Andrew Phillips — 作者 (5)
Culture and Order in World Politics [图书] 豆瓣
作者: Andrew Phillips / Christian Reus-Smit 出版社: Cambridge University Press 2020
Understanding how cultural diversity relates to international order is an urgent contemporary challenge. Building on ideas first advanced in Reus-Smit's On Cultural Diversity (2018), this groundbreaking book advances a new framework for understanding the nexus between culture and order in world politics. Through a pioneering interdisciplinary collaboration between leading historians, international lawyers, sociologists and international relations scholars, it argues that cultural diversity in social life is ubiquitous rather than exceptional, and demonstrates that the organization of cultural diversity has been inextricably tied to the constitution and legitimation of political authority in diverse international orders, from Warring States China, through early modern Europe and the Ottoman and Qing Empires, to today's global liberal order. It highlights the successive 'diversity regimes' that have been constructed to govern cultural difference since the nineteenth century, traces the exclusions and resistances these projects have engendered and considers contemporary global vulnerabilities and axes of contestation.
How the East Was Won [图书] 豆瓣
作者: Andrew Phillips 出版社: Cambridge University Press 2021 - 10
How did upstart outsiders forge vast new empires in early modern Asia, laying the foundations for today's modern mega-states of India and China? In How the East Was Won, Andrew Phillips answers reveals the crucial parallels uniting the Mughal Empire, the Qing Dynasty and the British Raj. Vastly outnumbered and stigmatised as parvenus, the Mughals and Manchus pioneered similar strategies of cultural statecraft, first to build the multicultural coalitions necessary for conquest, and then to bind the indigenous collaborators needed to subsequently uphold imperial rule. The English East India Company later adapted the same 'define and conquer' and 'define and rule' strategies to carve out the West's biggest colonial empire in Asia. Refuting existing accounts of the 'rise of the West', this book foregrounds the profoundly imitative rather than innovative character of Western colonialism to advance a new explanation of how universal empires arise and endure.
Scala谜题 [图书] 豆瓣
Scala Puzzlers
作者: Andrew Phillips / Nermin Serifovic 译者: 包春霞 / 冷钰冰 出版社: 人民邮电出版社 2017 - 11
Scala是一种多范式的编程语言,其设计初衷是要整合面向对象编程和函数式编程的各种特性。
本书整合了众多典型的Scala代码示例,深入解密Scala。书中不仅介绍了Scala语言,还介绍了编译器。本书通过有趣的方式带领读者学习并深入理解和掌握Scala。全书共有36个谜题,每一个谜题都可以丰富读者的知识,并能够让读者更深入地了解Scala。
本书适合于对Scala感兴趣的开发者、对JVM平台上的语言以及函数式编程感兴趣的程序员阅读。
Outsourcing Empire: How Company-States Made the Modern World [图书] 豆瓣
作者: J. C. Sharman / Andrew Phillips 出版社: Princeton University Press 2020 - 6
How chartered company-states spearheaded European expansion and helped create the world’s first genuinely global order
From Spanish conquistadors to British colonialists, the prevailing story of European empire-building has focused on the rival ambitions of competing states. But as Outsourcing Empires shows, from the seventeenth to the twentieth centuries, company-states―not sovereign states―drove European expansion, building the world’s first genuinely international system. Company-states were hybrid ventures: pioneering multinational trading firms run for profit, with founding charters that granted them sovereign powers of war, peace, and rule. Those like the English and Dutch East India Companies carved out corporate empires in Asia, while other company-states pushed forward European expansion through North America, Africa, and the South Pacific. In this comparative exploration, Andrew Phillips and J. C. Sharman explain the rise and fall of company-states, why some succeeded while others failed, and their role as vanguards of capitalism and imperialism.
In dealing with alien civilizations to the East and West, Europeans relied primarily on company-states to mediate geographic and cultural distances in trade and diplomacy. Emerging as improvised solutions to bridge the gap between European rulers’ expansive geopolitical ambitions and their scarce means, company-states succeeded best where they could balance the twin imperatives of power and profit. Yet as European states strengthened from the late eighteenth century onward, and a sense of separate public and private spheres grew, the company-states lost their usefulness and legitimacy.
Bringing a fresh understanding to the ways cross-cultural relations were handled across the oceans, Outsourcing Empire examines the significance of company-states as key progenitors of the globalized world.