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Balancing Power without Weapons: State Intervention into Cross-Border Mergers and Acquisitions

Balancing Power without Weapons: State Intervention into Cross-Border Mergers and Acquisitions

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Ashley Thomas Lenihan
Cambridge University Press, 11/12/2020
EAN 9781316632925, ISBN10: 131663292X

Paperback, 376 pages, 22.9 x 15.2 x 2.2 cm
Language: English
Originally published in English

Why do states block some foreign direct investment on national security grounds even when it originates from within their own security community? Government intervention into foreign takeovers of domestic companies is on the rise, and many observers find it surprising that states engage in such behaviour not only against their strategic and military competitors, but also against their closest allies. Ashley Lenihan argues that such puzzling behaviour can be explained by recognizing that states use intervention into cross-border mergers and acquisitions as a tool of statecraft to internally balance the economic and military power of other states through non-military means. This book tests this theory using quantitative and qualitative analysis of transactions in the United States, Russia, China, and fifteen European Union states. It deepens our understanding of why states intervene in foreign takeovers, the relationship between interdependence and conflict, the limits of globalization, and how states are balancing power in new ways. This title is also available as Open Access.

Introduction
1. A theory of non-military internal balancing
2. The numbers
a comprehensive look at the motivations behind
3. Unbounded intervention
the state and the blocked deal
4. Unbounded or overbalancing? An outlier case
5. Bounded intervention
mitigating threats to national security
6. Non-intervention and the 'internal' intervention alternative
Conclusion.