
The latest issue of the
Review of International Political Economy (Vol. 28, no. 5, 2021) is out. Contents include:
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Lisa Tilley, Extractive investibility in historical colonial perspective: the emerging market and its antecedents in Indonesia
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Jacob L. Stump, Producing zones of neediness in world politics: missionaries, educators, and a cultural political economy of colonialism in Appalachia
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Lukas Hakelberg & Thomas Rixen, Is neoliberalism still spreading? The impact of international cooperation on capital taxation
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Zsófia Barta & Alison Johnston, Entitlements in the crosshairs: how sovereign credit ratings judge the welfare state in advanced market economies
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Eckhard Hein, Walter Paternesi Meloni & Pasquale Tridico, Welfare models and demand-led growth regimes before and after the financial and economic crisis
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Joan Miró, Austerity’s failures and policy learning: mapping European Commission officials’ beliefs on fiscal governance in the post-crisis EU
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Mirko Heinzel, Jonas Richter, Per-Olof Busch, Hauke Feil, Jana Herold & Andrea Liese, Birds of a feather? The determinants of impartiality perceptions of the IMF and the World Bank
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Arjan Reurink & Javier Garcia-Bernardo, Competing for capitals: the great fragmentation of the firm and varieties of FDI attraction profiles in the European Union
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Emily Anne Wolff, The global politics of African industrial policy: the case of the used clothing ban in Kenya, Uganda and Rwanda
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Alice Evans, Export incentives, domestic mobilization, & labor reforms
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Florence Dafe & Zoe Williams, Banking on courts: financialization and the rise of third-party funding in investment arbitration
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Donald MacKenzie, Iain Hardie, Charlotte Rommerskirchen & Arjen van der Heide, Why hasn't high-frequency trading swept the board? Shares, sovereign bonds and the politics of market structure
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Andreas Goldthau & Llewelyn Hughes, Saudi on the Rhine? Explaining the emergence of private governance in the global oil market