$3,000 marketing and publicity budget
Features and excerpts in The Nation, Truthout, In These Times,
Jacobin, Mother Jones, Truthdig,
Promotion through TomDispatch.com, which is syndicated in The
Nation, Truthout, Mother Jones, Salon, Common Dreams, and
others.
Publicity and promotion in conjunction with the author's speaking
engagements
Alfred McCoy holds the Harrington Chair in History at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. He is author of The Politics of Heroin, the classic study of drug trafficking that the CIA tried to suppress, and In the Shadows of the American Century.
"An ambitious effort to discern patterns in the rise and fall of
world empires.... McCoy’s account is compelling...with many
provocative observations on world history and its present
twists." —Kirkus
"To Govern the Globe is a brilliant distillation of 700
years of geopolitics, exposing how we arrived where we are, amidst
the worsening climate crisis and collapsing world orders. Al
McCoy’s eloquently written book is a call to action for us all, as
time still remains to prevent an unprecedented cascade of
catastrophes." —Amy Goodman, host of "Democracy Now!"
"McCoy is one of the most eminent scholars in the world on the
abuse of power and authority, on surveillance and repression, on
the historical evolution of state-sanctioned torture in the US and
elsewhere, and, more recently, on the rapidly declining state of
the US empire. McCoy’s latest book “To Govern the Globe” is a
formidable work of scholarship spanning an incredible arc of world
history. Yet it is a gripping and fast-paced read that manages to
distill the complex history of the rise and fall of world empires
into a gripping narrative that is simultaneously exhilarating and
terrifying. The book’s scope is so massive that only a scholar of
McCoy’s skill could even consider attempting to capture it. McCoy’s
meticulous understanding of the past and present failures and
excesses of empires gives him the rare credibility to offer a
detailed, damning picture of the grim realities humankind faces as
history transforms into our future. After reading “To Govern the
Globe,” however, I must conclude that embedded within McCoy’s book
is a ray of hope demanding to be seen by us all before it’s truly
too late.” —Jeremy Scahill, investigative journalists and
author of Blackwater and Dirty Wars
“McCoy’s argument is meticulously footnoted and his sobering
conclusions appear firmly grounded in data. The past may not be the
best predictor of the future, but as McCoy notes, “the past remains
our best means of understanding the present and our only viable
guide to the future.” —California Review of Books
"To Govern the Globe can be read as a clarion call to take action."
—The Arts Fuse
"A fascinating look at the rise and fall of empires and what it
means for world orders. From colonial exploitation and capitalist
ravaging of people and planet to arms racing and warfare, Alfred
McCoy offers a deep dive into how this history has led to the
climate crisis, and the impacts it will have on our
future." —Ray Acheson, disarmament program director at the
Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom
“In an age where most scholars concentrate on a limited specialty,
no one sees a bigger picture more brilliantly than Alfred McCoy. In
this powerful, enlightening, and frightening book he gives us a
magisterial view of the empires of the past—and of the force in our
future which promises to dwarf them all.” —Adam Hochschild,
author of King Leopold's Ghost
"To Govern the Globe is history on an epic scale -- sweeping,
provocative, and unsparing in its judgments. Alfred McCoy's
immensely readable narrative spans centuries, charting the rise and
fall of successive world orders down to our own present moment
shaped by China's emergence as a great power and the blight of
climate change." —Andrew Bacevich, author of After the
Apocalypse: America's Role in a World Transformed
"It’s hard to believe a book spanning seven centuries could be so
timely. Yet, Alfred McCoy’s probing and original study links the
fate of multiple empires—including Pax Americana—to the
all-too-relevant histories of protracted war, brutal exploitation,
and catastrophic medical, environmental, and demographic
crises." —Christian G. Appy, author of American
Reckoning: The Vietnam War and Our National Identity
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