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Strangely inspired: Recovering a neo-Strangean approach to power, authority and knowledge for IPE

This article was written by Blayne Haggart and Randall Germain
This article was published on

In this short video extract, Blayne Haggart and Randall Germain discuss the key arguments from their new Review of International Studies article - Strangely inspired: Recovering a neo-Strangean approach to power, authority and knowledge for IPE
 

Want to know more? You can read the full article at DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/S026021052500021X

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Abstract

The academic imprint of Susan Strange, long considered a pioneer in the field of IPE, no longer resonates with contemporary debates about the organization and structure of the global political economy. We argue that her analytical framework continues to be a productive way to think about important current developments, most importantly in relation to what can now be called the digital age and its emergent form of capitalism. We therefore modify and update Strange’s framework to highlight its unique analytical potential, and to set out the operational principles of what we want to call a ‘neo-Strangean’ framework of authority. We then apply it to what Strange identifies as the finance or credit structure. By focusing on a core domain of political-economic power, we demonstrate our principal claim that a neo-Strangean framework of authority points towards an understanding of how new actors and imperatives are reshaping the global political economy. We close by outlining the analytical benefits that a neo-Strangean research agenda promises for the field of IPE, which for us centre on emphasizing the dynamics and disruptive consequences of a knowledge-infused global political economy in a way that pays sufficient attention to ideational and material factors.

Photo by Christine Roy on Unsplash