International Political Economy (IPE) meets International Political Sociology (IPS)

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Serval ID
serval:BIB_C84792F5C4C0
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
International Political Economy (IPE) meets International Political Sociology (IPS)
Journal
International Relations
Author(s)
Graz Jean-Christophe, Kessler Oliver, Kunz Rahel
Publication state
Published
Issued date
02/12/2019
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
4
Number
33
Pages
586–594
Language
english
Abstract
This forum opens a debate that is long overdue: for far too long, the fields of international political sociology (IPS) and international political economy (IPE) have been standing apart. Discussions take place in different conference sections, in different networks that publish in different journals. Yet, this divide is surprising given that the two fields share similar trajectories, theoretical concerns, problématiques, and conceptual challenges. This forum starts exploring this shared terrain: we believe that there is no a priori reason to separate the sociocultural, the political and the economic when we aim at making sense of the world in any meaningful way. We propose that bridging the IPE-IPS divide has tremendous potential for the development of a socio-political economy analysis that, we believe, has two benefits. First, it allows for the opening of new empirical terrains or deepening and widening existing ones. Second, bringing IPE/S back together creates reflexive spaces for more holistic, embodied and contextualised conceptual innovation. The contributors to this forum show each in their own way such empirical and conceptual added value of moving beyond the IPE and IPS divide in order to develop what we call here a socio-political economy of the globe. They focus on various issues, such as the transformation of capitalism from an oil- to a data-dependent accumulation regime with the rising of the so-called ‘digital age’ (Chenou); the profound social, economic and political transformation triggered by urbanisation in the development world (Elias, Rethel and Tilley); emerging global risks and the neglected role of the insurance industry (Lobo-Guerrero); regional development-security nexuses (Lopez Lucia); and business power in climate change diplomacy (Moussu).
Keywords
climate diplomacy, development-security nexus, digital age, international political economy, international political sociology, sociopolitical economy of the globe, urbanisation, climate diplomacy
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16/02/2018 19:10
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09/02/2021 17:14
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