Related references
Note: Only part of the references are listed.
Article
Economics
Eric Helleiner
Summary: The growing political salience of economic nationalism after the 2008 financial crisis has brought attention to the enduring importance of this ideology, but academic scholarship on the topic has blindspots that inhibit understanding of key strands such as American populist conservatism and Chinese developmentalism. Overcoming these blindspots, including recognizing the diverse origins and content of neomercantilist economic nationalism, will better position political economy scholars to interpret contemporary economic nationalism.
NEW POLITICAL ECONOMY
(2021)
Article
International Relations
Andreas Bieler et al.
INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
(2021)
Article
Economics
Kristen Hopewell
Summary: President Trump is seen as reversing 70 years of US trade policy and abdicating the American hegemon's traditional role in the multilateral trading system. The shift in US orientation towards the multilateral trading system is not solely attributed to the rise of populism under Trump, but also a reaction to the decline of US institutional power.
NEW POLITICAL ECONOMY
(2021)
Article
Economics
Kate Bedford
Summary: The article discusses the connection between gambling and political economy, proposing that gambling should take into account a wider range of everyday games and adapt to the diversity of capitalist economies. Using the example of bingo in the UK, it illustrates the important mutual aid dimension in the debates on gambling liberalization, and highlights the state regulation of diverse economies as a key focus in political economy.
NEW POLITICAL ECONOMY
(2021)
Article
Economics
Jacqueline Best et al.
Summary: The aim of this Special Issue is to draw attention to and critically evaluate the historical assumptions in contemporary political economy, in order to contribute to a more analytical and reflexive understanding of the potential biases and omissions in the field. The overarching goal is to identify key blind spots and understand how scholars have missed or misconstrued important dynamics defining contemporary capitalism and social inequalities.
NEW POLITICAL ECONOMY
(2021)
Article
Economics
Erin Lockwood
Summary: This article explores the role of antisemitism in the populist backlash against financial power, arguing that the uncertainty and complexity of finance make it difficult for people to attribute responsibility for financial crises. It also highlights the historical connections between antisemitic myths and backlash to financial power.
NEW POLITICAL ECONOMY
(2021)
Article
Economics
Andrew Gamble
Summary: Political economy tends to attribute rationality to long-term economic developments and irrationality to political trends, reflecting a legacy of economism. Critical political economists anticipated the financial crisis but not the political responses, including the rise of populism and nationalism. Understanding the variety of nationalist insurgencies requires acknowledging different rationalities instead of a binary distinction between economic and political logics.
NEW POLITICAL ECONOMY
(2021)
Article
Economics
V. Spike Peterson
Summary: This paper points out blind spots in the understanding of 'the state' in International Political Economy, emphasizing the prerequisites for successful state formation and the enduring impact of structural inequalities. The focus is on how economic inequalities are historically shaped and today reproduce racial logics, contributing to a rise in xenophobia, alt-right nationalisms, and anti-migrant hostilities globally.
NEW POLITICAL ECONOMY
(2021)
Article
Economics
Robbie Shilliam
Summary: The article argues that Enoch Powell was both a prominent racist and a neoliberal politician in Britain, suggesting that racist populism should be seen as a formative stage of the neoliberal project.
NEW POLITICAL ECONOMY
(2021)
Article
Economics
Louis W. Pauly
Summary: Making reasonable guesses about the blind spots in International Political Economy and shedding some light on them; Disciplinary blind spots are suggested when scholarly skepticism turns into certainty; Conceptual blind spots occur when political 'structure' is seen as more than just a metaphor; Empirical blind spots arise when intergovernmental ideology exaggerates the limiting effect of organizational innovations and discounts the probability of fundamental transformation in global governing practices over time.
NEW POLITICAL ECONOMY
(2021)
Article
Economics
Maha Rafi Atal
Summary: In recent years, the power of large technology corporations has been a major topic of public debate. These companies with platform functions dominate their commercial rivals and manipulate the regulatory system by straddling different categories, hindering challenges to their power.
REVIEW OF INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY
(2021)
Article
Economics
Kevin L. Young
Summary: The encompassing scale and scope of International Political Economy (IPE) in the social sciences studies complex overlapping systems, borrowing from a vast range of social theory and methods. The current pluralism in IPE risks culminating in fragmentation of knowledge, while proposing 'engaged pluralism' for greater knowledge synthesis. A stronger adherence to a scientific ethos is argued to assist in building this 'engaged pluralism'.
REVIEW OF INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY
(2021)
Article
Economics
Matthew Paterson
Summary: The dynamics of climate change politics have presented two fundamental and contradictory challenges for political economy. On one hand, the new science of 'net zero emissions' emphasizes the necessity and transformative potential of a world without fossil fuels, while on the other hand, the possibility of civilizational collapse is now more widely recognized.
REVIEW OF INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY
(2021)
Article
Economics
Marieke de Goede
Summary: This article highlights the blind spot in International Political Economy literature regarding the colonial and contested histories of financial infrastructures. It argues that financial infrastructures are profoundly political and rooted in long-term colonial histories, pointing towards the postcolonial nature of contemporary capitalism and finance.
REVIEW OF INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY
(2021)
Article
Economics
Genevieve LeBaron et al.
Summary: This article aims to push the discussion of blind spots in the field of global political economy, covering issues such as institutionalized racism and misogyny, the rise of big tech, intensifying corporate power, expertise dynamics in global governance, assetization, and climate change. Gender and racial inequalities are particularly important blind spots that need to be addressed.
REVIEW OF INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY
(2021)
Article
Economics
J. P. Singh
Summary: This essay refines the understanding of culture and race to explain North-South trade outcomes. Culture is presented as a toolkit of values, and the rise of racism and xenophobia can be traced to sedimented histories within cultural toolkits.
REVIEW OF INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY
(2021)
Article
International Relations
David A. Lake et al.
Summary: As International Organization marks its seventy-fifth anniversary, the authors in this journal acknowledge the increasing challenges to the Liberal International Order (LIO). The articles in this issue delve into the nature of these challenges by examining the interplay between the Westphalian order and the LIO, as well as internal and external threats. The reflection on overlooked dynamics in studying the LIO underscores the importance of understanding all aspects contributing to the order's functioning and dysfunction.
INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATION
(2021)
Article
Development Studies
Derek Hall
CANADIAN JOURNAL OF DEVELOPMENT STUDIES-REVUE CANADIENNE D ETUDES DU DEVELOPPEMENT
(2020)
Article
Sociology
Leon Moosavi
INTERNATIONAL REVIEW OF SOCIOLOGY-REVUE INTERNATIONALE DE SOCIOLOGIE
(2020)
Article
International Relations
Pablo de Orellana et al.
REVIEW OF INTERNATIONAL STUDIES
(2019)
Article
International Relations
Adam B. Lerner
INTERNATIONAL STUDIES REVIEW
(2019)
Article
International Relations
Tom Long
INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS
(2018)
Article
Education & Educational Research
Brita Bergland
EDUCATIONAL PHILOSOPHY AND THEORY
(2018)
Article
Management
Peter Bloom
CULTURE AND ORGANIZATION
(2016)
Article
Political Science
Petter Y. Lindgren
JAPANESE JOURNAL OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
(2015)
Article
Economics
David A. Lake
REVIEW OF INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATIONS
(2009)
Article
Philosophy
Nick Smith
CONTINENTAL PHILOSOPHY REVIEW
(2009)