The Rise and Fall of the Great Powers: Economic Change and Military Conflict from 1500 to 2000About national and international power in the "modern" or Post Renaissance period. Explains how the various powers have risen and fallen over the 5 centuries since the formation of the "new monarchies" in W. Europe. |
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... regime, left an international system which was more out of joint with the fundamental economic realities than perhaps at any time in the five centuries covered in this book. Britain and France, although weakened, were still at the ...
... regime, left an international system which was more out of joint with the fundamental economic realities than perhaps at any time in the five centuries covered in this book. Britain and France, although weakened, were still at the ...
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... regime the armed strength to preserve itself, while all possibility of western social and political “modernization” was firmly resisted; foreigners in Russia, for example, were segregated from the natives in order to prevent subversive ...
... regime the armed strength to preserve itself, while all possibility of western social and political “modernization” was firmly resisted; foreigners in Russia, for example, were segregated from the natives in order to prevent subversive ...
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... regimes of Europe entered into a symbiotic relationship with the market economy, providing for it domestic order and a nonarbitrary legal system (even for foreigners), and receiving in taxes a share of the growing profits from trade ...
... regimes of Europe entered into a symbiotic relationship with the market economy, providing for it domestic order and a nonarbitrary legal system (even for foreigners), and receiving in taxes a share of the growing profits from trade ...
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... regime—and every prospect of the progressive, if turbulent and occasionally brutal, stimulus of competition. By extension, this lack of economic and political rigidity would imply a similar lack of cultural and ideological orthodoxy ...
... regime—and every prospect of the progressive, if turbulent and occasionally brutal, stimulus of competition. By extension, this lack of economic and political rigidity would imply a similar lack of cultural and ideological orthodoxy ...
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... regimes would have been maintained in France and England. Only Scandinavia, Poland, Muscovy, and the lands still under Ottoman rule would not have been subject to Habsburg power and influence—and the concomitant triumph of the Counter ...
... regimes would have been maintained in France and England. Only Scandinavia, Poland, Muscovy, and the lands still under Ottoman rule would not have been subject to Habsburg power and influence—and the concomitant triumph of the Counter ...
Contents
Defense Expenditures of the Great Powers 1930 | |
Annual Indices of Manufacturing Production 1913 | |
The Offstage Superpowers | |
Aircraft Production of the Powers 19321939 | |
Shares of World Manufacturing Output 19291938 | |
The Unfolding Crisis 19311942 | |
Tank Production in 1944 | |
STRATEGY AND ECONOMICS TODAY | |
Size of Navies 16891815 | |
STRATEGY AND ECONOMICS IN | |
17501900 | |
Britain as Hegemon? | |
The Middle Powers | |
The Crimean War and the Erosion of Russian Power | |
Military Expenditures of the Powers in the Crimean | |
The United States and the Civil | |
Conclusions | |
The Shifting Balance of World Forces | |
Total Population of the Powers 18901938 | |
Urban Population of the Powers and as Percentage | |
National Income Population and per Capita Income | |
Alliances and the Drift to War 18901914 | |
IndustrialTechnological Comparisons of the 1914 | |
U K Munitions Production 19141918 | |
IndustrialTechnological Comparisons with | |
The Coming of a Bipolar World and | |
World Indices of Manufacturing Production 1913 | |
The Challengers | |
Aircraft Production of the Powers 19391945 | |
The New Strategic Landscape | |
Total GNP and per Capita GNP of the Powers | |
The Cold War and the Third World | |
Defense Expenditures of the Powers 19481970 | |
The Fissuring of the Bipolar World | |
The Changing Economic Balances 1950 to 1980 | |
Production of World Manufacturing Industries | |
Average Annual Rate of Growth of Output | |
Shares of Gross World Product 19601980 | |
To the Twentyfirst Century | |
Chinas Balancing | |
The Japanese Dilemma | |
The EECPotential and Problems | |
The Soviet Union and Its Contradictions | |
The Problem of Number One | |
Epilogue | |
Bibliography | |
About the Author | |
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Common terms and phrases
agricultural aircraft alliance allies American armaments armed forces army Austria-Hungary Austrian balance Britain British campaign capital century China Chinese colonial commercial conflict country’s decades decline defense despite diplomacy diplomatic Dutch early East eastern economic Empire especially Europe’s European expansion expenditures exports fact fighting fleet foreign France France’s French German Germany’s global growth Habsburg Habsburg Empire Hitler’s imperial important increasing industrial investment Italian Italy Japan Japanese land larger less massive military million modern Moscow Napoleon NATO naval navy nuclear Ottoman Ottoman Empire output overseas percent Poland political population position possessed problems production regime relative revolution rise Royal Navy Russian seemed share of world Soviet Union Spain Spanish spending strategical strength struggle territories trade treaty troops turn United United Provinces USSR victory Warsaw Pact weapons West West Germany western Europe world manufacturing