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What is Complex Interdependence

Global Dimensions of Democracy and Human Rights: Problems and Perspectives
A model of world politics based on the assumptions that states are not the only important actors, security is not the dominant national goal, and military force is not the only significant instrument of foreign policy. This theory stresses cross-cutting ways in which the growing ties among transnational actors make them vulnerable to each other’s actions and sensitive to each other’s needs.
Published in Chapter:
The Free Market Economy as the Main Guarantee of the State's Socio-Economic Development and Promoting International Cooperation
Irakli Kervalishvili (Georgian Technical University, Georgia)
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-6684-4543-3.ch015
Abstract
The free market economy is a market system in which the prices of goods and services are the result of an agreement reached freely between sellers and consumers, without the intervention of outside forces. The laws and forces of supply and demand in such a market are free from the influence of government, price-fixing monopolies, or any other power. A free market is a controlled market or a regulated market in which the government intervenes in the regulation of supply and demand through non-market methods, such as laws that prohibit market entry or that directly regulate prices. A free-market economy (market economy) is a market-based economy where the prices of goods and services are freely formed by the forces of supply and demand, and they are able to reach equilibrium without government policy interference.
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The Economic Component of World Politics and the Main Global Social and Economic Problems
A model of world politics based on the assumptions that states are not the only important actors, security is not the dominant national goal, and military force is not the only significant instrument of foreign policy. This theory stresses cross-cutting ways in which the growing ties among transnational actors make them vulnerable to each other’s actions and sensitive to each other’s needs.
Full Text Chapter Download: US $37.50 Add to Cart
Main Characters of Globalization in the 21st Century
A model of world politics based on the assumptions that states are not the only important actors, security is not the dominant national goal, and military force is not the only significant instrument of foreign policy. This theory stresses cross-cutting ways in which the growing ties among transnational actors make them vulnerable to each other’s actions and sensitive to each other’s needs.
Full Text Chapter Download: US $37.50 Add to Cart
The Main Principles of Democracy and Its Role in Global Development
A model of world politics based on the assumptions that states are not the only important actors, security is not the dominant national goal, and military force is not the only significant instrument of foreign policy. This theory stresses cross-cutting ways in which the growing ties among transnational actors make them vulnerable to each other’s actions and sensitive to each other’s needs.
Full Text Chapter Download: US $37.50 Add to Cart
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