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Section I: Understanding the Changing Global Order
Geoffrey R.D. Underhill: Introduction: Conceptualizing the Changing Global Order
1: Michael Kratke, University of Amsterdam and Geoffrey R.D. Underhill: The Emergence of IPE
2: Robert W. Cox, York University: Problems of Power and Knowledge in a Changing Global World Order
3: Herman M. Schwartz, University of Virginia: Globalization: The Long View
4: James H. Mittelman, American University: Globalization and Its Critics
5: Eric Helleiner, Trent University: Alternatives to Neoliberalism? Towards a More Heterogeneous Global Political Economy
6: Sandra Whitworth, York University: Theory and Exclusion: Gender, Masculinity, and International Political Economy
Section II: Global Issues
Geoffrey R.D. Underhill: Introduction: Global Issues in Historical Perspective
7: Brian Burgoon, University of Amsterdam: The Political Economy of Post-September 11th Security
8: Louis W. Pauly, University of Toronto: Global Finance and Political Order
9: Jonathan Story, INSEAD: Emerging World Financial Order and Different Forms of Capitalisms
10: Michael C. Webb, University of Victoria: The Group of Seven and Global Macroeconomic Governance
11: Jens Ladefefoged Mortensen, University of Copenhagen: WTO and the Governance of Globalization: Dismantling the Compromise of Embedded Liberalism
12: Susan K. Sell, The George Washington University: Big Business, the WTO and Development: Uruguay and Beyond
13: Winfried Ruigrok, University of St. Gallen: Transnational Production and Corporate Strategies
14: Henry Farrell, George Washington University: The Political Economy of the Internet and E-Commerce
15: Robert O'Brien, McMaster University: The Agency of Labour in a Changing Global Order
16: Geeta Chowdhry, Northern Arizona University: Postcolonial Readings of Child Labour in a Globalized Economy
17: Steven Berstein, University of Toronto: Environment, Economy, and Global Environment Governance
18: Marianne Marchand, Universidad de las Americas: Gendered Representation of the 'Global': Reading/Writing Globalization
19: H. Richard Friman, Marquette University: Crime in the Global Economy
Section III: Regional Dynamics
Richard Stubbs and Austina J. Reed, McMaster University: Introduction: Regionalism and Globalization
20: Helge Hveem, University of Oslo: Explaining the Regional Phenomenon in an Era of Globalization
21: Bastiaan van Apeldoorn, Free University, Amsterdam: The Transnational Political Economy of Europen Integration: The Future Socio-Economic Governance in the Enlarged Union
22: Tony Porter, McMaster University: The North American Free Trade Agreement
23: Nicola Phillips, University of Manchester: Latin America in the Global Political Economy
24: Richard Higgott, University of Warwick: Economic Regionalism in East Asia: Consolidation with Centrifugal Tendencies
25: Tim Shaw, University of London and Pamela K. Mbabazi, Mbarara University of Science and Technology, Uganda: Political Economies of Africa(s) at the Start of the 21st Century
Section IV: Responses to Globalization
Richard Stubbs and Sarah Eaton, University of Toronto: Introduction: Responses to Globalization
26: Philip G. Cerny, Rutgers University: Political Globalization and the Competition State
27: Mike Smith, Loughborough University: Negotiating Globalization: The Foreign Economic Policy of the European Union
28: Sigurt Vitols, Social Science Research Center Berlin: Globalization and the Transformation of the Germany Model
29: Andrew Baker, University of Belfast: The Political Economy of the UK Compeitition State: Committed Globalism, Selected Europeanism
30: Annette Freyberg-Inan, University of Amsterdam: Transition Economies
31: Bruce E. Moon, Lehigh University, USA: The United States and Globalization: Struggles with Hegemony
32: Mark Beeson, University of Queensland: Politics and Markets in East Asia: Is the Developmental State Compatible with Globalization
33: Christopher W. Hughes, University of Warwick: Japan, East Asian Regionalism and Selective Resistance to Globalization: Regional Divisions of Labour and Financial Cooperation
34: Shaun Breslin, University of Warwick: China and the Political Economy of Global Engagement
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