb essays, Cox shows precisely why he has achieved – and why he deserves – his enviably huge reputation. A must read for anybody seriously interested in the fate of civilization before and after September 11th.’ Professor Michael Cox, Department of International Politics, Aberystwyth The Political Economy of a Plural World is a new volume by one of the world’s leading critical thinkers in international political economy. Building on his seminal contributions to the field, Robert W. Cox engages with the major themes that have characterized his work over the past three decades, and also the main topics which affect the globalized world at the start of the twenty-first century. The book addresses such core issues as global civil soci- ety, power and knowledge, the covert world, multilateralism, and civilizations and world order. Michael G. Schechter has written an introductory essay which addresses current critiques of Coxian theory, enabling the author to enter into a stimulating dialogue with critics of his work. Timely, provocative and original, this book is a major contribution to international political economy and essential reading for all students and academics in the field. Robert W. Cox is Professor emeritus of political science at York University, Toronto. He has published widely on international political economy, and his books include Approaches to World Order. Routledge/RIPE Series in Global Political Economy Series Editors: Otto Holman, Marianne Marchand (Research Centre for International Political Economy, University of Amsterdam), Henk Overbeek (Free University, Amsterdam) and Marianne Franklin (University of Amsterdam) This series, published in association with the Review of International Political Economy, provides a forum for current debates in international political econ- omy. The series aims to cover all the central topics in IPE and to present innovative analyses of emerging topics. The titles in the series seek to tran- scend a state-centred discourse and focus on three broad themes: • the nature of the forces driving globalisation forward • resistance to globalisation • the transformation of the world order. The series comprises two strands: The RIPE Series in Global Political Economy aims to address the needs of students and teachers, and the titles will be published in hardback and paper- back. Titles include Transnational Classes and International Relations Kees van der Pijl Gender and Global Restructuring Sightings, sites and resistances Edited by Marianne H. Marchand and Anne Sisson Runyan Global Political Economy Contemporary theories Edited by Ronen Palan Ideologies of Globalization Contending visions of a new world order Mark Rupert The Clash within Civilisations Coming to terms with cultural conflicts Dieter Senghaas Global Unions? Theory and strategies of organized labour in the global political economy Edited by Jeffrey Harrod and Robert O’Brien The Political Economy of a Plural World Critical reflections on power, morals and civilization Robert Cox with Michael G. Schechter Routledge/RIPE Studies in Global Political Economy is a forum for innovative new research intended for a high-level specialist readership, and the titles will be available in hardback only. Titles include: 1 Globalization and Governance* Edited by Aseem Prakash and Jeffrey A. Hart 2 Nation-States and Money The past, present and future of national currencies 3 The Global Political Economy of Intellectual Property Rights The new enclosures? Christopher May 4 Integrating Central Europe EU expansion and Poland, Hungary and the Czech Republic Otto Holman 5 Capitalist Restructuring, Globalisation and the Third Way Lessons from the Swedish model J. Magnus Ryner 6 Transnational Capitalism and the Struggle over European Integration Bastiaan van Apeldoorn 7 World Financial Orders An historical international political economy Paul Langley *Also available in paperback Dedicated to the memory of Harold Karan ‘Jake’ Jacobson, wise scholar, inspiring teacher, loyal friend The Political Economy of a Plural World Critical reflections on power, morals and civilization Robert W. Cox With Michael G. Schechter First published 2002 by Routledge 11 New Fetter Lane, London EC4P 4EE Simultaneously published in the USA and Canada by Routledge 29 West 35th Street, New York, NY 10001 Routledge is an imprint of the Taylor & Francis Group This edition published in the Taylor & Francis e-Library, 2003. © 2002 Robert W. Cox, and Chapter 1, Michael G. Schechter All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reprinted or reproduced or utilized in any form or by any electronic, mechanical, or other means, now known or hereafter invented, including photocopying and recording, or in any information storage or retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publishers. British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library Library of Congress Cataloging in Publication Data Cox, Robert W., 1926– Political economy of a plural world: Critical reflections on power, morals and civilization / by Robert W. Cox. p. cm. Includes bibliographical references and index. 1. Legitimacy of governments. 2. Civil society. 3. Civilization. 4. Counterculture. 5. Government, Resistance to. 6. Globalization. 7. International economic relations. 1. Title. JC497.C67 2002 300—dc2l 2002069949 ISBN 0-203-11603-8 Master e-book ISBN ISBN 0-203-16325-7 (Adobe eReader Format) ISBN 0–415–25290–3 (hbk) ISBN 0–415–25291–1 (pbk) Contents Series editors’ preface ix Acknowledgements xi Preface xiii 1 Critiques of Coxian theory: background to a conversation 1 By Michael G. Schechter 2 Reflections and transitions 26 3 Vico, then and now 44 4 Universality, power and morality 57 5 Power and knowledge: towards a new ontology of world order 76 6 Civil society at the turn of the millennium: prospects for an alternative world order 96 7 The covert world 118 8 Civilizations: encounters and transformations 139 9 Conceptual guidelines for a plural world 157 10 Civilizations and world order 176 viii Contents Epilogue 189 Notes 193 References 212 Name index 224 Subject index 227 Series editors’ preface In 1988, the late Susan Strange wrote that Robert Cox ‘is an eccentric in the best English sense of the word, a loner, a fugitive from intellectual camps of victory, both Marxist and liberal’. Her review of Cox’s magnum opus Power, Production and World Order: Social Forces in the Making of History (1987) was an early attempt to grasp Cox’s thinking as independent and non- dogmatic, a characterization so different from all sorts of parochial critiques that tried to pin him down as Marxist (or attacking him for not being Marxist enough), neo-Gramscian (while sometimes chiding him for misreading Gramsci), Weberian, etc., or accused him of being reductionist, empiricist or eclectic. In this volume, Robert Cox , whilst not ‘shying away’ from the labels eclectic or empiricist, is most concerned with being labelled reductionist. This is one of the important features of this book. For the first time, Cox is engaging with his critics in a comprehensive way. This takes the form of a dialogue (in Chapter 2) with some of the most important critiques of Coxian theory from Chapter 1 (selected by Michael Schechter). Three different, albeit related, strands of these critiques are reviewed. First, some key concepts in Cox’s work are critically discussed: class and production, the international- ization of the state, nébuleuse, etc. Second, a number of issues are highlighted which have been missing or underdeveloped in the work of Cox: the military- security aspects of world order, the importance of ecology in the global political economy, and issues of transnational identity politics, including gender. Finally, Robert Cox has been criticized for being either too pessimistic or too Utopian with regard to the future of global governance. In particular the question whether the nébuleuse – ‘the unofficial and official transnational and international networks of state and corporate representatives and intel- lectuals who work towards the formulation of a policy consensus for global capitalism’ – can be challenged by a counter-nébuleuse and whether interna- tional organizations can play a supportive role in this respect is discussed. This collection of essays is more than just a conversation between Cox and his critics though. The first part of the volume consists of a number of chapters which trace and document the gradual shift in Cox’s thinking over the years, culminating in a ‘new ontology of world order’. The concrete sub- stance of this new ontology is illustrated in the second half of the book x Series editors’ preface where two topics stand out: the role of a revitalized civil society (interpreted as a multilevel phenomenon) in determining the future of global governance and the prospect of generating legitimacy through the peaceful coexistence of civilizations. Both issues are analysed in the light of the present crisis of authority/legitimacy and the clash between formal and informal politics, of which the globalization of informal violence (to use Robert Keohane’s term) is only the most extreme expression. The RIPE Series in Global Political Economy is proud to be publishing this latest book by Robert Cox. The Political Economy of a Plural World: Critical reflections on power, morals and civilization is essential reading for those who want to know in which direction Coxian Historicism has evolved over the years and how the ‘new’ thinking of Robert Cox reflects more recent devel- opments and trends in the global political economy. But its significance transcends its importance as a source for the intellectual historiography of one of the great independent thinker on global politics.
Recommended publications
  • Review Essay
    Review Essay Toward an Old New Paradigm in American International Relations by Karl Walling Karl Walling is a professor in the Strategy and Policy Department at the U.S. Naval War College in Newport, RI. He is also a FPRI Senior Scholar. Daniel H. Deudney, Bounding Power: Republican Security Theory from the Polis to the Global Village (Princeton: University Press, 2007). ]NELID$[T David C. Hendrickson, Union, Nation, or Empire: The American Debate over International Relations, 1789–1941 (Kansas: University Press, 2009). [TD$INLE] David C. Hendrickson, Peace Pact: The Lost World of the American Founding (Kansas: University Press, 2003). [TD$INLE] # 2011 Published by Elsevier Limited on behalf of Foreign Policy Research Institute. Spring 2011 | 325 Review Essay George C. Herring, From Colony to Superpower: U.S. Foreign Relations Since 1776 (Oxford: University Press, 2008). [TD$INLE] Walter L. Hixson, The Myth of American Diplomacy (New Haven and London: Yale University Press, 2008). [TD$INLE] How Americans study the history of their foreign relations is changing almost as rapidly as the international environment. In this review, we see Walter L. Hixson applying intellectually fashionable critical theory to American diplo- macy and George C. Herring inviting a host of non-state actors on to the diplomatic stage. Together, David C. Hendrickson and Daniel H. Deudney come close to (re)inventing a discipline by treating American foreign policy as a particular species of a much larger and older intellectual tradition dating back at least as far as ancient Greece. Perhaps for this reason, Deudney’s book was awarded the prize for the best book of the decade by the International Studies Association.
    [Show full text]
  • Article Consumer Databases and The
    Consumer Databases and the Commercial Article Mediation of Identity: a medium theory analysis Vincent Manzerolle Sandra Smeltzer University of Western Ontario, Canada. University of Western Ontario, Canada. [email protected] [email protected] Abstract This paper argues that the systemic nature of contemporary consumer surveillance undermines the most fundamental principle of free market economics: consumer sovereignty. Specifically, this paper argues that the rise of an information society in conjunction with neoliberal capitalism has entrenched routine forms of surveillance within commercial strategies by employing networked databases as a primary medium for the articulation of consumer sovereignty. The communicative relationship between consumers and producers within the market involves effectively ‘listening’ (and then responding) to consumer needs and wants in a timely manner. Surveillance is therefore not only necessary for the operation of globalized consumer capitalism, it is also the primary means by which consumers communicate their sovereignty within the marketplace. By turning to the work of Harold Innis and the intellectual tradition known as medium theory, this paper will theorize how consumer databases are used to circumvent the fundamental neutrality of the market, and thus sovereignty, of individual consumers by exploiting individual vulnerabilities through behaviour and profile modelling. Increasingly, vast amounts of personal information are in the hands of third party entities, creating what Innis calls monopolies of knowledge. Drawing on the example of Acxiom, a US-based data collection and management corporation, we highlight how the commercial mediation of identity has become progressively more hidden from view of the consumer and thus the need for greater regulation of this industry. Introduction Personal information is increasingly the basic fuel on which economic activity runs.
    [Show full text]
  • Mcluhan Lecture
    MediaTropes eJournal Vol I (2008): 19–41 ISSN 1913-6005 “AGENTS OF AGGRESSIVE ORDER”: LETTERS, HANDS, AND THE GRASPING POWER OF TEETH IN THE EARLY CANADIAN TORTURE NARRATIVE MONIQUE TSCHOFEN Introduction This paper brings together a most fascinating and under-examined body of early New World writing that belong to a genre of writing I call “the torture narrative” with the insights of Marshall McLuhan in order to offer a way of thinking about body parts, especially hands, teeth, tongues, and eyeballs, and their extensions through technologies such as alphabets, manuscripts, books, and weapons. At its core are questions about the nature and effects of the changes wrought by the early-Gutenberg era—a period characterized by vast scientific and technical discoveries, rising nationalisms, explorations, and conquests—in the New World. Rather than explore the ways an early New World print culture reflects or distorts discrete historical or ethnographic facts about colonial contact, I want to probe the ways the torture narrative speaks to the conditions of speaking and writing, and therefore to the discursive and textual production of the New World subject and New World space. My inquiry seeks to understand both the violence in, and the violence of, representation at founding historical moments, but its relevance far exceeds Renaissance or American studies. At stake in this discussion is an appreciation of a mode of intellectual inquiry that is attentive to the relationship between media technologies and the social worlds they reflect and transform. I. McLuhan’s Theories: Break-Boundaries and the Effects of Alphabetization Fascinated by turbulence, over-heating, explosions, implosions, and reversals, Marshall McLuhan is a thinker of boundaries, limits, and all modalities of transformation.
    [Show full text]
  • ECSP Report 3
    FOREWORD by P.J . Simmons, Editor ust over two years ago, then U.S. Permanent Representative to the United Nations Madeleine K. Albright Jargued that “environmental degradation is not simply an irritation, but a real threat to our national security.” As Secretary of State, Ms. Albright has already indicated that she intends to build upon the pathbreaking initia- tive of her predecessor, Warren Christopher, to make environmental issues “part of the mainstream of American foreign policy.” On Earth Day 1997, Albright issued the State Department’s first annual report on “Environmen- tal Diplomacy: the Environment and U.S. Foreign Policy.” In it, Secretary Albright asserted that global environ- mental damage “threatens the health of the American people and the future of our economy” and that “environ- mental problems are often at the heart of the political and economic challenges we face around the world.” Noting that “we have moved beyond the Cold War definition of the United States’ strategic interests,” Vice President Gore argued the Department’s report “documents an important turning point in U.S. foreign policy— a change the President and I strongly support.” Similar sentiments expressed by officials in the United States and abroad indicate the growing interest in the interactions among environmental degradation, natural re- source scarcities, population dynamics, national interests and security.* The breadth and diversity of views and initiatives represented in this issue of the Environmental Change and Security Project Report reflect the advances in research, contentious political debates and expanding parameters of this important field of academic and policy inquiry. As a neutral forum for discussion, the Report includes articles asserting strong connections between environment and security as well as more skeptical analyses.
    [Show full text]
  • Fitzgerald and Winseck.Docx
    Media Economics: Missed Opportunities, Mischaracterizations Scott Fitzgerald, Curtin Business School, Curtin University, Perth, Australia Dwayne Winseck, School of Journalism and Communication/Institute of Political Economy, Carleton A heightened state of flux is now sweeping the media, creative, telecom and internet industries. In the United States Netflix recently, albeit briefly, surpassed Disney as the country’s largest media company by market capitalization. The just completed mega-merger between AT&T and Time Warner and another prospective one between Disney and 21st Century Fox (or potentially Comcast and 21st Century Fox) are presented as countering the threat posed by Netflix, Facebook, Apple, Amazon, and Google to traditional film and TV businesses. Such developments highlight the issues of competition, market power, consumer welfare and industry evolution. In the latter context, visions of heightened competition, technical innovation and interactivity associated with digital distribution have been recurrent themes in industry analysis since before the US Telecommunications Act of 1996. Media Economics, by Stuart Cunningham, Terry Flew and Adam Swift (2015), takes up the challenge of grappling with new institutional actors and considers how audiences interact with and contribute to the emergent digital media ecology. These leading media studies scholars survey several different schools of thought useful to analysing media industries. They suggest that certain schools of heterodox economics - the ‘new’ institutionalism, evolutionary
    [Show full text]
  • Care and Freedom
    Care and freedom Author: S. Umi Devi Persistent link: http://hdl.handle.net/2345/4083 This work is posted on eScholarship@BC, Boston College University Libraries. Berkeley, CA: Center for Working Families, University of California, Berkeley, 2000 Use of this resource is governed by the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons "Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 United States" (http:// creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/us/) Care and Freedom S. Uma Devi* October 2000 *S. Uma Devi is currently on sabbatical from her position as Chairperson of the Economics Department at the Univeristy of Kerala, India, where until recently she was also the Director of Women’s Studies. S. Uma Devi was a visiting scholar at the Center for Working Families during the Spring of 1999-2000. ÓCenter for Working Families, University of California, Berkeley Acknowledgments I am grateful to the Vanguard Foundation for generously funding my research on globalization, human development, and gender concerns. This paper, part of that ongoing project, would not have been possible but for Professor Arlie Hochschild’s keen interest and investment of time, energy, and care. She reversed the global chain of caregivers. I also thank Professors Arlie Hochschild and Barrie Thorne as co-directors of the Center for Working Families, for inviting me to affiliate with the center. Their team, consisting of Bonnie Kwan, Chi-Shan Lin, and Janet Oh, have gone out of their way to provide assistance with loving care. I will always cherish the cordial work atmosphere of the center. I also wish to thank Professors Hochschild and Thorne for their comments on an earlier draft of this paper, and Dr.
    [Show full text]
  • Culture and Development Economics: Theory, Evidence, Implications
    39-62b.qxd 22.10.2002 13:12 Page 39 POLSCI PAPERS CULTURE AND DEVELOPMENT ECONOMICS: THEORY, EVIDENCE, IMPLICATIONS Michael Woolcock * Vijayendra Rao ** Sabina Alkire *** 1 The only way to offer universality for one's scientific judgement is to use other disciplines that can contribute to that judgement - or, at least, this seems to be the latest consensus among scholars. Economics is a complex domain which cannot function well without the help of other sciences. Cultural variables are relevant for the economic studies because various forms of cultural behaviour have to be tested by economists for the success of developing and implementing economic strategies. Although economics has the arrogance to consider itself self sufficient, quantitative data must be sustained for accuracy by qualitative interpretations supplied by sociology or anthropology. One can, after using cultural data, find new research questions and raise more accurate theories. This article argues that multidisciplinary studies are the best cure for superficial and unfounded conclusions Key words: economy, culture, multidisciplinarity, development, social capital, epistemology * Michael Woolcock is social scientist with the Development Research Group at the World Bank and an adjunct lecturer in Public Policy at the Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University ** Vijayendra Rao is senior economist with the Development Research Group at the World Bank *** Sabina Alkire is research writer for the Commission on Human Security and Senior Research Associate with the Von Hugel Institute, University of Cambridge 1 Our thanks to Anthony Bebbington, Lynn Bennett, Michael Cernea, Paul Clements, Shelton Davis, Kreszentia Duer, Katrinka Ebbe, David Ellerman, Scott Guggenheim, Robert Klitgaard, Alexandre Marc, Stephen Marglin, Deepa Narayan, Ron Parker, Frank Penna, Nicholas Sambanis, Amartya Sen, Marco Verweij, Michael Walton, and Anna Wetterberg for comments on earlier drafts of this paper.
    [Show full text]
  • China's Fear of Contagion
    China’s Fear of Contagion China’s Fear of M.E. Sarotte Contagion Tiananmen Square and the Power of the European Example For the leaders of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP), erasing the memory of the June 4, 1989, Tiananmen Square massacre remains a full-time job. The party aggressively monitors and restricts media and internet commentary about the event. As Sinologist Jean-Philippe Béja has put it, during the last two decades it has not been possible “even so much as to mention the conjoined Chinese characters for 6 and 4” in web searches, so dissident postings refer instead to the imagi- nary date of May 35.1 Party censors make it “inconceivable for scholars to ac- cess Chinese archival sources” on Tiananmen, according to historian Chen Jian, and do not permit schoolchildren to study the topic; 1989 remains a “‘for- bidden zone’ in the press, scholarship, and classroom teaching.”2 The party still detains some of those who took part in the protest and does not allow oth- ers to leave the country.3 And every June 4, the CCP seeks to prevent any form of remembrance with detentions and a show of force by the pervasive Chinese security apparatus. The result, according to expert Perry Link, is that in to- M.E. Sarotte, the author of 1989: The Struggle to Create Post–Cold War Europe, is Professor of History and of International Relations at the University of Southern California. The author wishes to thank Harvard University’s Center for European Studies, the Humboldt Foundation, the Institute for Advanced Study, the National Endowment for the Humanities, and the University of Southern California for ªnancial and institutional support; Joseph Torigian for invaluable criticism, research assistance, and Chinese translation; Qian Qichen for a conversation on PRC-U.S.
    [Show full text]
  • Mass Media and the Transformation of American Politics Kristine A
    Marquette Law Review Volume 77 | Issue 2 Article 7 Mass Media and the Transformation of American Politics Kristine A. Oswald Follow this and additional works at: http://scholarship.law.marquette.edu/mulr Part of the Law Commons Repository Citation Kristine A. Oswald, Mass Media and the Transformation of American Politics, 77 Marq. L. Rev. 385 (2009). Available at: http://scholarship.law.marquette.edu/mulr/vol77/iss2/7 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Journals at Marquette Law Scholarly Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in Marquette Law Review by an authorized administrator of Marquette Law Scholarly Commons. For more information, please contact [email protected]. MASS MEDIA AND THE TRANSFORMATION OF AMERICAN POLITICS I. INTRODUCTION The importance of the mass media1 in today's society cannot be over- estimated. Especially in the arena of policy-making, the media's influ- ence has helped shape the development of American government. To more fully understand the political decision-making process in this coun- try it is necessary to understand the media's role in the performance of political officials and institutions. The significance of the media's influ- ence was expressed by Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn: "The Press has become the greatest power within Western countries, more powerful than the legislature, the executive, and the judiciary. One would then like to ask: '2 By what law has it been elected and to whom is it responsible?" The importance of the media's power and influence can only be fully appreciated through a complete understanding of who or what the media are.
    [Show full text]
  • The Cold War As a System - Michael Cox
    The Cold War as a System - Michael Cox Many leftists saw the Cold War as a genuine clash between Soviet 'Socialism' and Western capitalism. Michael Cox, however, shows how Soviet Stalinism and the Cold War helped stabilise global capitalism for 40 years. Introduction: Stalinism and the New Left Until the fifties, the influence of Stalinism upon the left was clear and unambiguous. Destalinization, followed by the process of youth radicalization in the sixties however, began to reduce the political hold of Stalinism upon the left, and it seemed that a new marxism was going to emerge. However, things were never quite that simple. For although the new left challenged Stalinism, it never fully broke with it theoretically. Indeed, often without thinking, it frequently took up positions which were, to all intents and purposes, supportive of Stalinism. For instance, the majority of the new left gave almost total support to Ho Chi Minh and the NLF in Vietnam, while many were nearly religious in their adoration of Mao and China during the cultural revolution. Moreover, the new left, again almost without thinking, uncritically endorsed nationalist movements in the Third World, little realizing that they were simply repeating Soviet and Chinese anti-imperialist rhetoric. Furthermore, much of the economic theory of the new left, notably on development, bore a distinct Stalinist imprint as well.1 Finally, even those influenced by Trotsky, accepted the argument that the left had a 'duty' to defend the Soviet Union from its enemies. In spite of its greater radicalism therefore, it was evident that the new left never really came to terms with Stalinism intellectually, nor broke completely with its assumptions.
    [Show full text]
  • Bounding Power: Republican Security Theory from the Polis to the Global Village, Daniel H
    Reviews Bounding Power: Republican Security Theory from the Polis to the Global Village, Daniel H. Deudney (Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 2006), 384 pp., $35 cloth, $24.95 paper. With Bounding Power, Daniel Deudney Long in gestation, Bounding Power is a makes a masterly contribution to the ren- vigorously argued and sophisticated book, aissance of classical political theory in which contains a number of important contemporary thought about world poli- strands of discussion that combine to tics; in this regard he follows Michael make the case for what Deudney labels ‘‘re- Doyle and others in demonstrating how a publican security theory.’’ One important fresh reading of the historical traditions strand of the book is its reconstruction of that lie behind contemporary theoretical the concepts of anarchy (an absence of formulations can generate new per- authoritative order) and hierarchy (order spectives on both theory and practice. In established through subordination), and the case of Doyle’s work, a key theme has their reorientation around Deudney’s new been exploring the intellectual roots of formulation, ‘‘negarchy,’’ characterized by liberalism in international relations and the presence of mutual restraints with a thecontoursofliberalpeacetheory—the primary role in generating ordered rela- idea that liberal democracies are not tionships. Two of the heroes of Deudney’s disposed to go to war against each other. intellectual reconstruction are Hobbes and For Deudney, meanwhile, the central Locke. Hobbes develops his argument for subject is republicanism, and in particular sovereign power as a means by which to the idea that the republican tradition depart from anarchy, whereas Locke ar- of thought about security—with its re- gues for the need to enhance freedom cognition of the interplay of changing without jeopardizing law and order.
    [Show full text]
  • The Boston College Economics Department
    THE BOSTON COLLEGE BC ECONOMICS DEPARTMENT NEWSLETTER June, 1992 EC August 1996 Prof. Robert McEwen, S.J. Professor Emeritus Robert J. McEwen of the Society of Jesus died of a heart attack on May 15, 1996 in Cork, Ireland, where he was visiting relatives. He was 79. He had just completed his 50th year of teaching in the Boston College Department of Economics. McEwen received one of the first Ph.D.’s granted in economics at Boston College, and chaired the department from 1957 to 1970, playing a crucial role in its development. His area of expertise was consumer economics–a field in which he received recognition from President Lyndon Johnson and from state leaders. In 1963, he successfully lobbied the Massachu- setts legislature to create the state Consumer Council, and served as its founding chair. The following remembrance of Bob McEwen was written by Prof. Francis McLaughlin, a colleague of Bob’s for many years. A remembrance In mid-May Father Robert J. McEwen died suddenly while visiting relatives in Ireland. He had turned in grades and completed fifty years of teaching economics at BC just a few weeks earlier. Father McEwen was chairman of the department from 1957 to 1970, and a key player in the department's growth and development. In 1957 he received one of the first three Ph.D. degrees in economics awarded by Boston College. His thesis was on the "so- called" fair trade laws. He was "against them" according to Father Seavey Joyce, a member of his thesis committee. The following September Bob became chairman, taking over from Father Joyce.
    [Show full text]