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A Journal of Crime, Conflict & World Order

The World Today

Price $22.95

Vol. 23, Nos. 1-2 (1996)

Edited by Pablo González Casanova and John Saxe-Fernández, this special 375-page collection includes contributions on the world situation on every continent in the final stage of the 20th century. Given the failure of social democracy, real socialism, and the nationalism of the poor countries, the goal was not only to describe the world today, but also to identify and evaluate options and obstacles to the establishment of a humanist agenda for the 21st century.

ISSN: 1043-1578. Published quarterly by Social Justice, P.O. Box 40601, San Francisco, CA 94140. SocialJust@aol.com.

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Pablo González Casanova and John Saxe-Fernández (eds.)

Preface to 'The World Today'

Pablo González Casanova and John Saxe-Fernández

The Future of Global Polarization

Samir Amin

The New World Order and the Left

Ralph Miliband

Democracy and the World Order: Dilemmas and Conflicts

Bogdan Denitch

Globalism, Neoliberalism, and Democracy

Pablo Gonzalez Casanova

Globalization and Stagnation

Arthur MacEwan

NAFTA: The Intersection of the Geopolitics and Geoeconomics of Capital

John Saxe-Fernández

Globalization, States, and Left Strategies

Leo Panitch

Europe's Crises

Daniel Singer

East-Central Europe: Transition to Market Economy and Democracy

Milos Nikolic

The Problem of 'Alternativeness' in Russia's Past, Present, and Eventual Future

Kiva Maidanik

Indirect Rule, Civil Society, and Ethnicity: The African Dilemma

Mahmood Mamdani

The State Subregion in the Future of Africa

Bernard Founou-Tchuigoua

The Arab World Today

Fawsy Mansour

Wither the Arabic World?

Faysal Yachir

India in the South Asian Context

Nirmal Kumar Chandra

Asia in the World-System

George Aseniero

The East and the World Today

William K. Tabb

Situating China

Lin Chun

Japan: Beyond the 'Lessons of Growth'

Tessa Morris-Suzuki

Latin America and the New World Order

Carlos M. Vilas

Governability and Democracy in Latin America

Atilio A. Boron

Australian Laborism, Social Democracy, and Social Justice into the 1990s

Peter Beilharz

After the Beijing Women's Conference: What Will Be Done?

Rita Maran

Reflections on the Fourth World Conference on Women, Beijing and Huairou, 1995

Gail Hershatter, Emily Honig, and Lisa Rofel