1st Edition

Greece in the 21st Century The Politics and Economics of a Crisis

Edited By Vassilis Fouskas, Constantine Dimoulas Copyright 2018
226 Pages
by Routledge

226 Pages
by Routledge

226 Pages
by Routledge

For most of the first part of the 21st century Greece has been seen as a critical battlefield for the survival of the powerful and the adjustment or extinction of the weak, as if all the historical contradictions of the global financial crisis and the eurozone crisis were concentrated in that tiny part of the world, with a population of just 11 million people and a GDP of less than 2% of that of... Read more

Introduction and Acknowledgments - What's in the Greek Cauldron? 1 Eurozone Authoritarianism and the Neoliberal Project in Greece and Southern Europe 2 Sovereign Debt or Balance of Payments Crisis? Exploring the Structural Logic of Adjustment in the Eurozone 3 Greece and the Crisis of the Eurozone: A Structural Analysis 4 Is There Really a Eurozone Crisis? 5 Competing Explanations and Strategies for the Greek Crisis and the Question of the Productive Model 6 Internal Devaluation and Hegemonic Crisis (2010-16) 7 The ‘Politics of Fulfilment’ as a Preliminary for the Making of a Precarious State in Greece 8 The Political Effects of the Greek Economic Crisis: The Collapse of the Old Two-Party System 9 Blaming the Other: An Enquiry into the Cultural and Political Preconditions of the Greek Crisis

Biography

Constantine Dimoulas is an Assistant Professor in social administration and evaluation of social programmes at Panteion University, Greece.



Vassilis K. Fouskas is Professor of international politics and economics at the University of East London, UK, and the founding editor of the Journal of Balkan and Near Eastern Studies (Taylor & Francis).