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Index
Cover
Title page
Copyright page
List of Tables and Figures
The Hazy Power Space of Global Domestic Politics
Preface
Note
1: Introduction: New Critical Theory with Cosmopolitan Intent
1.1 The meta-game of world politics
1.2 The old game can no longer be played
1.3 The counter-power of global civil society
1.4 The transformation of the state
1.5 Terrorist groups as new global actors
1.6 The political power of perceived risks from industrialized civilization
1.7 Who are the ‘players’?
1.8 Legitimacy undergoes a paradigm change
1.9 Blind empiricism?
1.10 New Critical Theory with cosmopolitan intent
1.11 New Critical Theory of social inequalities
Notes
2: Critique of the National Outlook
2.1 The ‘cosmopolitan’ is at once a citizen of the ‘cosmos’ and a citizen of the ‘polis’
2.2 The public world is everything that is perceived as an irritating consequence of modern risk society's decisions
2.3 The communitarian myth
2.4 Methodological nationalism as a source of error
Notes
3: Global Domestic Politics Changes the Rules: On the Breaching of Boundaries in Economics, Politics and Society
3.1 The meta-power of global business
3.2 The meta-power of global civil society
3.3 Translegal domination
3.4 The neo-liberal regime
3.5 The dialectic of global and local issues, or the crisis of legitimation in nation-state politics
3.6 The nationality trap
3.7 The transnational surveillance and citadel state
3.8 The cosmopolitan state
3.9 The regionalization of cosmopolitan states
3.10 The asymmetry of power between financial risks and risks associated with technologized civilization
3.11 Seeing issues of risk as issues of power
3.12 European and non-European constellations
3.13 Cosmopolitan realism
Notes
4: Power and Counter-Power in the Global Age: The Strategies of Capital
4.1 The global politics of global business
4.2 Strategies of capital between autarchy and preventive dominance
Notes
5: State Strategies between Renationalization and Transnationalization
5.1 Strategies of indispensability
5.2 Strategies of irreplaceability
5.3 Strategies aimed at avoiding global market monopolies
5.4 Strategies aimed at reducing competition between states
5.5 Strategies aimed at repoliticizing politics
5.6 Strategies aimed at cosmopolitanizing states
Notes
6: Strategies of Civil Society Movements
6.1 Legitimatory capital and its non-convertibility
6.2 Strategies of risk dramaturgy
6.3 Strategies of democratization
6.4 Strategies of cosmopolitanization
Note
7: Who Wins? On the Transformation of Concepts and Forms of the State and of Politics in the Second Modernity
7.1 The end of the end of politics
7.2 Man is a wolf to man: Thomas Hobbes revised for the world risk society
7.3 Forms of the state in the second modernity
7.4 The perception of global risks robs the utopia of the neo-liberal state of its persuasive power
7.5 Both right and left: on the transformation of the concepts and forms of politics in the second modernity
7.6 Searching for a lost imagination
Notes
8: A Brief Funeral Oration at the Cradle of the Cosmopolitan Age
8.1 Roots with wings: cosmopolitanism in relation to competing distinctions
8.2 Resistance to globalization accelerates and legitimizes the same
8.3 Globalization advances by virtue of a paradoxical alliance of its opponents
8.4 Cosmopolitan despotism: humanity's threat to humanity takes the place of democracy
8.5 Self-justification rules out the possibility of democracy
Notes
References and Bibliography
Index
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