Constructing Economic Interests: Geography, Culture, & the Liberal International Order

K. McNamara
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引用次数: 3

Abstract

The liberal international order seems to be resting on very shaky ground. While the election of Donald Trump and the Brexit vote were startling shocks, these developments represented only the most extreme outcomes of anti-globalization and anti-establishment politics that had been growing for some time. As analysts today struggle to understand these complex phenomena, they most often divide their explanations into two opposing camps: identity politics versus economic anxiety. I argue that we need instead to understand the new political cleavages in terms of the interactions between economic circumstances and culture, rather than thinking of them as competing explanations. I offer a new way of theorizing about where interests come from, one that focuses on the stark geographic cleavages of the new post-industrial economy and how these material circumstances have created polarized everyday lived experiences. Although I focus on the US case in this short memo, this emphasis on the cultural class cleavages created by the twenty-first century economy should also illuminate some of the drivers for Brexit and the rise of populist politics more generally.
建构经济利益:地理、文化与自由国际秩序
自由主义的国际秩序似乎建立在非常不稳固的基础上。尽管唐纳德•特朗普(Donald Trump)当选美国总统和英国脱欧公投令人震惊,但这些事态发展只是一段时间以来愈演愈烈的反全球化和反建制政治的最极端结果。今天的分析人士在努力理解这些复杂的现象时,他们通常会将自己的解释分为两个对立的阵营:身份政治与经济焦虑。我认为,我们需要从经济环境和文化之间的相互作用来理解新的政治分歧,而不是把它们视为相互竞争的解释。我提供了一种新的方式来理论化兴趣的来源,一种关注新后工业经济的明显地理分裂,以及这些物质环境如何创造了两极分化的日常生活体验的方式。尽管在这篇简短的备忘录中,我关注的是美国的情况,但这种对21世纪经济造成的文化阶级分裂的强调,也应该能更广泛地阐明英国退欧和民粹主义政治崛起的一些驱动因素。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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