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POLS 5225

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Political Science 5225
INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY & CHANGE
Spring 2016
Ibrahim Elnur (email: ielnur@aucegypt.edu )
Hatem C121
M 5:00-7:40 pm
Office hours: Mondays and Thursdays: 2:00-3:30 pm
Room 2007 HUSS
Purpose of the course:
This course will examine selected theories and topics within the field of international
political economy. The course will explore the relationship between political and
economic structures in the international systems, the debates over competing
perspectives on the political economy approach, and the operation of key institutions
in the international system. An important element of the seminar will be to relate
issues of international political economy to political change within states and
societies.
Course Structure and Requirements:
Written work represents most of your grade. The course is developed specifically to
enhance your analytical capabilities, and your grasp of the topic, so as to increase the
authority of the paper, which you write for the course. The goal of the course is a
5,000-6,000-word research paper, directly pertaining to your long-term research goals
at AUC.
The course will be in the form of seminar and class discussion will serve as the main
component of our weekly meetings. Attendance is mandatory; thorough familiarity
with the reading material is essential; and active participation in class discussion is
required.
Evaluation:
Grades will be determined on the basis of:
Presentation and participation
Six reaction papers
A book review
Term essay
Total
20%
30%
20%
30%
100%
Core Texts:
A. Held, David, Anthony McGrew, David Goldblatt, and Jonathan
Perraton.1999. Global Transformations: Politics, Economics and
Culture.Stanford: Stanford University Press.
B. Held, David, and Anthony McGrew, eds. 2003. The Global
Transformations Reader: An Introduction to the Globalization Debate.
Cambridge: Polity Press.
And additional readings
I. Elnur, POLS 5225, Spring 2016
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Week 1: February 1st: Introduction to International Political Economy
•
Murphy, Craig N., and Douglas R. Nelson. 2001. “International Political
Economy: A Tale of Two Heterodoxies.”British Journal of Politics and
International Relations 3 (3): 393-412.doi: 10.1111/1467-856X.00065.
•
Lipschutz, Ronnie D. 2001.“Because People Matter: Studying Global
Political Economy.”International Studies Perspectives 2: 321-339.
doi:10.1111/1528-3577.00064
•
Burnham, Peter. 2001.“Marx, International Political Economy and
Globalization.” Capital & Class 25 (75): 103-112.
•
Selwyn, Benjamin. 2015.“Twenty-First-Century International Political
Economy: A Class-Relational Perspective.” European Journal of
International Relations 21 (2): 513-537. doi:10.1177/1354066114556659.
Week 2: February 8th: Introduction to Globalization Debate & Conceptualizing
Globalization (I)
•
Held,David, and Anthony McGrew.2000. “The Great Globalization Debate:
An Introduction.” In The Global Transformations Reader, 1-45. Cambridge:
Polity Press.
•
Held, David, Anthony McGrew, David Goldblatt and Jonathan Perraton. 2003.
“Rethinking Globalization.” In The Global Transformations Reader, edited by
David Held and Anthony McGrew,54-61. Cambridge: Polity Press.
•
Harvey, David. 2003. “Time-Space Compression and the Postmodern
Condition.”
Week3: February15th: Conceptualizing Globalization (II):
•
Hardt, Michael and Negri, Antonio. 2000.Empire (Preface and Part IV: The
decline and fall of empire. [Print copy in library: CHECK SHELF, JC359
.H279 2000, Main Library]
•
Desai, Meghnad (2002): Marx’s Revenge: The Resurgence of Capitalism and
the Death of Statist Socialism: Preface, Ch. 1, 18 and 19. [Print copy in
library: CHECK SHELF, HB97.5 .D38 2002, Main Library]
•
Beramendi, Pablo, and Eric Wibbels. 2015. “Globalization, Public Finance,
and Poverty.” International Studies Review 17 (4): 677-685.
doi:10.1111/misr.12270.
•
Heemskerk, Elke M., and Frank Takes. 2016.“The Corporate Elite Community
Structure of Global Capitalism.” New Political Economy 21 (1): 90-118. doi:
10.1080/13563467.2015.1041483.
Week 4: February 22nd: Global Trade and Global Markets.
I. Elnur, POLS 5225, Spring 2016
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•
Held & McGrew. 2003. The Global Transformation Reader, Chapter 3:
Global Trade, Global Markets, pp. 149-188.
•
Lowenfeld, Andreas F. (2002): International Economic Law, Oxford
University Press, Part II: The GATT/WTO System after the Uruguay Round,
pp. 68-131. [Print-copy in library: CHECK SHELF, K3820 .I58 1981 v. 6,
Main Library]
•
Morrissey, Oliver. 2001.“Investment and Competition Policy in the WTO:
Issues for Developing Countries.”Development Policy Review 20 (1): 6373.doi: 10.1111/1467-7679.00157.
•
Chang, HA-Joon. 2001.“Intellectual Property Rights and Economic
Development: Historical Lessons and Emerging issues. Journal of Human
Development 2 (2): 287-309. doi: 10.1080/14649880120067293.
•
López-Cariboni, Santiago and Xun Cao. 2015.“Import Competition and Policy
Diffusion.” 43 (4): 471-502. doi: 10.1177/0032329215602888.
Week 5: February 29th:Global Finance: Patterns and Shifts.
•
Held & McGrew. 2003. The Global Transformation Reader, Chapter 4:
Shifting Patterns of Global Finance, pp. 189-235.
•
Goldbach, Roman. 2015.“Asymmetric Influence in Global Banking
Regulation.” Review of International Political Economy 22 (6): 1087-1127.
doi: 10.1080/09692290.2015.1050440.
•
Knaak, Peter. 2015.“Innovation and Deadlock in Global Governance:
Transatalantic Coordination Failure in OTC Derivatives Regulation.” Review
ofInternational Political Economy22 (6): 1217-1248.
doi:10.1080/09692290.2015.1099555.
•
Katzenstein, Peter J., and Stephen Nelson. 2013.“Reading the Right Signals
and Reading the Signals Right: IPE and the Financial Crisis of 2008.” Review
of InternationalPolitical Economy 20 (5): 1101-1131.
doi:10.1080/09692290.2013.804854.
•
Sawyer,Malcolm.2013.“What is Financialization?” International Journal
ofPolitical Economy 42 (4): 5-18. doi: 10.2753/IJP0891-1916420401.
•
Bonizzi, Bruno. 2014.“Financialization in Developing and Emerging
Countries.” International Journal of Political Economy 42 (4): 83-107.
doi:10.2753/IJP0891-1916420405.
Week 6: March 7th: Global Production Networks:
•
Held, David, Anthony McGrew, David Goldblatt, and Jonathan Perraton.
1999. “Corporate Power and Global Production Networks. Global
Transformations, pp. 236-282.
•
The Global Conveyor-belt in Wichterich, C. (2000): The Globalized Women:a
Future of Inequality.
I. Elnur, POLS 5225, Spring 2016
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•
Held & McGrew, The Global Transformation Reader, Part IV: A
GlobalEconomy, pp.249-337.
•
Raza, Werner. 2016.“Politics of Scale and Strategic Selectivity in the
Liberalisation of Public Services: the Role of Trade in Services.” New
Political Economy 21 (2): 204-219. doi: 10.1080/13563467.2015.1079172.
Milner, Helen V., and Nita Rudra. 2015.“Globalization and the Political
Benefits of the Informal Economy.” International Studies Review 17 (4): 664669. doi: 10.1111/misr.12268.
•
Week 7: March 14th: Globalization and the State:
•
Held, David, and Anthony McGrew. 1999. “The Territorial
State and Global Politics.” In Global Transformations: Politics, Economics
and Culture, 32-86.
•
Held & McGrew The Global Transformations Reader,
Part 2: The Reconfiguration of Political Power, pp. 105-190.
•
Mann, Michael. 1999. “Has Globalization Ended the Rise
and Rise of the Nation-State?”, in International Order and the Future of
World Politics, edited by Paul, T.V. and Hall J.A, 237-261. Cambridge
University Press [Print copy in library:CHECK SHELF, JZ5566 .I58 1999,
Main Library]
•
Nayar, Baldev Raj (2002): Globalization and Nationalism,
Chapter 1.[Print copy in library:CHECK SHELF, HC435.2 .N346 2001,
Main Library]
Week 8: March 21st: Global Economy and Population Flows:
•
Held & McGrew Global Transformation, Chapter 6:
People on the Move, pp. 283-326.
•
Baines, Dudley (1991): Emigration from Europe, 18151930, Macmillan. [Print-copy available in library:CHECK SHELF, JV7590
.B35 1991, Main Library]
•
Hatton and Williamson (2006): Global Migration and the
World Economy, pp. 367-404.[Print-copy available in library:CHECK
SHELF, JV6217 .H38 2006, Main Library]
•
Hatton, Timothy J. 2014.“The Economics of International
Migration: A Short History of the Debate.” Labor Economics 30: 43-50.
doi:10.1016/j.labeco.2014.06.006.
•
Peters, Margaret E. 2015.“Open Trade, Closed Borders:
Immigration in the Era of Globalization.” World Politics 67 (1): 114-154.
doi:10.1017/S0043887114000331.
Roundtable I: Reading materials for roundtable discussion on Globalization and
Brain Drain/Brain Gain:
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•
Kapur, Devish, and John McHale. 2005. “Gone but Not
Forgotten? The Role of the Diaspora.” In The Global Migration of Talents:
What does it Mean for Developing Countries?, 110-131. Center for Global
Development.
http://www.cgdev.org/doc/books/Migration_Labor/The%20Role%20of%20Di
aspora%20ch%207.pdf
•
Peters, Margaret E. 2014.“Trade, Foreign Direct Investment
and Immigration Policy in the United States.” International Organization 68:
811-844. doi:10.1017/S0020818314000150.
Possible Main themes for RT 1:
International migration has grown, albeit no faster than world population, but it is
attracting increasing attention among both senders and recipients. Central to this
increasing interest is the links between international migration and economic
development. The discourses on these links attempts to transcend the most visible
marks of such links (i.e. Brain-drain and gain; remittances ..etc) to less visible and
long effects related to ‘potential’ positive transformative impact of international
migration tosending countries (Knowledge transfer, impact on education, triggering
of social changes .etc).
Week 9: March 28th: The Political Economy of Transition (I): Eastern Europe
and Russia:
•
Nesterenko, A. 2002.“The Transition Period Has Ended. Now What?”Russian
Social Science Review 43 (3): 48-66.doi: 10.2753/RSS1061-1428430348.
•
Ran, I.2001. “Ten Years of Systematic Changes in Central and Eastern Europe
and in Russia: Results and Lessons.” 39 (2): 6-29.doi: 10.2753/RUP1061194039026.
•
Yarashevic, Viachaslau. 2013. “External Debt of Post-Communist Countries.”
Communist and Post-Communist Studies 46: 203–216
doi:10.1016/j.postcomstud.2013.03.001.
•
Lewis, Paul G. 2010.“1990–2010—Two Decades of Post-communist
Transformation: Successes and
Failures.”ZeitschriftfürVergleichendePolitikwissenschaft4(2).
•
Papava, Vladimer. 2002.“Necroeconomics - the Theory of Post-Communist
Transformation of an Economy.International Journal of Social Economics
29(10): 796 – 805.doi:10.1108/03068290210444421.
•
Aitova, Gulnara. 2015.“From the Soviet Model of Labor Relations to Social
Partnership: The Limits of Transformation.”World Review of Political
Economy 6 (2): 252-265. doi: 10.13169/worlrevipoliecon.6.2.0252.
•
Pop, Liliana. 2007.“Time and Crisis: Framing Success and Failure in
Romania's Post-Communist Transformations.”Review of International
Studies33 (3): 395-413. Doi:10.1017/S0260210507007577
Week 10: April 4th: The Political Economy of Transition (I): China.
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•
Gao, Shangquan (1996): China’s Economic Reform, Houndmills,
Basingstoke, Hampshire: Macmillan Press; New York: St. Martin's Press. i.
Ch.1: From Planned Economy to Market Economy; ii, Ch. 2: The
Achievements ad Problems of China’s Economic Reform.
•
Gore, Lance (1998): Market Communism: The Institutional Foundation of
China’s Post-Mao Hyper-Growth, Oxford University Press. Ch.2: Institutions
and Institutional Reform in China: An Overview.
•
Korzeniewicz, Xu-chongio (2000): State-Assets Depletion and Economic
Reform in China, Studies in Comparative International Development, Spring
2000, Vol. 35, issue 1, p.28.
•
Green, Stephen (2005): Privatization in the former Soviet bloc: has China
learned the lesson? In Stephen Green and Guy S. Liu (2005): Exist The
Dragon? Privatization and the State Control in China, Blackwell Publishers,
2005
Week 11: April 11th: NICs Debate: A Revisit
1. Hamilton, Clive (1987): Can the Rest of Asia emulate the NICs? Third World
Quarterly, vol. 9, issues No. 4.
2. Ranis. Gustav (2002): Lessons from Taiwan’s Performance: Neither Miracle
nor Crisis. Ch (1) In Cow, Peter. (ed.). Taiwan in the Global Economy: From
an Agrarian Economy to an Exporter of High-Tech Products.
3. Amsden, Alice & Chu, Wan-Wen (2002): Upscaling: Recasting Old Theories
to Suit Late Industrializes. Ch (2) In Cow, Peter. (ed.). Taiwan in the Global
Economy: From an Agrarian Economy to an Exporter of High-Tech Products.
4. Pasha, Mustapha &Mittelman, James (1995): What Future for the NIC Model?
Globalization and the Remaking of the Third World, European Journal of
Development Research;Dec95, Vol. 7 Issue 2, p353
Roundtable 2: Additional Readings: Globalization and the relevance of NICS
debate:
Holslag 2015- Unequal Partnerships and Open Doors- Probing China's Economic
Ambitions in Asia.
Nölke 2015- Domestic Structures, Foreign Policies and Global Economic OrderImplications from the Rise of Large Emerging Economies
Week 12: April 18th: Challenges of Integration and Marginalization: On NorthSouth Gap
1. Muurshed, S. Mansoob (2002): Perspectives on two phases of globalization in
Muurshed, S. Mansoob (2002): Globalization, Marginalization and
Development, Routledge, London and New York.
2. Robin and Landi (1996): Whither the North-South Gap?, Third World
Quarterly, March 1996, Vol.17, issue 1.
I. Elnur, POLS 5225, Spring 2016
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3. Hoogvelt, Ankie (2001): Globalization, Imperialism and Exclusion: The Case
of Sub-Saharan Afdrica, in Zack-Williams et al (2001), Africa in Crisis, Pluto
Press, London, Sterling, Virgina.
4. Henry and Springborg (2001): Globalization and the Politics of Development
in the Middle East, Cambridge University Press.
5. Routray (2015): The Post-Development Impasse and the State in India, pp.
1906-1921.
6. Siddiqui 2015- Trade Liberalization and Economic Development- A Critical
Review
Possible Main themes for RT 2:
The historical conditions that enabled the catching up process of East Asian Newly
Industrializing is no longer available. The globalization processes has already
transformed beyond recognition the global political, and economic terrains. This
workshop is an attempt to go beyond the redundancy of replicablity discourses and
identify what are the relevant lessons to be learned from the NICs experience I, if any,
for the vast majority of the countries of the global South in their struggle to transcend
marginalization.
Roundtable 3: Additional Readings: Globalization and development: Potential
trends, threats and the Re-shaping of development thinking
1.
Taylor, Charles (2002)"Modern Social Imaginaries", Public Culture, 14 (1):
91-124.
2.
Stiglitz, Joseph E. (1998): Towards a New Paradigm for Development:
Strategies, Policies and Processes, WB.
3.
A Critique of Stiglitz:
4.
Ferguson, James (1999): Expectation of Modernity: Myths and Meanings
of Urban Life on the Zambian Copper belt, University of California
Press (Chapter 7: global Discontent): Abjection and Aftermath of
Modernism).
5.
Malessky, E. (2015): Transfer Pricing and Global Poverty, International
Studies Review,Volume 17, Issue 4, pages 669–677, December 2015.
6.
O'Connell 2015- European Crisis- A New Tale of Center-Periphery Relations
in the World of Financial Liberalization/Globalization?
7.
Downie 2015- Global Energy Governance in the G-20- States, Coalitions, and
Crises
8.
Borras, Franco and Suarez- Land and Food Sovereignty.
Possible Main themes for RT 3:
While the impasse in development studies is shared by many, the alternative paths
are not. How the advancing processes of globalization is impacting on paradigms
shift in the development thinking. To what extend does the ongoing discourses of
several (postmodern, post-development and globalization-inspired) notions and
insights offer alternative paradigms for development thinking. in an era with
marked impasse in development thinking.
I. Elnur, POLS 5225, Spring 2016
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Week 13: May 9th: Week 13: April: Globalization and Governance: State
Retreat and Non-State Actors:
1. Strange, Susan (1996): The Retreat of the State: The diffusion of Power in
the World Economy, Cambridge Studies in International Relations,
Cambridge University Press, pp. 3-43.
2. Drahos, Peter and Braithwaite, John (2000): The Globalization of
Regulation, The Journal of Political Philosophy, Volume9, Number 1,
2001, pp. 103-128.
3. Nayar, Raj Baldev (2001): Nationalism and Globalization, Sage
Publication, New Delhi and London: Chapter 1: Globalization,
Nationalism and Economic Reform: The Fundamental Issues, pp. 11-49.
4. Risse-Keppen, Thomas (1995): Bringing Transnational Relations Back in:
Non-State Actors, Domestic Structure and International Institutions,
Cambridge University Press, Ch. 9: Structures of Governance and
Transnational Relations: What have we learned.
5. Staden, Alfred and Volland, Hans (2002): The Erosion of State
Sovereignty: Towards a Post-territorial World? In Kreijen, Gerarad et
al(eds.) (2002): State Sovereignty and International Governance, Oxford
University Press, Ch.
List of Presentations
Date
Presenter Discussant
Book
Review
1. Introduction to International
Political Economy
February
1st
Ibrahim
-
-
2. Introduction to the globalization
debate Conceptualizing
globalization (1)
February
8th
Ibrahim
-
-
3. Conceptualizing globalization (2)
February
15th
4. Global Trade and global markets
February
22nd
5. Global finance: patterns and shifts
February
Topic
I. Elnur, POLS 5225, Spring 2016
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29th
6. Global production networks
March
7th
7. Globalization and the state
March
14th
8. Global economy and population
flows: RT 1
March
21st
ALL
9. The political economy of transition March
(1), (Eastern Europe)
28th
10. The political economy of transition April
(2), (China)
4th
April
11th
ALL
12 Challenges of Integration and
Marginalization: On North-South
Gap:RT 3
April
18th
ALL
13:Globalization and governance: Non
state actors
May 9th
14. Final Project Presentation
May 16th
11. A revisit of NICs debate: RT 2
ALL
Assignments and deadlines:
A. Reaction Papers:
1. Reaction paper on Week 2 readings due February 8th
2. Written contributions to Roundtables: I, II and III (Same day as the
roundtable but preferably earlier).
3. Reaction paper on Week 7 readings due March 21st.
4. Reaction paper on WK 10 readings due April 4th.
I. Elnur, POLS 5225, Spring 2016
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B. Book Review:
No specified length. You review should reach all participants in the seminar well
ahead of the presentation day (preferably two days ahead).
The Reaction Paper:
As agreed the reaction paper is expected to be in the range of 750 to 1000 words. A
mere summary of the material will not earn you a full grade. Students are expected to
Identify author/s’ main contribution, gaps and questions that need further inquiry as
suggested by the author. You are also expected to synthesize and critique the
theoretical arguments and/or empirical research if applicable. The main components
of the reaction paper are expected to answer the following questions:
-
What is the main thrust of the argument?
-
What are the theoretical issues that come up in this reading?
-
What are the main questions of relevance to this module?
-
How does this piece challenge other readings?
List of books for reviewing:
1. Asia's giants [electronic resource] : comparing China and India /
edited by Edward Friedman and Bruce Gilley. New York : Palgrave
Macmillan, 2005. (wk 10 )
2. Khan, Haider.Interpreting East Asian growth and innovation : the
future of miracles / Haider A. Khan. Houndmills [England] ;New
York : Palgrave Macmillan, 2004. HC460.5.Z9 T445 2004 (wk11)
3. Catching up and falling behind [electronic resource] : postcommunist (wk 9)
4.
Diaspora networks and the international migration of skills
[electronic resource] : how countries can draw on their talent abroad /
edited by Yevgeny Kuznetsov. Washington, DC : World Bank, 2006. (wk 8)
5. When women come first [electronic resource] : gender and class in
transnational migration / Sheba Mariam George.Berkeley :University
of California Press, c2005.(wk 8 )
6. Desai, Meghnad (2002): Marx’s Revenge: The Resurgence of
Capitalism and the Death of Statist Socialism: Preface, London ; New
York : Verso, 2002 HB97.5 .D38 2002 (wk 3).
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7. Globalizing Women: Transnational Feminist Networks/ Valentine M.
Moghadam, John Hopkins University Press, 2006HQ1101.M64 2005(wk
12).
8. Empire and imperialism : a critical reading of Michael Hardt and
Antonio Negri / Atilio A. Boron ; translated by Jessica
Casiro.London ; New York : Zed Books ; New York : Distributed in the
USA exclusively by Palgrave Macmillan, 2005 JC359 .B6713 2005(wk
3).
9. Williamson, Jeffrey G. 2011. Trade and Poverty: When the Third World
Fell Behind. Cambridge, Mass MIT Press.(wk 12).
10. Huang, Yasheng (2008): Capitalism with Chinese characteristics:
entrepreneurship and the state, Cambridge ; New York : Cambridge
University Press, 2008. HC427.92 .H8429 2008. (wk10).
11. Sadurski, Wojciech Febbrajo, Alberto (2010): Central and Eastern
Europe After Transition: Towards a New Socio-legal Semantics,
KJC4445 -- .C426 2010eb. (wk 9).
12. Urmas Varblane, Elias G. Carayannis (Eds.) (2011): Innovation Systems
in Small Catching-Up Economies: New Perspectives on Practice and
Policy; ISBN: 978-1-4614-1547-3 (Print) 978-1-4614-1548-0
(Online)(wk 12).
13. DelliGatti, Domenico; Desiderio, Saul; Gaffeo, Edoardo; more(2011):
Macroeconomics from the Bottom-up, ISBN: 978-88-470-1970-6
(Print) 978-88-470-1971-3 (Online).(wk 12).
------------------------------------------------------------Dr. James Sunday’s Books
14. Aligica, Paul Dragos, and Anthony J Evans. (2009) 1–267 The
Neoliberal Revolution in Eastern Europe: Economic Ideas in the
Transition From Communism. Cheltenham: Edward Elgar.(wk 9).
15. Andreasson, Stefan. (2010) 1–269 Africa's Development Impasse:
Rethinking the Political Economy of Transformation. London: Zed
Books.(wk 12).
16. Bush, Ray. (2007) 1–251 Poverty and Neoliberalism: Persistence and
Reproduction in the Global South. London: Pluto Press.(wk 12).
17. Caselli, Marco. (2012) 1–146 Trying to Measure Globalization:
Experiences, Critical Issues and Perspectives. London: Springer.(wk 2).
18. Cheung, Gordon C K. (2009) 1–135 Intellectual Property Rights China:
Politics of Piracy, Trade and Protection. Oxford: Routledge.(wk 4).
19. Colás, Alejandro. (2005) Neoliberalism, Globalisation and International
Relations. In Neoliberalism: a Critical Reader, London: Pluto Press.(wk
).
20. Couldry, Nick. (2010) 1–185 Why Voice Matters: Culture and Politics
After Neoliberalism. London: SAGE Publications.(wk 7).
21. Craig, David, and Doug Porter. (2006) 1–353 Development Beyond
Neoliberalism? Governance, Poverty Reduction and Political Economy.
Oxford: Routledge.(wk 12).
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22. Drahokoupil, Jan. (2009) 1–256 Globalization and the State in Central
and Eastern Europe: the Politics of Foreign Direct Investment. Oxford:
Routledge.(wk 9).
23. Duménil, Gérard, and Dominique Lévy. (2011) 1–400 The Crisis of
Neoliberalism. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.(wk 3).
24. Dunn, Bill. (2009) 1–385 Global Political Economy: a Marxist Critique.
London: Pluto Press.(wk 3).
25. Ehteshami, Anoushiravan. (2007) 1–257 Globalization and Geopolitics
in the Middle East: Old Games, New Rules. Oxford: Routledge.(wk 12).
26. Eichengreen, Barry J. (2008) 1–276 Globalizing Capital: a History of the
International Monetary System. Second. Princeton: Princeton University
Press.(wk 5).
27. Foust, Christina R. (2010) 1–256 Transgression as a Mode of Resistance:
Rethinking Social Movement in an Era of Corporate Globalization.
Lanham: Lexington Books.(wk 5).
28. Fraser, Nancy. (2013) 1–260 Fortunes of Feminism: From StateManaged Capitalism to Neoliberal Crisis. London: Verso.(wk 13).
29. Gallagher, Kevin P. (2013) 1–185 The Clash of Globalizations: Essays
on the Political Economy of Trade and Development Policy. London:
Anthem Press.(wk 4).
30. Gaventa, John, and Rajesh Tandon, Eds. (2010) 1–280 Globalizing
Citizens: New Dynamics of Inclusion and Exclusion. London: Zed
Books.(wk13 ).
31. Gibson-Graham, J K. (2006) 1–346 The End of Capitalism as We Knew
It: a Feminist Critique of Political Economy. Minneapolis: University of
Minnesota Press.(wk13 ).
32. Gill, Rosalind, and Christina Scharff, Eds. (2011) New Femininities:
Postfeminism, Neoliberalism and Subjectivity. Hampshire: Palgrave
Macmillan.(wk13).
33. Greenwald, Bruce C, and Judd Kahn. (2009) 1–211 Globalization: the
Irrational Fear That Someone in China Will Take Your Job. Hoboken,
NJ: John Wiley & Sons.(wk6).
34. Guazzone, Laura, and Daniela Pioppi, Eds. (2009) 1–401 The Arab State
and Neoliberal Globalization: the Restructuring of State Power in the
Middle East. Reading: Ithaca Press.(wk12 ).
35. Guthrie, Doug. (2009) 1–392 China and Globalization: the Social,
Economic and Political Transformation of Chinese Society. Revised.
Oxford: Routledge.(wk10).
36. Harrison, Ann, Ed. (2007) 1–674 Globalization and Poverty. Chicago:
University of Chicago Press.(wk13).
37. Harriss-White, Barbara, and Judith Heyer, Eds. (2010) 1–385 The
Comparative Political Economy of Development: Africa and South Asia.
Oxford: Routledge.(wk13).
38. Harvey, David. (2007) A Brief History of Neoliberalism. Oxford:
Oxford University Press.(wk3 ).
39. Hawkin, David J, Ed. (2004) 1–231 The Twenty-First Century Confronts
Its Gods: Globalization, Technology, and War. Albany: State University
of New York Press.(wk6).
40. James, Paul. (2006) 1–384 Globalism, Nationalism, Tribalism: Bringing
Theory Back in. London: SAGE Publications.(wk12).
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41. King, Charles. (2010) 1–256 Extreme Politics: Nationalism, Violence,
and the End of Eastern Europe. Oxford: Oxford University Press.(wk 9).
42. Kunz, Rahel. (2011) 1–235 The Political Economy of Global
Remittances: Gender, Governmentality and Neoliberalism. Oxford:
Routledge.(wk 8).
43. Milgate, Murray, and Shannon C Stimson. (2009) After Adam Smith: a
Century of Transformation in Politics and Political Economy. Princeton:
Princeton University Press.(wk 6).
44. Moghadam, Valentine M. (2009) 1–181 Globalization and Social
Movements: Islamism, Feminism, and the Global Justice Movement.
Plymouth: Rowman & Littlefield.(wk 13).
45. Parfitt, Trevor W. (2002) 1–183 The End of Development? Modernity,
Postmodernity and Development. London: Pluto Press.(wk 12).
46. Ritzer, George. (2011) 1–371 Globalization: the Essentials. West Sussex:
John Wiley & Sons.(wk 6).
47. Ritzer, George, and Zeynep Atalay, Eds. (2010) 1–487 Readings in
Globalization: Key Concepts and Major Debates. Oxford: Blackwell.(wk
3).
48. Ross, Michael L. (2012) 1–312 The Oil Curse: How Petroleum Wealth
Shapes the Development of Nations. Princeton: Princeton University
Press.(wk 12).
I. Elnur, POLS 5225, Spring 2016
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