The Advantages and Pitfalls of Leveraging Humanitarian Development and Diplomacy Towards National Security

Book Chapter
David Alpher
David Alpher
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The Advantages and Pitfalls of Leveraging Humanitarian Development and Diplomacy Towards National Security
Authors: David Alpher
Date: June 30, 2014
Published Date: June 30, 2014
Publisher: Springer
ISBN: 978-3-319-06093-4

  • Examines the role that leverage plays in political and economic bargaining, resource and economic investment
  • Investigates the role of leverage in the economic crisis of 2008-09 and in the broader context of the theory of capitalism
  • Discusses the risk and theory behind over-leveraging in both economic and political contexts
Leveraging, according to David M. Anderson and his colleagues, is both a basic principle of human conduct and the most dominant strategy in recent years that individuals, organizations and countries use to pursue their ends.  Although many scholars agree that a crisis of "over-leveraging" caused the financial crisis of 2008-09, it has not been appreciated that an "over-leveraging" crisis has existed in American politics and the American family system as well.  This book addresses the need for a "Leverage Mean" (falling between the extremes of too much leverage and too little leverage)  in the economy, politics, family life, and international relations.  It identifies three different kinds of leveraging -- bargaining, resource, and investment  and provides an explanatory and normative theory which draws on the fields of economics, political science, sociology, history, international relations, law, and philosophy.  Moreover, it shows how the dissolution of the Cold War, the dismantling of the modern family, and the rise of the Internet along with the deregulation of the financial services industry led to the diffusion of power which has made leveraging of the first importance for everyone.  This book should be of interest to social scientists, philosophers, political theorists, public policy makers and politicians.

 

David Anderson and his colleagues are the first to characterize and assess one of the major instruments of power of the contemporary era. This volume represents the best work on leverage since Archimedes and will be widely read and discussed.

-Benjamin Ginsberg, David Bernstein Professor of Political Science Chair, Center for Advanced Governmental Studies Johns Hopkins University

 

Leverage  might literally be the operative word of the 21st century. Anderson's volume is a wide-ranging and illuminating study of this fundamental and dynamic concept.

-Parag Khanna, Senior Fellow New America Foundation

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