The contested world economy : the deep and global roots of international political economy
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Bibliographic Information
The contested world economy : the deep and global roots of international political economy
Cambridge University Press, 2023
- : paperback
Available at / 4 libraries
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National Graduate Institute for Policy Studies Library (GRIPS Library)
: paperback331.2||H5101577193
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Note
Includes bibliographical references (p. 271-300) and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
The rapid growth of the field of international political economy since the 1970s has revived an older tradition of thought from the pre-1945 era. The Contested World Economy provides the first book-length analysis of these deep intellectual roots of the field, revealing how earlier debates about the world economy were more global and wide-ranging than usually recognized. Helleiner shows how pre-1945 pioneers of international political economy included thinkers from all parts of the world rather than just those from Europe and the United States featured in most textbooks. Their discussions also went beyond the much-studied debate between economic liberals, neomercantilists, and Marxists, and addressed wider topics, including many with contemporary relevance, such as environmental degradation, gender inequality, racial discrimination, religious worldviews, civilizational values, national self-sufficiency, and varieties of economic regionalism. This fascinating history of ideas sheds new light on current debates and the need for a global understanding of their antecedents.
Table of Contents
- 1. Introduction and overview
- Part I. The Three Orthodoxies in a Global Context: 2. The rise of European classical economic liberalism
- 3. Economic liberalism from non-European perspectives
- 4. Neomercantilist reactions in Europe and the United States
- 5. Neomercantilism elsewhere
- 6. European Marxist critiques of global capitalism
- 7. The global diffusion of Marxism
- Part II. Beyond the Three Orthodoxies: 8. Autarkic visions of economic self-sufficiency
- 9. Environmentalist calls for a more sustainable world economy
- 10. Feminist critiques of a patriarchal world economy
- 11. Pan-African responses to a racialized world economy
- 12. Religious and civilizational political economies of Pan-Islamism and Pan-Asianism
- 13. Distinctive visions of economic regionalism for East Asia, Europe and the Americas
- Part III. Ending at a Beginning: 14. The embedded liberalism of Bretton Woods
- 15. The case for a wider history.
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