Review of International Political Economy

Volume 26, n° 6, December 2019

  • Clift B. - Contingent Keynesianism: the IMF’s model answer to the post-crash fiscal policy efficacy question in advanced economies, pp. 1211–1237.
  • Ferragina E. - The political economy of family policy expansion, pp. 1238–1265.
  • Fioretos O. - Minilateralism and informality in international monetary cooperation, pp. 1136–1159.
  • Fioretos O., Heldt E.C. - Legacies and innovations in global economic governance since Bretton Woods, pp. 1089–1111.
  • Hasselbalch, J.A. - Framing brain drain: between solidarity and skills in European labor mobility, pp. 1333–1360.
  • Heldt E.C., Schmidtke H. - Explaining coherence in international regime complexes: How the World Bank shapes the field of multilateral development finance, pp. 1160–1186.
  • Helleiner E. - The life and times of embedded liberalism: legacies and innovations since Bretton Woods, pp. 1112–1135.
  • Lütz S., Hilgers S., Schneider S. - Accountants, Europeanists and Monetary Guardians: bureaucratic cultures and conflicts in IMF-EU lending programs, pp. 1187–1210.
  • Mantz F. - Decolonizing the IPE syllabus: Eurocentrism and the coloniality of knowledge in International Political Economy, pp. 1361–1378.
  • Reynolds A. - Evaluating trade policies: the political engagement of religious actors in Costa Rica, Canada, and the United States, pp. 1293–1310.
  • Rosales A. - Radical rentierism: gold mining, cryptocurrency and commodity collateralization in Venezuela, pp. 1311–1332.
  • Schaffer L.M., Spilker G. - Self-interest versus sociotropic considerations: an information-based perspective to understanding individuals’ trade preferences, pp. 1266–1292.

(résumés du n° 6/2019)

Volume 26, n° 5, October 2019

  • Bernards N. - The poverty of fintech? Psychometrics, credit infrastructures, and the limits of financialization, pp. 815–838.
  • Bernards N., Campbell-Verduyn M. - Understanding technological change in global finance through infrastructures, pp. 773–789.
  • Campbell-Verduyn M., Goguen M., Porter T. - Finding fault lines in long chains of financial information, pp. 911–937.
  • Christensen R.C., Hearson M. - The new politics of global tax governance: taking stock a decade after the financial crisis, pp. 1068–1088.
  • Clarke C. - Platform lending and the politics of financial infrastructures, pp. 863–885.
  • Genito L. - Mandatory clearing: the infrastructural authority of central counterparty clearing houses in the OTC derivatives market, pp. 938–962.
  • Gerard,K. - Rationalizing ‘gender-wash’: empowerment, efficiency and knowledge construction, pp. 1022–1042.
  • Langevin M. - Big data for (not so) small loans: technological infrastructures and the massification of fringe finance, pp. 790–814.
  • Meissner K.L. - Cherry picking in the design of trade policy: why regional organizations shift between inter-regional and bilateral negotiations, pp. 1043–1067.
  • Rikap C. - Asymmetric Power of the Core: Technological Cooperation and Technological Competition in the Transnational Innovation Networks of Big Pharma, pp. 987–1021.
  • Rodima-Taylor D., Grimes W.W. - International remittance rails as infrastructures: embeddedness, innovation and financial access in developing economies, pp. 839–862.
  • Schwartz H.M. - What’s wealth got to do with it? Global balance sheets and US geo-economic power, pp. 963–986.
  • Singh J.P. - Development finance 2.0: do participation and information technologies matter?, pp. 886–910.

(résumés du n° 5/2019)

Volume 26, n° 4, August 2019

  • Clapp J. - The rise of financial investment and common ownership in global agrifood firms, pp. 604–629.
  • Dallas M.P., Ponte S., Sturgeon T.J. - Power in global value chains, pp. 666–694.
  • Dietz T., Dotzauer M., Cohen E.S. - The legitimacy crisis of investor-state arbitration and the new EU investment court system, pp. 749–772.
  • Gamso J. - China’s rise and physical integrity rights in developing countries, pp. 722–748.
  • Granier C., Bedu N. - The role of banks and the state in the shaping of the French fund industry, pp. 573–603.
  • Jamal A., Milner H.V. - Economic self-interest, information, and trade policy preferences: evidence from an experiment in Tunisia, pp. 545–572.
  • Logvinenko I. - Before the interests are invested: disputes over asset control and equity market restrictions in Russia, pp. 695–721.
  • Macartney H., Calcagno P. - All bark and no bite: the political economy of bank fines in Anglo-America, pp. 630–665
( résumés du n° 4/2019)

Volume 26, n° 3, June 2019

  • Jafri J. - When billions meet trillions: impact investing and shadow banking in Pakistan, pp. 520–544.
  • Kaya A., Reay M. - How did the Washington consensus move within the IMF? Fragmented change from the 1980s to the aftermath of the 2008 crisis, pp. 384–409.
  • Linsi L., Mügge D.K. - Globalization and the growing defects of international economic statistics, pp. 361–383.
  • Mabbett D., Schelkle W. - Independent or lonely? Central banking in crisis, pp. 436–460.
  • Roberts, A., Zulfiqar G.M. - The political economy of women’s entrepreneurship initiatives in Pakistan: reflections on gender, class, and “development.”, pp. 410–435.
  • Sahasrabuddhe A. - Drawing the line: the politics of federal currency swaps in the global financial crisis, pp. 461–489.
  • Schwartz H.M. - American hegemony: intellectual property rights, dollar centrality, and infrastructural power, pp. 490–519.

(résumés du n° 3/2019)

Volume 26, n° 2, April 2019

  • Binder A. - All exclusive: the politics of offshore finance in Mexico, pp. 313–336.
  • Chodor T. - The rise and fall and rise of the trans-pacific partnership: 21st century trade politics through a new constitutionalist lens, pp. 232–255.
  • Ergen T., Kohl S. - Varieties of economization in competition policy: institutional change in German and American antitrust, 1960–2000, pp. 256–286.
  • Hammer A. - Comparative capitalism and emerging economies: formal-informal economy interlockages and implications for institutional analysis, pp. 337–360.
  • Hopewell, K. - US-China conflict in global trade governance: the new politics of agricultural subsidies at the WTO, pp. 207–231.
  • Sgambati, S. - The art of leverage: a study of bank power, money-making and debt finance, pp. 287–312.

(résumés du n° 2/2019)

Volume 26, n° 1, February 2019

Special section: New directions in the international political economy of energy

  • KUZEMKO Caroline, LAWRENCE Andrew, WATSON Matthew - New directions in the international political economy of energy, pp. 1-24
  • NEWELL Peter - Trasformismo or transformation? The global political economy of energy transitions, pp. 25-48
  • SOVACOOL Benjamin K., WALTER Götz - Internationalizing the political economy of hydroelectricity: security, development and sustainability in hydropower states, pp. 49-79
  • KUZEMKO Caroline - Re-scaling IPE: local government, sustainable energy and change, pp. 80-103
  • NEVILLE Kate J., COOK Jackie, BAKA Jennifer, BAKKER Karen, WEINTHAL Erika S. - Can shareholder advocacy shape energy governance? The case of the US antifracking movement, pp. 104-133

Regular articles

  • FOSSATI Diego - Embedded diasporas: ethnic prejudice, transnational networks and foreign investment, pp. 134-157
  • KIM Sung-Young - Hybridized industrial ecosystems and the makings of a new developmental infrastructure in East Asia’s green energy sector, pp. 158-182
  • ALLAN Bentley B. - Paradigm and nexus: neoclassical economics and the growth imperative in the World Bank, 1948–2000, pp. 183-206

(résumés du n° 1/2019)

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