America Inc.? : innovation and enterprise in the national security state / Linda Weiss.
Series: Cornell studies in political economyPublisher: Ithaca ; London : Cornell University Press, [2014]Copyright date: ©2014Description: xii, 262 pages : illustrations ; 24 cmContent type:- text
- unmediated
- volume
- 9780801452680
- 0801452686
- 9780801479304
- 0801479304
- 338.0973 23
- HC110.D4 W48 2014
Item type | Current library | Shelving location | Call number | Copy number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Book | NMC Library | Stacks | HC110 .D4 W48 2014 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 1 | Available | 33039001339760 |
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Includes bibliographical references (pages 235-253) and index.
The national security state and technology leadership -- The U.S. puzzle -- The argument -- Re-viewing the NSS-private sector relationship -- Existing accounts: discounting, sidelining, civilianizing the state -- The approach of this book -- New thinking on the American state -- Rise of the national security state as technology enterprise -- Emergence (1945-1957) -- Growth: the Sputnik effect (1958-1968) -- Crisis: the legitimation and innovation deficits (1969-1979) -- Reform and reorientation : beginnings (1980-1989) -- Reform and reorientation : consolidation (1990-1999) -- Re-visioning (2000-2012) -- Investing in new ventures -- Geopolitical roots of the U.S. venture capital industry -- Post-cold war trends: new funds for a new security environment -- Beyond serendipity: procuring transformative technology -- Technology procurement versus R&D: the activist element of government purchasing -- Spin-off and spin-around: serendipitous and purposeful -- Breaching the wall: nudging towards military-commercial (re-)integration -- Reorienting the public-private partnership -- Structural changes in the domestic arena -- Reorientation: the quest for commercial viability -- Beyond a military-industrial divide: innovating for both security and commerce -- No more breakthroughs? -- Post-9/11 decline of the NSS technology enterprise? -- Nanotechnology: a coordinated effort -- Robotics: the drive for drones -- Clean energy: from laggard to leader? -- Caveat: a faltering NSS innovation engine? -- Hybridization and American anti-statism -- The significance of hybridization -- An American tendency? -- Nature of the beast: neither "privatization" nor "outsourcing" -- Innovation hybrids -- Penetrating the myths of the military-commerce relationship -- Four myths laid bare -- Serendipitous spin-off -- Hidden industrial policy -- Wall of separation and military-industrial complex -- R&D spending creates innovation leadership -- The defense spending question: in search of the Holy Grail? -- Hybrid state, hybrid capitalism, great power turning point -- Comparative institutions and varieties of capitalism -- The American state -- Great power turning point -- Notes -- References -- Acknowledgments.
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