Review of International Political Economy

Volume 27, n° 6, December 2020

  • Bojičić-Dželilović V., Hozić A.A. - Taxing for inequalities: gender budgeting in the Western Balkans, pp. 1280-1304.
  • Cohn C., Duncanson C. - Whose recovery? IFI prescriptions for postwar states, pp. 1214-1234.
  • Johnston, M.F. - Frontier finance: the role of microfinance in debt and violence in post-conflict Timor-Leste, pp. 1305-1329.
  • Lai D. - What has justice got to do with it? Gender and the political economy of post-war Bosnia and Herzegovina, pp. 1257-1279.
  • Mathers J.G. - Women, war and austerity: IFIs and the construction of gendered economic insecurities in Ukraine, pp. 1235-1256.
  • Puente I., Schneider B.R. - Business and development: how organization, ownership and networks matter, pp. 1354-1377.
  • Schwak J. - Film in an IPE classroom: for a critical pedagogy of the everyday, pp. 1330-1353.
  • True J., Hozić A.A. - Don’t mention the war! International Financial Institutions and the gendered circuits of violence in post-conflict, pp. 1193-1213.
( résumés n° 6/2020)

Volume 27, n° 5, 2020

  • Bruszt L., Karas D. - Diverging developmental strategies beyond “lead sectors” in the EU’s periphery: the politics of developmental alliances in the Hungarian and Polish dairy sectors, pp. 1020–1040.
  • Bruszt, László, Langbein, J. - Manufacturing development: how transnational market integration shapes opportunities and capacities for development in Europe’s three peripheries, pp. 996–1019.
  • Bruszt Laszlo, Langbein J. - To the Memory of Wade Jacoby, pp. 995–995.
  • Bruszt L., Lundstedt L., Munkacsi Z. - Collateral benefit: the developmental effects of EU-induced state building in Central and Eastern Europe, pp. 1170–1191.
  • Langbein J. - Shallow market integration and weak developmental capacities: Ukraine’s pathway from periphery to periphery, pp. 1126–1146.
  • Langbein J., Markiewicz O. - Changing modes of market integration, domestic developmental capacities and state-business alliances: insights from Turkey’s automotive industry, pp. 1104–1125.
  • Markiewicz O. - Stuck in second gear? EU integration and the evolution of Poland’s automotive industry, pp. 1147–1169.
  • Medve-Bálint G., Šćepanović V. - EU funds, state capacity and the development of transnational industrial policies in Europe’s Eastern periphery, pp. 1063–1082.
  • Šćepanović V. - Transnational integration in Europe and the reinvention of industrial policy in Spain, pp. 1083–1103.
  • Vukov V. - European integration and weak states: Romania’s road to exclusionary development, pp. 1041–1062.

(résumés n°5/2020)

Volume 27, n° 4, 2020

  • Baglioni E., Campling L., Hanlon G. - Global value chains as entrepreneurial capture : Insights from management theory, pp. 903‑925.
  • Eagleton-Pierce M. - The rise of managerialism in international NGOs, pp. 970‑994.
  • Eagleton-Pierce M., Knafo S. - Introduction : The political economy of managerialism, pp. 763‑779.
  • Knafo S. - Neoliberalism and the origins of public management, pp. 780‑801.
  • Linsi L. - The discourse of competitiveness and the dis-embedding of the national economy, pp. 855‑879.
  • Moore P. V., Joyce S. - Black box or hidden abode? The expansion and exposure of platform work managerialism, pp. 926‑948.
  • Nunn A. - Neoliberalization, fast policy transfer and the management of labor market services, pp. 949‑969.
  • Seabrooke L., Sending O. J. - Contracting development : Managerialism and consultants in intergovernmental organizations, pp. 802‑827.
  • Sharma S., Soederberg S. - Redesigning the business of development : The case of the World Economic Forum and global risk management, pp. 828‑854.
  • Whiteside H. - Public-private partnerships : Market development through management reform, pp. 880‑902.
( résumés du n° 4/2020) * en attente de la version papier *

Volume 27, n° 3, June 2020

  • Dafe F. - Ambiguity in international finance and the spread of financial norms: the localization of financial inclusion in Kenya and Nigeria, pp. 500-24.
  • Rau, C., Zürn M. - Authority, politicization, and alternative justifications: endogenous legitimation dynamics in global economic governance1, pp. 583-611.
  • Malik A., Gallien M. - Border economies of the Middle East: why do they matter for political economy?, pp. 732-62.
  • Rioux S., LeBaron G., Verovšek P. J. - Capitalism and unfree labor: a review of Marxist perspectives on modern slavery, pp. 709-31.
  • Dreher V. W. - Divergent effects of international regulatory institutions. Regulating global banks and shadow banking after the global financial crisis of 2007-2009, pp. 556-82.
  • Thérien J.-P., Pouliot V. - Global governance as patchwork: the making of the Sustainable Development Goals, pp. 612-36.
  • Hameiri S. - Institutionalism beyond methodological nationalism? The new interdependence approach and the limits of historical institutionalism, pp. 637-57.
  • Odijie M. E. - Is traditional industrial policy defunct? Evidence from the Nigerian cement industry, pp. 686-708.
  • Seddon J. - Merchants against the bankers: the financialization of a commodity market, pp. 525-55.
  • Evans A. - Overcoming the global despondency trap: strengthening corporate accountability in supply chains, pp. 658-85.
  • Knafo S., Dutta S. J. - The myth of the shareholder revolution and the financialization of the firm, pp. 476-99.
  • Babic M., Garcia-Bernardo J., Heemskerk E. M. - The rise of transnational state capital: state-led foreign investment in the 21st century, pp. 433-75.
( résumés du n° 3/2020) * en attente de la version papier *

Volume 27, n° 2, March 2020

Forum on China’s Rise in a Liberal Order in Transition.
Forum Guest Editors: Nana de Graaff, Tobias ten Brink, Inderjeet Parmar
  • Nana de Graaff, Tobias ten Brink, Inderjeet Parmar - China’s rise in a liberal world order in transition – introduction to the FORUM, pp. 191-207 
  • Nana de Graaff - China Inc. goes global. Transnational and national networks of China’s globalizing business elite, pp. 208-233 
  • Shuhong Huo, Inderjeet Parmar - ‘A new type of great power relationship’? Gramsci, Kautsky and the role of the Ford Foundation’s transformational elite knowledge networks in China, pp. 234-257 
  • Clara Weinhardt, Tobias ten Brink - Varieties of contestation: China’s rise and the liberal trade order - [Contribution to forum: China’s rise in a liberal world order in transition], pp. 258-280 
  • Christopher A. McNally - Chaotic mélange: neo-liberalism and neo-statism in the age of Sino-capitalism, pp. 281-301 
  • Colin Hay - Does capitalism (still) come in varieties?, pp. 302-319 
  • Mark Anner - Squeezing workers’ rights in global supply chains: purchasing practices in the Bangladesh garment export sector in comparative perspective, pp. 320-347 
  • PritishBehuria - The domestic political economy of upgrading in global value chains: how politics shapes pathways for upgrading in Rwanda’s coffee sector*, pp. 348-376 
  • Benjamin Selwyn, Bettina Musiolek, Artemisa Ijarja - Making a global poverty chain: export footwear production and gendered labor exploitation in Eastern and Central Europe, pp. 377-403 
  • Cédric Durand, Wiliiam Milberg - Intellectual monopoly in global value chains, pp. 404-429

Volume 27, n° 1, January 2020

  • Elbe S., Long C. - The political economy of molecules: vital epistemics, desiring machines and assemblage thinking, pp. 125–145.
  • Gill S.R., Benatar S.R. - Reflections on the political economy of planetary health, pp. 167–190.
  • Hester R.J., Williams O.D. - The somatic-security industrial complex: theorizing the political economy of informationalized biology, pp. 98–124.
  • Nunes J. - The everyday political economy of health: community health workers and the response to the 2015 Zika outbreak in Brazil, pp. 146–166.
  • Schrecker T. - Globalization and health: political grand challenges, pp. 26–47.
  • Sell S.K., Williams O.D. - Health under capitalism: a global political economy of structural pathogenesis, pp. 1–25.
  • Shadlen K.C., Sampat B.N., Kapczynski A. - Patents, trade and medicines: past, present and future, pp. 75–97.
  • Sparke M. - Neoliberal regime change and the remaking of global health: from rollback disinvestment to rollout reinvestment and reterritorialization, pp. 48–74.

(résumés du n° 1/2020)

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