Military Review English Edition March-April 2015 | Page 146

incentivize collaboration between nations and between the public and private sectors to produce streamlined, efficient regulatory environments encompassing all actors. The book also introduces an important by-product of globalization, the principle of economic entanglement where countries form interdependent ties that make conflict self-damaging and cooperation mutually beneficial. Creating entanglement in all aspects of national interest is a helpful concept in considering solutions to trends like the rise of China, whose influence reaches into all domains in the commons. Although the book covers a wide range of ground and provides the reader a good understanding of the commons and the issues associated with them, it falls short ݡ