Financial statecraft' goes beyond sanctions against rogue states. The aims of financial statecraft may be defensive or offensive, its targets bilateral or systemic, and its instruments financial or monetary. Regions and countries profiled include Argentina, Venezuela, Brazil, India, Southeast Asia, China, and Japan.
Benjamin J. Cohen, University of California, USA
John Echeverri-Gent, University of Virginia. USA
Natasha Hamilton-Hart, University of Auckland, New Zealand
Ignacio Labaqui, Universidad Catolica Argentina, Argentina
Injoo Sohn, University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong
Ulrich Volz, University of London, UK
1. New Kids on the Block: Rising Multipolarity, More Financial Statecraft; Leslie Elliott Armijo and Saori N. Katada 2. Who's Afraid of Reversing Neoliberal Reforms? The Financial Statecraft of Argentina and Venezuela; Ignácio Labaqui 3. Brave New World? The Politics of International Finance in Brazil and India; Leslie Elliott Armijo and John Echeverri-Gent 4. The End of Monetary Mercantilism in Southeast Asia?; Natasha Hamilton-Hart 5. All Politics is Local: The Renminbi's Prospects as a Future Global Currency; Ulrich Volz 6. Regionalism as Financial Statecraft: Pursuit of a Counterweight Strategy by China and Japan; Saori N. Katada and Injoo Sohn 7. The Financial Statecraft of Emerging Powers: How, Why and So What?; Saori N. Katada and Leslie Elliott Armijo