Critical Perspectives on International Political Economy considers and revises the progress of critical thinking within IPE and engages with issues such as finance, the practices of health and work, the relevance of new social movements and the political economy of the Internet. In so doing it provides a possible map for the next stage of critical development in the study of International Political Economy.
Critical Perspectives on International Political Economy considers and revises the progress of critical thinking within IPE and engages with issues such as finance, the practices of health and work, the relevance of new social movements and the political economy of the Internet. In so doing it provides a possible map for the next stage of critical development in the study of International Political Economy.
LOUISE AMOORE Lecturer in International Politics, University of Newcastle-upon-Tyne GARY BURN Visiting Research Fellow, Centre for Global Political Economy, University of Sussex CHRIS FARRANDS Principal Lecturer, International Relations, Nottingham Trent University PAUL LANGLEY Lecturer in International Politics, University of Northumbria, Newcastle CRIAG N. MURPHY Professor and Chair of Political Science, Wellesley College, Massachusetts DOUGLAS R. NELSON Professor of Economics, Murphy Institute of Political Economy, Tulane University, New Orleans IAIN WATSON Teaching Associate, University of Durham CHRIS WHITE Teaching Assistant, Department of International Studies, Nottingham Trent University
Inhaltsangabe
Foreword; B.K.Gills Acknowledgements Notes on the Contributors Introduction; J.P.Abbott & O.Worth Being Critical About Being 'Critical' in IPE: Negotiating Emancipatory Strategies; C.Farrands A Case for IPE Theoretical Plurality; C.White Process, Project, and Practice: The Politics of Globalization; L.Amoore & P.Langley Germany Unlocked? Globalizing Capital and the Logic of Accumulation; G.Burn Rethinking Resistance: Contesting Neoliberal Globalization and the Zapatistas as a Critical Social Movement; I.Watson Health for All? Towards a Neo-Gramscian Critique of the WHO; O.Worth The Internet and the Digital Divide: Representational Space or Representation of Space?; J.P.Abbott Conclusions: Explaining a Thriving Heterodoxy; C.N.Murphy & D.R.Nelson
Foreword; B.K.Gills Acknowledgements Notes on the Contributors Introduction; J.P.Abbott & O.Worth Being Critical About Being 'Critical' in IPE: Negotiating Emancipatory Strategies; C.Farrands A Case for IPE Theoretical Plurality; C.White Process, Project, and Practice: The Politics of Globalization; L.Amoore & P.Langley Germany Unlocked? Globalizing Capital and the Logic of Accumulation; G.Burn Rethinking Resistance: Contesting Neoliberal Globalization and the Zapatistas as a Critical Social Movement; I.Watson Health for All? Towards a Neo-Gramscian Critique of the WHO; O.Worth The Internet and the Digital Divide: Representational Space or Representation of Space?; J.P.Abbott Conclusions: Explaining a Thriving Heterodoxy; C.N.Murphy & D.R.Nelson
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