Photo of Stephen BurmanStephen Burman
Reader (Centre for Global Political Economy)

Selected publications

Article

Burman, Stephen (1979) The Illusion of Progress: Race and Politics in Atlanta, Georgia. Ethnic and Racial Studies, 2 (4). pp. 441-454. ISSN 0141-9870

Book

Burman, Stephen (2007) The State of the American Empire: How the USA Shapes the World. The Earthscan Atlas Series . Routledge. ISBN 9781844074280

Burman, Stephen (1995) The Black Progress Question: Explaining the African-American Predicament. SAGE Series on Race and Ethnic Relations, 9 . Sage, p. 236. ISBN 9780803950610

Burman, Stephen (1991) America in the Modern World: The Transcendence of US Hegemony. Prentice Hall / Harvester Wheatsheaf. ISBN 9780745003634

Book Section

Burman, Stephen (2005) 'If I Ruled the World': National Interest and Global Responsibility in American Foreign Policy. In: Brinks, Jan Herman, Rock, Stella and Timms, Edward (eds.) Nationalist Myths and Modern Media: Contested Identities in the Age of Globalisation. International Library of Political Studies . Tauris Academic Studies, pp. 15-26. ISBN 9781845110383

Burman, Stephen (2003) Foreign economic policy. In: Singh, Robert (ed.) Governing America: the politics of a divided democracy. Oxford University Press, pp. 286-301. ISBN 9780199250493

Burman, Stephen (2000) American Renewal: Domestic Transformation and Global Political Economy. In: Thompson, Grahame (ed.) Markets. The United States in the Twentieth Century . Hodder Arnold H&S. ISBN 9780340758250

Burman, Stephen (1995) America in Transition: Domestic Weakness and International Competitiveness. In: Thompson, Grahame (ed.) Markets. The United States in the Twentieth Century . Hodder Arnold H&S. ISBN 9780340596883

Conference or Workshop Item

Burman, Stephen (2002) Continental Drift: European Integration and American Hegemony. In: 2nd International Conference on Which Global Village, Genoa, ITALY.

Reports and working papers

Burman, Stephen (2015) Research analysts paper: US and emerging powers. Other. Americas Research Group.