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Energy and the Politics of the North Atlantic (repost)

Posted By: libr
Energy and the Politics of the North Atlantic (repost)

Energy and the Politics of the North Atlantic by George A. Gonzalez
English | 2013 | ISBN: 1438447957 | 191 pages | PDF | 1,1 MB

Documents how energy resource acquisition has been the driving motivator for European and American international relations.

Since the onset of the Second Industrial Revolution in the second half of the nineteenth century, energy has become a key axis of politics and international relations, particularly for the United States and Western Europe. In Energy and the Politics of the North Atlantic,George A. Gonzalez documents how the United States–thanks to its copious reserves of oil, coal, and natural gas–was able to assume a dominant position in the world system by the 1920s. This energy/economic imbalance was an important causal factor underlying the eruption of World War II. After 1945, and in the context of the Cold War and the war against communism, the United States used its access to both fossil fuels and nuclear power as a means to defeat the Soviet Union and its allies. Driving American foreign policy, Gonzalez argues, is a domestic system of urban sprawl based on the automobile and the energy reserves necessary to maintain it. The massive consumer demand created by urban sprawl underpins US foreign policy in the Middle East since the 1970s, while it is concerns over access to energy that is driving the European Union project.