Notre Dame London: Fischer Hall Library
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States, debt, and power : 'saints' and 'sinners' in European history and integration / Kenneth Dyson.

By: Publisher: Oxford Oxford University Press, 2014Edition: First editionDescription: xxiii, 771 pages ; 26 cmContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 0198714076
  • 9780198714071
Subject(s): Online resources:
Contents:
Machine generated contents note: 1.Contextualizing Debt: History, Morality, and the Triple Structural Dimension -- 2.The Nature of Sovereign Creditworthiness: Hierarchy, Sovereignty, and Responsibility -- 3.Moralizing Credit: Bad Debt, Good Debt, and the Troubled Conscience -- pt. I Debt and Political Rule in European History -- 4.The Evolution of Public Debt -- 5.Financial Repression, Debasement, and the Historic Arc of Default -- 6.Theological Traces and Social Contexts -- 7.The Dynamics of Public Debt in Historical Perspective: The Limitations of Formal Economic Reasoning -- pt. II Law, Culture, and Statecraft -- 8.Law, Public Debt, and the Paradoxes of Power -- 9.Economic Cultures, Ideologies of Debt, and State Virtue -- 10.Space, Time, and Statecraft: Saints. Fallen Angels, False Prophets, Redeemers, and Sinners -- pt. III State Liability and Territorial Control -- 11.States and Financial Markets: The Imbalance of Power --
Contents note continued: 12.Professional Consensus, Political Silence, and Sovereign Creditworthiness -- 13.The Dynamics of External Imbalances and Debt -- 14.Which Truth? The Power of Numeric Indicators and Probabilistic Reasoning about Public Debt -- 15.Public Debt Dynamics: Political Will and State Capacity -- 16.Public Debt and Multilevel Statehood: Sub-National Fiscal Governance, Structural Imbalances, and `Stand-Alone' Fiscal Capacity -- pt. IV Sovereign Creditworthiness and European Integration -- 17.Still the `Old' Europe? Historical Legacies and Long-Term Political Challenges -- 18.The Achilles Heel of Post-War European Integration: Endogenous Preference Formation and the Boundaries of Creditor-State Power.
List(s) this item appears in: EU
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Holdings
Item type Current library Class number Status Notes Date due Barcode Item reservations
Book-Circulating Book-Circulating Fischer Hall Library Main shelves HJ8615. D97 2014 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available Purchased with the support of the Nanovic Institute for European Studies. B000770
Total reservations: 0

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Machine generated contents note: 1.Contextualizing Debt: History, Morality, and the Triple Structural Dimension -- 2.The Nature of Sovereign Creditworthiness: Hierarchy, Sovereignty, and Responsibility -- 3.Moralizing Credit: Bad Debt, Good Debt, and the Troubled Conscience -- pt. I Debt and Political Rule in European History -- 4.The Evolution of Public Debt -- 5.Financial Repression, Debasement, and the Historic Arc of Default -- 6.Theological Traces and Social Contexts -- 7.The Dynamics of Public Debt in Historical Perspective: The Limitations of Formal Economic Reasoning -- pt. II Law, Culture, and Statecraft -- 8.Law, Public Debt, and the Paradoxes of Power -- 9.Economic Cultures, Ideologies of Debt, and State Virtue -- 10.Space, Time, and Statecraft: Saints. Fallen Angels, False Prophets, Redeemers, and Sinners -- pt. III State Liability and Territorial Control -- 11.States and Financial Markets: The Imbalance of Power --

Contents note continued: 12.Professional Consensus, Political Silence, and Sovereign Creditworthiness -- 13.The Dynamics of External Imbalances and Debt -- 14.Which Truth? The Power of Numeric Indicators and Probabilistic Reasoning about Public Debt -- 15.Public Debt Dynamics: Political Will and State Capacity -- 16.Public Debt and Multilevel Statehood: Sub-National Fiscal Governance, Structural Imbalances, and `Stand-Alone' Fiscal Capacity -- pt. IV Sovereign Creditworthiness and European Integration -- 17.Still the `Old' Europe? Historical Legacies and Long-Term Political Challenges -- 18.The Achilles Heel of Post-War European Integration: Endogenous Preference Formation and the Boundaries of Creditor-State Power.