International Political Economy: An Intellectual History

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Princeton University Press, 16 mar 2008 - 210 pagine

The field of international political economy gained prominence in the early 1970s--when the Arab oil embargo and other crises ended the postwar era of virtually unhindered economic growth in the United States and Europe--and today is an essential part of both political science and economics. This book offers the first comprehensive examination of this important field's development, the contrasting worldviews of its American and British schools, and the different ways scholars have sought to meet the challenges posed by an ever more complex and interdependent world economy.

Benjamin Cohen explains the critical role played by the early "intellectual entrepreneurs," a generation of pioneering scholars determined to bridge the gap between international economics and international politics. Among them were brilliant thinkers like Robert Keohane, Susan Strange, and others whose legacies endure to the present day. Cohen shows how their personalities and the historical contexts in which they worked influenced how the field evolved. He examines the distinctly different insights of the American and British schools and addresses issues that have been central to the field's development, including systemic transformation, system governance, and the place of the sovereign state in formal analysis. The definitive intellectual history of international political economy, this book is the ideal volume for IPE scholars and those interested in learning more about the field.

 

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Sommario

Introduction
1
The American School
16
The British School
43
A Really Big Question
63
The Control Grap
92
The Mystery of the State
111
What Have We Learned?
123
New Bridges?
148
References
158
Index
178
Copyright

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Pagina 90 - Regimes can be defined as sets of implicit or explicit principles, norms, rules, and decision-making procedures around which actors' expectations converge in a given area of international relations.
Pagina 8 - Practical men, who believe themselves to be quite exempt from any intellectual influences, are usually the slaves of some defunct economist. Madmen in authority, who hear voices in the air, are distilling their frenzy from some academic scribbler of a few years back.
Pagina 1 - That would be delightful. Cecily, you will read your Political Economy in my absence. The chapter on the Fall of the Rupee you may omit. It is somewhat too sensational. Even these metallic problems have their melodramatic side.
Pagina 60 - The 1929 depression was so wide, so deep and so long because the international economic system was rendered unstable by British inability and United States unwillingness to assume responsibility for stabilizing it...
Pagina 85 - persistent and connected sets of rules, formal and informal, that prescribe behavioral roles, constrain activity, and shape expectations
Pagina 90 - Principles are beliefs of fact, causation, and rectitude. Norms are standards of behavior defined in terms of rights and obligations. Rules are specific prescriptions or proscriptions for action. Decision-making procedures are prevailing practices for making and implementing collective choice.
Pagina 57 - holds that hegemonic structures of power, dominated by a single country, are most conducive to the development of strong international regimes, whose rules are relatively precise and...
Pagina 42 - Structural power, on the other hand, is the power to shape and determine the structures of the global political economy within which other states, their political institutions, their economic enterprises and (not least) their scientists and other professional people have to operate.
Pagina 60 - Kindleberger (1973: 28) argued that the international economic and monetary system needs leadership, a country which is prepared, consciously or unconsciously, under some system of rules that it has internalised, to set standards of conduct for other countries; and to seek to get others to follow them. Without a powerful nation prepared to act as a stabiliser and underpin, or if necessary impose, a specific international order replete with essential public goods like a stable currency regime...
Pagina 60 - ... to set standards of conduct for other countries; and to seek to get others to follow them, to take on an undue share of the burdens of the system...

Informazioni sull'autore (2008)

Benjamin J. Cohen is the Louis G. Lancaster Professor of International Political Economy at the University of California, Santa Barbara. His many books include The Future of Money (Princeton) and The Geography of Money.

Informazioni bibliografiche