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2025-08-20



内容新,2025才出。
内容丰富,都是数百页的大型资料。
主要简介如下。
FASHION, POPULAR CULTURE AND POLITICAL ECONOMY This resource delves into the intricate interplay of political, economic and philosophic forces that have shaped popular culture, fashion, social movements and societies. Exploring the developments of the twentieth century and the transition into the new millennium, this work traces the causality between culture, fashion, philosophical discourses and political economy. It analyzes political-economic and philosophical factors to demonstrate how fashion emerges as a pivotal force that guides and shapes postmodern democratic societies and market economies. The volume weaves together insights from sociology, cultural studies, feminist studies, fashion history, cinematography, media, the entertainment industry and social policy research. It examines how postmodern societies, shaped by post-structuralist critiques and neo-liberal ideologies, navigate the complexities of democracy and market economies, evolving from deeply entrenched systems of colonialism and feudalism to achieve modernization and massive technological progress and reach a social reality of postmodernist paradigms. Topical and lucid, this invigorating work shows how fashion leads to social engineering. It will be of interest to scholars and researchers of fashion studies, popular culture, cultural studies, sociology, gender studies, political economy and political studies. This resource also provides valuable perspectives for policymakers, film critics, women’s rights groups, social policy researchers, film censor boards and journalists. Nirupama Singh Dar is a Sociologist, Fashion Forecaster and designer. She has done her schooling from Mount Carmel Convent school Lucknow and Delhi Public School RK Puram New Delhi. She graduated in Political Science honours from Lady Shri Ram College New Delhi and did her Post Graduate studies and Mphil in Sociology from the Centre for the study of Social Systems, Jawahar Lal Nehru University New Delhi. In her PhD she went on to research the new and yet uncharted field of ‘Sociology of Fashion’ and pursued her Post Doctoral research in the area of ‘Objectification of women by the Media’. She completed both her Doctorate and Post Doctorate from CSSS Jawaharlal Nehru University New Delhi. Being the holder of the first doctorate on fashion in India, she pioneered fashion research in the country. She also studied design at the National Institute of Fashion Technology, New Delhi, and has been designing collections for her brand, Body Politic. Her design work has been chronicled by the Indian embassy in Paris in their magazine Nouvelle de L’Inde. She has made several documentary films for UTV motion pictures (now called Disney UTV) and has blogged for the Fashion Design Council of India. Dr Dar is the Director of Fashion Research Foundation, which works in the areas of research and development of textile engineering and weaver empowerment with sustainability as it’s main agenda. It also works on researching Indian culture for branding techniques for the advertising industry and for lifestyle brands. She consults on economic, cultural and branding aspects of fashion and writes and lectures on Sociology of Fashion and Popular Culture. Dr Dar has been interviewed for her views on the Indian fash


e and Leonard Seabrooke
PA RT I . T H E F I E L D OF I P E
2. Modern IPE: Lessons from a Counter-History 17
Randall Germain
3. The Welcome Return of Political Economy to International Political
Economy Scholarship: States, Markets, and Governance 34
Geoffrey R. D. Underhill
4. Foreign Economic Policy 53
David H. Bearce
5. Open Economy Politics Revisited 67
Stephanie J. Rickard
6. Feminism 85
Georgina Waylen
7. Racism and Paternalism 99
J. P. Singh
8. Historical Materialism 113
Angela Wigger
PA RT I I . M E T HOD S
9. Formal Models of International Political Economy: Looking
Back and Moving Forward 129
Leslie Johns
vi Contents
10. Experiments in IPE Research 145
Gabriele Spilker
11. Networks in International Political Economy 164
William Kindred Winecoff and Kevin L. Young
12. Content Analysis in International Political Economy 187
Cornel Ban
13. Process Tracing and International Political Economy 201
Jeffrey T. Checkel
14. Historical International Political Economy 220
James Ashley Morrison
PA RT I I I . P RO C E S SE S
15. Diffusion Processes in International Political Economy 237
Brian Greenhill
16. Economic Coercion 254
Elena V. McLean
17. Policy Transfer 276
Timothy Legrand and Diane Stone
18. Regulation 291
Cyril Benoît and Matthias Thiemann
19. Accumulation 304
David Bailey
PA RT I V. F ORUM S
20. Intergovernmental Organizations 321
André Broome
21. Informality in International Political Economy 334
Felicity Vabulas
22. International Financial Institutions: Forms, Functions, and
Controversies 351
Alexandros E. Kentikelenis and Sarah L. Babb
Contents vii
23. From Silos to Barns? Regional Institutions in International
Political Economy 372
Etel Solingen
24. The Economics and Politics of Preferential Trade Agreements 386
Leonardo Baccini
25. Corporate Networks 403
Milan Babic, Jan Fichtner, and Eelke Heemskerk
PA RT V. F L OWS
26. Money 421
Mark Copelovitch and James Anderson
27. Trade 440
Elisabeth van Lieshout
28. Foreign Direct Investment 459
Rachel L. Wellhausen
29. Work and Workers in International Markets 476
John S. Ahlquist
30. Migration and IPE: A Story of Mutual Neglect? 490
Georg Menz
31. Foreign Aid 502
Sarah Blodgett Bermeo
PA RT V I . AC TOR S
32. The Evolving State of the State in International Political Economy 527
Heather Ba
33. The Firm 545
Glenn Morgan
34. Interest Groups and Order in Global Economic Relations 562
Iain Osgood
35. Households 582
Genevieve LeBaron and Liam Stanley
viii Contents
36. Non- Governmental Organizations 595
Elizabeth Bloodgood
PA RT V I I . OU TC OM E S
37. Liberalization 611
Timm Betz and Amy Pond
38. The Investment Treaty Regime 638
Lauge N. Skovgaard Poulsen
39. International Trade and Conflict 660
Edward D. Mansfield
40. Financial Systems 672
Lucia Quaglia
41. Development Policy 685
Seung- Uk Huh and Matthew S. Winters
42. Informal Markets 706
Anja P. Jakobi
43. Climate Crisis 719
Erin R. Graham
44. Sexual Injustice 732
Ellie Gore and Nicola J. Smith
PA RT V I I I . AS SE T S A N D R E S OU RC E S
45. Oil and Gas 753
Andreas Goldthau and Nick Sitter
46. Knowledge 771
Malcolm Campbell- Verduyn
47. Territory 794
Jordan Branch and Timothy Turnbull
48. The Many Meanings of Capital in IPE 806
Dick Bryan, Michael Rafferty, and Duncan Wigan
Index 821


Preface
This ninth edition comes with a sense of sadness at the passing of Ted Cohn, the creator and first author of this textresource. Ted was tireless in his efforts to perfect this resource, the testimony to which is given by its success and longevity. As events occur, though, and the complexities of the interaction of politics and economics evolve, it is important to update the materials of the resource to engage current scholars and students.
The ninth edition of this resource updates the emerging rivalry between the US and China, offering greater context from the perspective of how security helps to shape the contours of the global political economy, and vice versa. As the world evolves from a dominant US to a bipolar world, the possibilities for maintaining the Bretton Woods postwar system of trade and finance are under increasing pressure. Add to this the re-emergence of potential global conflict via Taiwan or Ukraine, and arguably the world economic arrangements are under duress not seen since the 1930s. The classic 1996 resource by Samuel Huntington,The Clash of Civilizations, which posited an emerging rivalry among different regions and worldviews among the West, the East, and Islam (the Middle East) received multiple critiques at the time, including ethnocentrism. Yet, as with all great works, there is a lasting grain of truth that we see in the present around the conflicts in the Middle East, in Ukraine, and the emerging Cold War between China and the West; that is, that such conflicts represent distinct perspectives on values and what the world order should look like. Contemporary analysts and politicians such as US President Biden, have repackaged such themes as an existential crisis between authoritarianism and democracy. What’s different in this emerging Cold War is that authoritarian regimes are no longer espousing communism, but have created, at least in the case of China, a highly successful form of authoritarian capitalism. Thus, the type of systemic and ideological conflict has changed, while the capabilities of the West’s adversaries have increased considerably. The current global economic system is under increasing strain as the two systems clash, not only on security but also on a variety of economic issues, from alleged currency manipulation to intellectual property theft to protectionist policies as the West begins to reckon with China’s emergence. At the same time, unlike the previous Cold War, both sides are enmeshed, and depend upon, global trade and financial interactions.
It is important for students to see the themes that cut across the chapters of this resource, so that they can begin to learn how to apply tools of analysis to a variety of situations. Perhaps the most central one is power. Power to control, influence, or incentivize others’ behavior comes in a wide range of modalities, from military to economic to ideational (or “soft power,” as coined by Joseph Nye). Power comes from the size of a military, but ultimately a robust economy is needed to pay for it. Beyond economic power, global political economists wrestle with another central theme, the role of the state in the economy. In the 20th century, the battle was between socialist planned economies and capitalist ones, with the former being disavowed in 1989 when the Soviet Union fell apart. The current one between authoritarian and democratic capitalism does not have a clear winner. Within most economies, the same lines of battle continue to be fought, between pro-market and pro-intervention advocates. In contrast to security studies, global political economists have to ork on both the global and domestic levels, and with a wide variety of actors, what scholars refer to as the “level of analysis” problem. It is this level of complexity alongside continual dynamic evolution that makes the subject so fascinating.
New to this Edition
Some of the significant revisions in this edition include:

We have updated content, literature, data and added new terms, data, and questions.

This edition adds a series of updated terms, updates most tables, includes more diagrams, and spends more time clarifying jargon.

The resource updates key events throughout, including discussions of the 2020–22 pandemic, inflationary, supply chain pressures, and Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

We change the term International Political Economy (IPE) to Global Political Economy (GPE) throughout, to reflect the fact that economic relations take place across a multitude of both state and non-state actors.

We change DCs to the North and LDCs to developing countries or the South, as those are the current terms, to avoid suggesting a value judgment.

We add new key terms to the glossary.

We update China–US relations as a major theme, including ramifications for security, trade, and finance.

We add a basic primer on economics to Chapter 1 as an appendix.

We add a basic framework for comparing theoretical perspectives to Chapter 1, explaining the concepts of power, actors, state–market relationships, and levels of analysis. We then explain the differences in the beginnin Chapter 8 contains an updated data table on trade in goods and services over time with additional partners, a brief discussion of the particular challenges of EU trade policy formulation, and a new final section comparing the theoretical perspectives on trade.

In Chapter 9, we provide new sections on ASEAN and the African Continental Free Trade Area, and new commentary on the challenges for creating South–South agreements

Chapter 10 has significantly expanded sections on Chinese MNCs/FDI and corporate social responsibility, as well as a new discussion of socially responsible investment.

We have updated all the data in Chapter 11, clarified the context around development strategy choices, updated the World Bank section, and added to the section on the “Beijing Model” of development.

The final chapter, 12, has been almost completely rewritten. After offering some closing thoughts, it reviews emerging issues in the GPE and includes a new short discussion about career paths for political economists.


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