Geography Reference
In-Depth Information
Vogel, Trading Up: Consumerism and Environmental Regulation in the Global Economy (Cambridge, MA: Harvard
University Press, 1995). On the way in which powerful states seek to force “adjustment” onto other states, see Beth
Simmons, Who Adjusts? Domestic Sources of Foreign Economic Policy during the Interwar Period (Princeton, NJ:
Princeton University Press, 1994); and Michael Mastanduno, “System Maker and Privilege Taker: U.S. Power and
the International Political Economy,” World Politics 61, no. 1 (January 2009), 121-54.
57 Krisch, “More equal than the rest?” 161.
58 This is the extraterritoriality tool that has been used by the United States with its Helms-Burton law, which
sanctions countries that trade with companies and property that have been expropriated by Cuba. See Vaughan
Lowe, “United States Extraterritorial Jurisdiction: The Helms-Burton and D'Amato Acts,” International and Com-
parative Law Quarterly vol. 46, 378-90.
59 Krisch, “International Law in Times of Hegemony,” 390.
 
 
 
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