Review of International Political Economy
2012 - 2025
Current editor(s): Gregory Chin, Juliet Johnson, Daniel Mügge, Kevin Gallagher, Ilene Grabel and Cornelia Woll From Taylor & Francis Journals Bibliographic data for series maintained by Chris Longhurst (). Access Statistics for this journal.
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Volume 25, issue 6, 2018
- Ideational power and pathways to legitimation in the euro crisis pp. 753-778

- Martin B. Carstensen and Vivien A. Schmidt
- Power paradox: how the extension of US infrastructural power abroad diminishes state capacity at home pp. 779-810

- Linda Weiss and Elizabeth Thurbon
- The ideational foundations of the illiberal backlash in Central and Eastern Europe: the case of Hungary pp. 811-828

- Aron Buzogány and Mihai Varga
- Debt, dignity, and defiance: why Greece went to the brink pp. 829-853

- Reinhard Wolf
- Does democracy promote capital account liberalization? pp. 854-883

- David A. Steinberg, Stephen C. Nelson and Christoph Nguyen
- Splitting the check: explaining patterns of counterpart commitments in World Bank projects pp. 884-908

- Matthew S. Winters and Jaclyn D. Streitfeld
- The authority of peer reviews among states in the global governance of corruption pp. 909-935

- Hortense Jongen
Volume 25, issue 5, 2018
- Limits to the BRICS’ challenge: credit rating reform and institutional innovation in global finance pp. 573-595

- Eric Helleiner and Hongying Wang
- External influence on exchange rates: An empirical investigation of US pressure and the Chinese RMB pp. 596-623

- Jessica Chen Weiss and Amber Wichowsky
- Gatekeeper power: understanding the influence of lead firms over transnational sustainability standards pp. 624-646

- Hamish van der Ven
- Transnational expertise and the expansion of the international tax regime: imposing ‘acceptable’ standards pp. 647-671

- Martin Hearson
- Kicking away the financial ladder? German development banking under economic globalisation pp. 672-698

- Natalya Naqvi, Anne Henow and Ha-Joon Chang
- Structural conditions for currency internationalization: international finance and the survival constraint pp. 699-725

- Stefan Angrick
- Different paths to regional hegemony: national identity contestation and foreign economic strategy in Russia and Turkey pp. 726-752

- Seçkin Köstem
Volume 25, issue 4, 2018
- Trading with the enemy: narrative, identity and US trade politics pp. 441-462

- Amy Skonieczny
- Instrument constituencies and transnational policy diffusion: the case of conditional cash transfers pp. 463-482

- Daniel Béland, Rosina Foli, Michael Howlett, M. Ramesh and J. J. Woo
- When is blacklisting effective? Stigma, sanctions and legitimacy: the reputational and financial costs of being blacklisted pp. 483-504

- Katrin Eggenberger
- When do states disrupt industries? Electric cars and the politics of innovation pp. 505-529

- Jonas Meckling and Jonas Nahm
- Power asymmetry and threat points: negotiating China's infrastructure development in Southeast Asia pp. 530-552

- Yoon Ah Oh
- A more German Italy? Competition and the development of relationship lending pp. 553-572

- Francesco Stolfi
Volume 25, issue 3, 2018
- Macroprudential regimes and the politics of social purpose pp. 293-316

- Andrew Baker
- Sovereign lending after debt relief pp. 317-339

- Jonas B. Bunte
- When politics gets in the way: domestic coalitions and the making of skill systems pp. 340-363

- Merve Sancak and Isik D. Özel
- Negotiating from the margins: how the UN shapes the rules of the WTO pp. 364-391

- Matias E. Margulis
- Whither the post-Washington Consensus? International financial institutions and development policy before and after the crisis pp. 392-417

- Ali Burak Güven
- Beyond voluntary: state–firm bargaining over corporate social responsibilities in mining pp. 418-440

- Paul Alexander Haslam
Volume 25, issue 2, 2018
- International development aid and the politics of scale pp. 145-168

- Shahar Hameiri and Fabio Scarpello
- A regional production network in a predatory state: export-oriented manufacturing at the margins of the law pp. 169-189

- Regine A. Spector
- Emerging markets and private governance: the political economy of sustainable palm oil in China and India pp. 190-214

- Philip Schleifer and Yixian Sun
- Context-driven attitude formation: the difference between supporting free trade in the abstract and supporting specific trade agreements pp. 215-242

- Andreas Jungherr, Matthias Mader, Harald Schoen and Alexander Wuttke
- Expanding property rights under investor-state dispute settlement (ISDS): class struggle in the era of transnational capital pp. 243-269

- Shawn Nichols
- Peace and conflict at different stages of the FDI lifecycle pp. 270-292

- Colin M. Barry
Volume 25, issue 1, 2018
- Are the major global banks now safer? Structural continuities and change in banking and finance since the 2008 crisis pp. 1-27

- Stephen Bell and Andrew Hindmoor
- Standards in the global value chains of the European Single Market pp. 28-48

- Knut Blind, Axel Mangelsdorf, Crispin Niebel and Florian Ramel
- The origins of national housing finance systems: a comparative investigation into historical variations in mortgage finance regimes pp. 49-74

- Timothy Blackwell and Sebastian Kohl
- Constructing investor rights? Why some states (fail to) terminate bilateral investment treaties pp. 75-97

- Julia Calvert
- The political economy of state governance in global production networks: change, crisis and contestation in the South African fruit sector pp. 98-121

- Matthew Alford and Nicola Phillips
- Periodizing, paths and probabilities: why critical junctures and path dependence produce causal confusion pp. 122-143

- Erik Peinert
Volume 24, issue 6, 2017
- One-size-fits-some! Capitalist diversity, sectoral interests and monetary policy in the euro area pp. 929-957

- Mattias Vermeiren
- Conceptualizing dynamic challenges to global financial diffusion: Islamic finance and the grafting of sukuk pp. 958-979

- Jikon Lai, Lena Rethel and Kerstin Steiner
- The domestic drivers of state finance institutions: evidence from sovereign wealth funds pp. 980-1003

- Juergen Braunstein
- An empirical investigation of the financialization convergence hypothesis pp. 1004-1029

- Sylvia Maxfield, W. Kindred Winecoff and Kevin L. Young
- Social norms strike back: why American financial practices failed in Japan pp. 1030-1051

- Fumihito Gotoh and Timothy J. Sinclair
- Subverting the status quo? Climate debt, vulnerability and counter-hegemonic frame integration in United Nations climate politics – a framework for analysis pp. 1052-1075

- David Ciplet
Volume 24, issue 5, 2017
- Power, knowledge and resistance: between co-optation and revolution in global trade pp. 741-775

- Erin Hannah, Holly Ryan and James Scott
- Accountability as justice for the Multilateral Development Banks? Borrower opposition and bank avoidance to US power and influence pp. 776-801

- Susan Park
- Shadow money and the public money supply: the impact of the 2007–2009 financial crisis on the monetary system pp. 802-838

- Steffen Murau
- Translating central bank independence into Norwegian: central bankers and the diffusion of central bank independence to Norway in the 1990s pp. 839-858

- Eivind Thomassen
- Institutionalizing neoliberalism: CFIUS and the governance of inward foreign direct investment in the United States since 1975 pp. 859-880

- Matthew J. Baltz
- South–South relations under world market capitalism: the state and the elusive promise of national development in the China–Ecuador resource-development nexus pp. 881-903

- Ruben Gonzalez-Vicente
- The performativity of potential output: pro-cyclicality and path dependency in coordinating European fiscal policies pp. 904-928

- Philipp Heimberger and Jakob Kapeller
Volume 24, issue 4, 2017
- When market fundamentalism and industrial policy collide: the Tea Party and the US Export–Import Bank pp. 569-598

- Kristen Hopewell
- A novel pathway to power? Contestation and adaptation in China's internationalization of the RMB pp. 599-628

- Christopher A. McNally and Julian Gruin
- Panama and the WTO: new constitutionalism of trade policy and global tax governance pp. 629-656

- Teppo Eskelinen and Matti Ylönen
- The IPE of money revisited pp. 657-680

- Benjamin Cohen
- Science and the system: IPE and international monetary politics pp. 681-698

- Stephen Chaudoin and Helen V. Milner
- Open economy politics and trade policy pp. 699-717

- Thomas Oatley
- The international political economy of money, macro-money theories and methods pp. 718-736

- Carla Norrlof
- Corrigendum pp. 737-737

- The Editors
- Corrigendum pp. 738-738

- The Editors
- Corrigendum pp. 739-740

- The Editors
Volume 24, issue 3, 2017
- Form over function in finance: international institutional design by bricolage pp. 363-392

- Nikhil Kalyanpur and Abraham Newman
- The regulator's conundrum. How market reflexivity limits fundamental financial reform pp. 393-423

- Bart Stellinga and Daniel Mügge
- Cause for optimism? Financial sanctions and the rise of the Sino-North Korean border economy pp. 424-453

- Jong-Woon Lee and Kevin Gray
- Can foreign aid donors credibly threaten to suspend aid? Evidence from a cross-national survey of donor officials pp. 454-496

- Haley J. Swedlund
- Accumulating through food crisis? Farmers, commodity traders and the distributional politics of financialization pp. 497-537

- Joseph Baines
- Veto players and the design of preferential trade agreements pp. 538-567

- Todd Allee and Manfred Elsig
Volume 24, issue 2, 2017
- International Political Economy meets the unexpected: Brexit, Trump and global populism pp. 177-178

- Jacqueline Best, Paul Bowles, Rachel Epstein, Kathryn Hochstetler, John Ravenhill and Wesley Widmaier
- Open economy politics and Brexit: insights, puzzles, and ways forward pp. 179-202

- Erica Owen and Stefanie Walter
- Black Swans, Lame Ducks, and the mystery of IPE's missing macroeconomy pp. 203-231

- Mark Blyth and Matthias Matthijs
- BREXIT, voice and loyalty: rethinking electoral politics in an age of interdependence pp. 232-247

- Henry Farrell and Abraham Newman
- Britain-out and Trump-in: a discursive institutionalist analysis of the British referendum on the EU and the US presidential election pp. 248-269

- Vivien A. Schmidt
- Brexit as a scandal: gender and global trumpism pp. 270-287

- Aida A. Hozić and Jacqui True
- The networks and niches of international political economy pp. 288-331

- Leonard Seabrooke and Kevin L. Young
- New developmentalism in Brazil? The need for sectoral analysis pp. 332-362

- Heike Döring, Rodrigo Salles Pereira dos Santos and Eva Pocher
Volume 24, issue 1, 2017
- The governance of global wealth chains pp. 1-29

- Leonard Seabrooke and Duncan Wigan
- Illicit Global Wealth Chains after the financial crisis: micro-states and an unusual suspect pp. 30-55

- J.C. Sharman
- Capital unchained: finance, intangible assets and the double life of capital in the offshore world pp. 56-86

- Dick Bryan, Michael Rafferty and Duncan Wigan
- Smoke screen? The globalization of production, transnational lobbying and the international political economy of plain tobacco packaging pp. 87-118

- Louise Curran and Jappe Eckhardt
- The end of exceptionalism? Explaining Chinese National Oil Companies’ overseas investments pp. 119-143

- Adam William Chalmers and Susanna Theresia Mocker
- Institutional change in Chinese cross-border finance: foreign investors, the party-state and power resources pp. 144-175

- Laura-Marie Töpfer
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