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International political economy: perspectives and prospects—Part II

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  26 October 2009

Extract

The study of international political economy is beset with complexity: the complexity of the empirical referent and the variety of intellectual perspectives. The complexity of contemporary international economic relations was discussed in the first of these two papers. This paper is devoted to a critical review of the major established perspectives on the global political economy and a discussion of some of the bases upon which it might be possible to construct a synthetic, and hopefully more satisfactory, approach.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © British International Studies Association 1982

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References

1. See the interesting discussion by John Maclean in ‘Marxist epistemology, explanations of Change and the study of international relations’ in Buzan, B. and Jones, R. J. Barry, (eds.), Change and the Study of International Relations: The Evaded Dimension (London, 1981).Google Scholar

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29. Ibid. p. 19.

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34. Ibid. p. 51.

35. See Robert Keohane, ‘The Study of Transnational Relations Reconsidered’, paper given to the Annual Conference of the British International Studies Association, University of Warwick, 16–18 December 1976.

36. Keohane and Nye, op. cit., and Gilpin, op. cit.

37. See J. B. Burbidge, ‘The International Dimension’, pp. 139–150 in Eichner, op. cit.