Saturday, June 19, 2021

New Issue: Review of International Political Economy

The latest issue of the Review of International Political Economy (Vol. 28, no. 3, 2021) is out. Contents include:
  • Natalya Naqvi, Renationalizing finance for development: policy space and public economic control in Bolivia
  • Manolis Kalaitzake, Brexit for finance? Structural interdependence as a source of financial political power within UK-EU withdrawal negotiations
  • Scott James & Lucia Quaglia, Brexit and the political economy of euro-denominated clearing
  • Sébastien Charles & Jonathan Marie, How Israel avoided hyperinflation. The success of its 1985 stabilization plan in the light of post-Keynesian theory
  • Morr Link & Yoram Z. Haftel, Islamic legal tradition and the choice of investment arbitration forums
  • Tarald Laudal Berge & Taylor St John, Asymmetric diffusion: World Bank ‘best practice’ and the spread of arbitration in national investment laws
  • Eugene Gholz & Llewelyn Hughes, Market structure and economic sanctions: the 2010 rare earth elements episode as a pathway case of market adjustment
  • Daniel McDowell, Financial sanctions and political risk in the international currency system
  • Moritz Weiss, Varieties of privatization: informal networks, trust and state control of the commanding heights
  • Robbie Shilliam, The past and present of abolition: reassessing Adam Smith’s “liberal reward of labor”
  • Declan Curran & Mounir Mahmalat, Policy divergence across crises of a similar nature: the role of ideas in shaping 19th century famine relief policies
  • Maria Gavris, Revisiting the fallacies in Hegemonic Stability Theory in light of the 2007–2008 crisis: the theory’s hollow conceptualization of hegemony