Joshua S. Goldstein befasst sich mit den drängendsten Fragen der Menschheit und untersucht diese aus der Perspektive der internationalen Beziehungen. Sein Werk dringt tief in die Bereiche Krieg, Frieden, Diplomatie und Wirtschaftsgeschichte ein und deckt die komplexen Muster menschlicher Konflikte und Zusammenarbeit auf. Goldsteins Analyse zeichnet sich durch Präzision und das Bestreben aus, die treibenden Kräfte globaler Ereignisse zu verstehen, und bietet den Lesern eine tiefgründige Perspektive auf die Welt. Seine Schriften stellen einen bedeutenden Beitrag zum Diskurs über die Zukunft der Menschheit dar.
This brief edition of Goldstein's best-selling 'International Relations' covers the subject comprehensively but more compactly than the comprehensive version, giving professors more latitude to use supplementary readings or focus on special topics and interests.
The first book ever to offer a proven, fast, inexpensive, practical approach
to permanently cutting greenhouse gas emissions: increasing our commitment to
both renewable and nuclear energy, together.
Remains of the Everyday traces the changing material culture and industrial ecology of China through the lens of recycling. Over the last century, waste recovery and secondhand goods markets have been integral to Beijing’s economic functioning and cultural identity, and acts of recycling have figured centrally in the ideological imagination of modernity and citizenship. On the one hand, the Chinese state has repeatedly promoted acts of voluntary recycling as exemplary of conscientious citizenship. On the other, informal recycling networks—from the night soil carriers of the Republican era to the collectors of plastic and cardboard in Beijing’s neighborhoods today—have been represented as undisciplined, polluting, and technologically primitive due to the municipal government’s failure to control them. The result, Joshua Goldstein argues, is the repeatedly re-inscribed exclusion of waste workers from formations of modern urban citizenship as well as the intrinsic liminality of recycling itself as an economic process.