9781069482679 - the political economy of violence: allocation, power, and the logic of conflict par gogo, joshua (13 résultats)

- Couverture souple
Vendeur : California Books, Miami, FL, Etats-UnisCalifornia Books
Contacter le vendeurVendeur avec une évaluation de 4 étoilesEtat: Neuf
EUR 37,87
Frais de port gratuitsExpédition nationale : Etats-UnisQuantité disponible : Plus de 20 disponibles
Etat : New.

- Couverture souple
Vendeur : CreativeCenters, Peoria, IL, Etats-UnisCreativeCenters
Contacter le vendeurVendeur avec une évaluation de 5 étoilesEtat: Neuf
EUR 37,86
EUR 4,81 expéditionExpédition nationale : Etats-UnisQuantité disponible : 1 disponible(s)
paperback. Etat : New.

- Couverture souple
Vendeur : Rarewaves.com USA, London, LONDO, Royaume-UniRarewaves.com USA
Contacter le vendeurVendeur avec une évaluation de 5 étoilesEtat: Neuf
EUR 43,23
Frais de port gratuitsExpédition depuis Royaume-Uni vers Etats-UnisQuantité disponible : Plus de 20 disponibles
Paperback. Etat : New.

- Couverture souple
Vendeur : PBShop.store UK, Fairford, GLOS, Royaume-UniPBShop.store UK
Contacter le vendeurVendeur avec une évaluation de 5 étoilesEtat: Neuf
EUR 37,63
EUR 5,89 expéditionExpédition depuis Royaume-Uni vers Etats-UnisQuantité disponible : Plus de 20 disponibles
PAP. Etat : New. New Book. Shipped from UK. Established seller since 2000.

- Couverture souple
Vendeur : Books Puddle, New York, NY, Etats-UnisBooks Puddle
Contacter le vendeurVendeur avec une évaluation de 4 étoilesEtat: Neuf
EUR 70,95
EUR 3,49 expéditionExpédition nationale : Etats-UnisQuantité disponible : 4 disponible(s)
Etat : New.

- Couverture souple
Vendeur : Rarewaves.com UK, London, Royaume-UniRarewaves.com UK
Contacter le vendeurVendeur avec une évaluation de 5 étoilesEtat: Neuf
EUR 39,71
EUR 76,22 expéditionExpédition depuis Royaume-Uni vers Etats-UnisQuantité disponible : Plus de 20 disponibles
Paperback. Etat : New.

- Couverture souple
- impression à la demande
Vendeur : Grand Eagle Retail, Bensenville, IL, Etats-UnisGrand Eagle Retail
Contacter le vendeurVendeur avec une évaluation de 5 étoilesEtat: Neuf
EUR 37,86
Frais de port gratuitsExpédition nationale : Etats-UnisQuantité disponible : 1 disponible(s)
Paperback. Etat : new. Paperback. Why do some societies experience persistent instability while others sustain continuity, even under conditions of inequality?The Political Economy of Violence offers a rigorous and original framework for understanding conflict, instability, and the conditions for stability in complex systems. Mo…ving beyond conventional explanations that focus on isolated causes, the book argues that violence is not accidental or irrational; it is a structural outcome of how systems allocate resources, distribute power, and sustain, or lose, legitimacy.At the center of the analysis is the concept of pressure: the tension generated by uneven allocation of resources, opportunities, and burdens. The book develops a unified model in which pressure accumulates within systems under conditions of constrained adjustment, or is displaced across systems through interdependence. These dynamics are formalized through a dual-loop framework: an internal loop in which pressure builds and escalates, and an external loop in which pressure is redistributed across interconnected systems, returning through feedback and sustaining instability at a broader scale.The book further introduces the MASI framework-Mobility, Access to Voice, Spatial Burden, and Welfare Gap-as a model of adjustment capacity, explaining how systems absorb, redistribute, or amplify pressure under varying structural conditions. Where these pathways are strong, pressure is managed; where they weaken, instability intensifies.Challenging traditional notions of equilibrium, the book redefines stability as a structural condition arising from the alignment of allocation, power, and legitimacy. Stability, in this framework, is not the absence of tension but the capacity of systems to organize and manage it. Misalignment between these elements produces persistent pressure, constrained adjustment, and the conditions under which conflict may escalate into violence.Integrating insights from political economy, development theory, and institutional analysis, this work provides a general theory of instability and violence applicable across diverse contexts, including resource-rich and developing economies. It offers scholars, policymakers, and practitioners a new lens for understanding how inequality, governance structures, and global interdependence interact to produce both stability and instability.Analytical, disciplined, and globally relevant, The Political Economy of Violence advances a central insight: systems do not fail because they contain tension; they fail because they lose the capacity to manage it. Violence is not accidental, it is structural. This book shows how inequality generates pressure within and across systems, and how alignment of allocation, power, and legitimacy shapes stability This item is printed on demand. Shipping may be from multiple locations in the US or from the UK, depending on stock availability.

- Couverture souple
- impression à la demande
Vendeur : Majestic Books, Hounslow, Royaume-UniMajestic Books
Contacter le vendeurVendeur avec une évaluation de 4 étoilesEtat: Neuf
EUR 69,22
EUR 7,62 expéditionExpédition depuis Royaume-Uni vers Etats-UnisQuantité disponible : 4 disponible(s)
Etat : New. Print on Demand.

- Couverture souple
- impression à la demande
Vendeur : Biblios, frankfurt am main, HESSE, AllemagneBiblios
Contacter le vendeurVendeur avec une évaluation de 4 étoilesEtat: Neuf
EUR 68,72
EUR 9,95 expéditionExpédition depuis Allemagne vers Etats-UnisQuantité disponible : 4 disponible(s)
Etat : New. PRINT ON DEMAND.

- Couverture souple
- impression à la demande
Vendeur : CitiRetail, Stevenage, Royaume-UniCitiRetail
Contacter le vendeurVendeur avec une évaluation de 5 étoilesEtat: Neuf
EUR 42,26
EUR 43,39 expéditionExpédition depuis Royaume-Uni vers Etats-UnisQuantité disponible : 1 disponible(s)
Paperback. Etat : new. Paperback. Why do some societies experience persistent instability while others sustain continuity, even under conditions of inequality?The Political Economy of Violence offers a rigorous and original framework for understanding conflict, instability, and the conditions for stability in complex systems. Mo…ving beyond conventional explanations that focus on isolated causes, the book argues that violence is not accidental or irrational; it is a structural outcome of how systems allocate resources, distribute power, and sustain, or lose, legitimacy.At the center of the analysis is the concept of pressure: the tension generated by uneven allocation of resources, opportunities, and burdens. The book develops a unified model in which pressure accumulates within systems under conditions of constrained adjustment, or is displaced across systems through interdependence. These dynamics are formalized through a dual-loop framework: an internal loop in which pressure builds and escalates, and an external loop in which pressure is redistributed across interconnected systems, returning through feedback and sustaining instability at a broader scale.The book further introduces the MASI framework-Mobility, Access to Voice, Spatial Burden, and Welfare Gap-as a model of adjustment capacity, explaining how systems absorb, redistribute, or amplify pressure under varying structural conditions. Where these pathways are strong, pressure is managed; where they weaken, instability intensifies.Challenging traditional notions of equilibrium, the book redefines stability as a structural condition arising from the alignment of allocation, power, and legitimacy. Stability, in this framework, is not the absence of tension but the capacity of systems to organize and manage it. Misalignment between these elements produces persistent pressure, constrained adjustment, and the conditions under which conflict may escalate into violence.Integrating insights from political economy, development theory, and institutional analysis, this work provides a general theory of instability and violence applicable across diverse contexts, including resource-rich and developing economies. It offers scholars, policymakers, and practitioners a new lens for understanding how inequality, governance structures, and global interdependence interact to produce both stability and instability.Analytical, disciplined, and globally relevant, The Political Economy of Violence advances a central insight: systems do not fail because they contain tension; they fail because they lose the capacity to manage it. Violence is not accidental, it is structural. This book shows how inequality generates pressure within and across systems, and how alignment of allocation, power, and legitimacy shapes stability This item is printed on demand. Shipping may be from our UK warehouse or from our Australian or US warehouses, depending on stock availability.

- Couverture souple
- impression à la demande
Vendeur : AussieBookSeller, Truganina, VIC, AustralieAussieBookSeller
Contacter le vendeurVendeur avec une évaluation de 5 étoilesEtat: Neuf
EUR 65,82
EUR 32,39 expéditionExpédition depuis Australie vers Etats-UnisQuantité disponible : 1 disponible(s)
Paperback. Etat : new. Paperback. Why do some societies experience persistent instability while others sustain continuity, even under conditions of inequality?The Political Economy of Violence offers a rigorous and original framework for understanding conflict, instability, and the conditions for stability in complex systems. Mo…ving beyond conventional explanations that focus on isolated causes, the book argues that violence is not accidental or irrational; it is a structural outcome of how systems allocate resources, distribute power, and sustain, or lose, legitimacy.At the center of the analysis is the concept of pressure: the tension generated by uneven allocation of resources, opportunities, and burdens. The book develops a unified model in which pressure accumulates within systems under conditions of constrained adjustment, or is displaced across systems through interdependence. These dynamics are formalized through a dual-loop framework: an internal loop in which pressure builds and escalates, and an external loop in which pressure is redistributed across interconnected systems, returning through feedback and sustaining instability at a broader scale.The book further introduces the MASI framework-Mobility, Access to Voice, Spatial Burden, and Welfare Gap-as a model of adjustment capacity, explaining how systems absorb, redistribute, or amplify pressure under varying structural conditions. Where these pathways are strong, pressure is managed; where they weaken, instability intensifies.Challenging traditional notions of equilibrium, the book redefines stability as a structural condition arising from the alignment of allocation, power, and legitimacy. Stability, in this framework, is not the absence of tension but the capacity of systems to organize and manage it. Misalignment between these elements produces persistent pressure, constrained adjustment, and the conditions under which conflict may escalate into violence.Integrating insights from political economy, development theory, and institutional analysis, this work provides a general theory of instability and violence applicable across diverse contexts, including resource-rich and developing economies. It offers scholars, policymakers, and practitioners a new lens for understanding how inequality, governance structures, and global interdependence interact to produce both stability and instability.Analytical, disciplined, and globally relevant, The Political Economy of Violence advances a central insight: systems do not fail because they contain tension; they fail because they lose the capacity to manage it. Violence is not accidental, it is structural. This book shows how inequality generates pressure within and across systems, and how alignment of allocation, power, and legitimacy shapes stability This item is printed on demand. Shipping may be from our Sydney, NSW warehouse or from our UK or US warehouse, depending on stock availability.

- Couverture souple
- impression à la demande
Vendeur : AHA-BUCH GmbH, Einbeck, AllemagneAHA-BUCH GmbH
Contacter le vendeurVendeur avec une évaluation de 5 étoilesEtat: Neuf
EUR 54,65
EUR 63,35 expéditionExpédition depuis Allemagne vers Etats-UnisQuantité disponible : 2 disponible(s)
Taschenbuch. Etat : Neu. nach der Bestellung gedruckt Neuware - Printed after ordering - Why do some societies experience persistent instability while others sustain continuity, even under conditions of inequality The Political Economy of Violence offers a rigorous and original framework for understanding conflict, instability,…and the conditions for stability in complex systems. Moving beyond conventional explanations that focus on isolated causes, the book argues that violence is not accidental or irrational; it is a structural outcome of how systems allocate resources, distribute power, and sustain, or lose, legitimacy.At the center of the analysis is the concept of pressure: the tension generated by uneven allocation of resources, opportunities, and burdens. The book develops a unified model in which pressure accumulates within systems under conditions of constrained adjustment, or is displaced across systems through interdependence. These dynamics are formalized through a dual-loop framework: an internal loop in which pressure builds and escalates, and an external loop in which pressure is redistributed across interconnected systems, returning through feedback and sustaining instability at a broader scale.The book further introduces the MASI framework-Mobility, Access to Voice, Spatial Burden, and Welfare Gap-as a model of adjustment capacity, explaining how systems absorb, redistribute, or amplify pressure under varying structural conditions. Where these pathways are strong, pressure is managed; where they weaken, instability intensifies.Challenging traditional notions of equilibrium, the book redefines stability as a structural condition arising from the alignment of allocation, power, and legitimacy. Stability, in this framework, is not the absence of tension but the capacity of systems to organize and manage it. Misalignment between these elements produces persistent pressure, constrained adjustment, and the conditions under which conflict may escalate into violence.Integrating insights from political economy, development theory, and institutional analysis, this work provides a general theory of instability and violence applicable across diverse contexts, including resource-rich and developing economies. It offers scholars, policymakers, and practitioners a new lens for understanding how inequality, governance structures, and global interdependence interact to produce both stability and instability.Analytical, disciplined, and globally relevant, The Political Economy of Violence advances a central insight: systems do not fail because they contain tension; they fail because they lose the capacity to manage it.

- Couverture souple
- impression à la demande
Vendeur : preigu, Osnabrück, Allemagnepreigu
Contacter le vendeurVendeur avec une évaluation de 5 étoilesEtat: Neuf
EUR 50,35
EUR 70,00 expéditionExpédition depuis Allemagne vers Etats-UnisQuantité disponible : 5 disponible(s)
Taschenbuch. Etat : Neu. THE POLITICAL ECONOMY OF VIOLENCE | Allocation, Power, and the Logic of Conflict | Joshua Gogo | Taschenbuch | Englisch | 2026 | Afcote Press | EAN 9781069482679 | Verantwortliche Person für die EU: Libri GmbH, Europaallee 1, 36244 Bad Hersfeld, gpsr[at]libri[dot]de | Anbieter: preigu Print on Demand.