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9780198793519

The Oxford Handbook of International Political Economy

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  • ISBN13:

    9780198793519

  • ISBN10:

    0198793510

  • Format: Hardcover
  • Copyright: 2025-04-24
  • Publisher: Oxford University Press

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Summary

The field of International Political Economy (IPE) has rapidly developed into a central pillar in the study of International Relations, and its interdisciplinary roots make it a rich and productive area of scholarly interest. This Oxford Handbook analyses and evaluates the state of the art in IPE research.

Bringing together leading experts from a wide geographical and theoretical spectrum, the Handbook provides accessible and comprehensive surveys on topics central to the study of International Political Economy. As IPE scholarship evolves to explore global events such as financial crises and trade wars, examining how politics is both a cause and a consequence of economics, it highlights the practical and problem-driven nature of the field. The Handbook considers the purported European-North American divide and the impact of the surrounding debate on the approach taken to the field. The chapters review the scholarly literature, outline future research opportunities, and consider the ways in which world events have contributed to new research in the field.

The Handbook covers both the theoretical and methodological foundations of the field as well as substantive topics within it, including regulation, foreign aid, migration, NGOs, capital, political–military relations, and many others.


The Oxford Handbooks of International Relations is a twelve-volume set of reference books offering authoritative and innovative engagements with the principal sub-fields of International Relations.

The series as a whole is under the General Editorship of Christian Reus-Smit of the University of Melbourne and Duncan Snidal of the University of Oxford, with each volume edited by specialists in the field. The series both surveys the broad terrain of International Relations scholarship and reshapes it, pushing each sub-field in challenging new directions. Following the example of Reus-Smit and Snidal's original Oxford Handbook of International Relations, each volume is organized around a strong central thematic by scholars drawn from different perspectives, reading its sub-field in an entirely new way, and pushing scholarship in challenging new directions.

Author Biography

Jon C.W Pevehouse, Mary Herman Rubinstein Professor in Political Science and Public Policy, University of Wisconsin-Madison,Leonard Seabrooke, Professor of International Political Economy and Economic Sociology, Copenhagen Business School

Jon C.W. Pevehouse is the Mary Herman Rubinstein Professor in Political Science and Public Policy at the University of Wisconsin–Madison. His research is centred in international relations and political methodology. He received the Karl Deutsch Award as well as several teaching awards, including the Chancellor's Distinguished Teaching Award at UW–Madison. Pevehouse has also served as the editor of International Organization.

Leonard Seabrooke is Professor of International Political Economy and Economic Sociology in the Department of Organization at the Copenhagen Business School. His research concentrates on professional action in the international political economy across a range issues, from activists to consultants to policymakers, intergovernmental organizations, and global wealth chains. Seabrooke is a former co-editor of Review of International Political Economy and International Studies Quarterly.

Table of Contents

1. Introduction, Jon C.W. Pevehouse and Leonard SeabrookeThe Field of IPE2. Modern IPE: Lessons from a Counter-History, Randall Germain3. The Welcome Return of Political Economy to International Political Economy Scholarship: States, Markets, and Governance, Geoffrey R. D. Underhill4. Foreign Economic Policy, David H. Bearce5. Open Economy Politics Revisited, Stephanie J. Rickard6. Feminism, Georgina Waylen7. Racism and Paternalism, J.P. Singh8. Historical Materialism, Angela WiggerMethods9. Formal Models of International Political Economy: Looking Back and Moving Forward, Leslie Johns10. Experiments in IPE Research, Gabriel Spilker11. Networks in International Political Economy, 1. W. Kindred Winecoff and Kevin L. Young12. Content Analysis in International Political Economy, Cornel Ban13. Process Tracing and International Political Economy, Jeffrey T. Checkel14. Historical International Political Economy, James Ashley MorrisonProcesses15. Diffusion Processes in International Political Economy, Brian Greenhill16. Economic Coercion, Elena V. McLean17. Policy Transfer, Tim Legrand and Diane Stone18. Regulation, Cyril Benoit and Matthias Thiemann19. Accumulation, David BaileyForums20. Intergovernmental Organizations, André Broome21. Informality in International Political Economy, Felicity Vabulas22. International Financial Institutions: Forms, Functions, and Controversies, Alexander L. Kentikelenis and Sarah L. Babb23. From Silos to Barns? Regional Institutions in International Political, Etel Solingen24. The Economics and Politics of Preferential Trade Agreements, Leonardo Baccini25. Corporate Networks, Milan Babic, Jan Fichtner, and Eelke HeemskerkFlows26. Money, Mark Copelovitch and James Anderson27. Trade, Elisabeth van Lieshout28. Foreign Direct Investment (FDI), Rachel L. Wellhausen29. Work and Workers in International Markets, John S. Ahlquist30. Migration and IPE: A Story of Mutual Neglect?, Georg Menz31. Foreign Aid, Sarah Blodgett BermeoActors32. The Evolving State of the State in International Political Economy, Heather Ba33. The Firm, Glenn Morgan34. Interest Groups and Order in Global Economic Relations, Iain Osgood35. Households, Genevieve LeBaron and Liam Stanley36. Non-Governmental Organizations, Elizabeth BloodgoodOutcomes37. Liberalization, Timm Betz and Amy Pond38. The Investment Treaty Regime, Lauge N. Skovgaard Poulsen39. International Trade and Conflict, Edward D. Mansfield40. Financial Systems, Lucia Quaglia41. Development Policy, Seung-Uk Huh and Matthew S. Winters42. Informal Markets, Anja P. Jakobi43. Climate Crisis, Erin R. Graham44. Sexual Injustice, Ellie Gore and Nicola J. SmithAssets and Resources45. Oil and Gas, Andreas Goldthau and Nick Sitter46. Knowledge, Malcolm Campbell-Verduyn47. Territory, Jordan Branch and Timothy Turnbull48. The Many Meanings of Capital in IPE, Dick Bryan, Michael Rafferty, and Duncan Wigan

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