The Future of Power
Its Changing Nature and Use in the Twenty-first Century
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Narrated by:
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Erik Synnestvedt
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By:
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Joseph Nye
About this listen
Power evolves.
In the 16th century, control of colonies and gold bullion gave Spain the edge; 17th-century Netherlands profited from trade and finance; 18th-century France gained from its larger population, while 19th-century British power rested on its primacy in the Industrial Revolution and its navy. In the era of Kennedy and Khrushchev, power resources were measured in terms of nuclear missiles, industrial capacity, and numbers of men under arms and tanks lined up ready to cross the plains of Eastern Europe. But the global information age of the 21st century is quickly rendering these traditional markers of power obsolete, remapping power relationships.
In The Future of Power, Joseph S. Nye, Jr., a longtime analyst of power and a hands-on practitioner in government, delivers a new power narrative that considers the shifts, innovations, bold technologies, and new relationships that will define the 21st century. He shows how power resources are adapting to the digital age and how smart power strategies must include more than a country’s military strength. Information once reserved for the government is ow available for mass consumption. The Internet has literally put power at the fingertips of nonstate agents, allowing them to launch cyberattacks on governments from their homes and creating a security threat that is felt worldwide. But the cyberage has also created a new power frontier among states, ripe with opportunity for developing countries. At the beginning of the twenty-first century, America had about a quarter of the world’s product but only 5 percent of its population. It was indisputably the most powerful nation in the world, unsurpassed in military strength and ownership of world resources. Today, China, Brazil, India, and others are increasing their share of world power resources, but remain unlikely to surpass America as the most powerful nation if the United States adopts new strategies designed for a global information age.The Internet’s ultimate impact on the nature of power is a concern shared by nations around the world. The Future of Power, by examining what it means to be powerful in the 21st century, illuminates the road ahead.
©2011 Joseph Nye (P)2011 Gildan Media CorpWhat listeners say about The Future of Power
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- VNP
- 15-08-21
Distractive reading voice
The reading voice is very unnatural and distractive with such a dramatic emphasis placed at the end of every word pronounced.
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- Adrian J. Smith
- 21-12-19
A decent overview of the nature of power
I first read this 8 years ago, but felt it deserved a second listen. Nye, best known for theorising soft power, examines the different variables of power and how they interact. Many of this may not be revelatory to those more familiar with international relations, but it does provide a decent recap, and an excellent primer for those less familiar.
The audible version by Erik Synnestvedt has a rather peculiar tone which overstresses the last syllable of every sentence, which can be off putting at times, but still a decent listen.
For other books on power, The 48 Laws of Power is a far more expansive work, however, not so readily applicable to international relations. However, an essential text for International Relations theory, highly complimentary to other works out there.
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- B. Buring
- 25-05-11
Narrator distracts from engaging analysis
The publisher has lumped this book among its self-help titles, which seems to have dictated the unfortunate choice of narrator. Usually, after a few minutes, it's no effort to pair up an author's words to the given voice and so move happily on to the substance of story/message/thesis. In this case, however, the pretentious intonation and odd pacing are only a constant distraction from what otherwise is an engaging (and persuasive) analysis on the topic of persuasion.
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4 people found this helpful