How about Robin Hahnel's recent book (South End Press)? I've forgotten its 
title.

At 01:07 PM 9/18/00 -0700, you wrote:
>Well, campers, my teaching team has started planning for the winter, and
>I'm wondering if any of you can recommend a good book on the global
>economy.  The ideal book would:
>
>discuss the origin, management, and consequences of third world debt,
>
>the politics and economics of structural adjustment,
>
>liberalization of capital flows and instability in foreign exchange
>markets,
>
>debates within, between, and against the international financial
>institutions,
>
>the east Asian financial crisis,
>
>and the upsurge in global inequality.
>
>It would also:
>
>put all of this within a political context, and
>
>be readable by students with the equivalent of intro micro, intro macro,
>and political economy.
>
>It isn't necessary to have a book that "theorizes" all of this in some
>novel way or pushes a particular interpretation.  The most important
>thing is to convey the facts of recent history, the political and
>institutional context, and the types of arguments different people are
>making.  (Yes, I know, some degree of theoretical commitment is
>necessary to do these things, but I'm more interested in the planets
>than the telescope right now...)
>
>Peter

Jim Devine [EMAIL PROTECTED] &  http://bellarmine.lmu.edu/~jdevine

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