In a recent article in RIPE, Benjamin J. Cohen suggests that a deep divide exists between two schools of IPE: the American and the British. While, at a certain level of generality, obvious differences do exist between how international relations generally, and IPE more specifically, are studied in the US and the UK, various dimensions of Cohen's argument are problematic, and may inadvertently hinder his professed desire to build bridges across the Atlantic. In particular, Cohen's approach is ambiguous as to exactly what the defining characteristics of the 'British' approach are, appears to conflate different traditions of theorizing, and presents a very narrow characterization of the field of IPE in the United States
The British school of International Political Economy (IPE) has been highly innovative in encouragin...
Much historical scholarship has depicted Suez as a watershed not merely in British imperial history,...
Abstract Though welcome, Cohen's call for exchange across diverse perspectives in international poli...
An academic field of study may be said to exist when a coherent body of knowledge is constructed to ...
The following article is written as a sympathetic critique of Benjamin Cohen's recent identification...
B.J. Cohen's "British school" of theories of international political economy has much broader, class...
This article challenges three aspects of the 'American' school of international political economy (I...
Benjamin J. Cohen's story of the transatlantic divide in IPE follows a simple plot, creating ex...
Even though European and US approaches to international relations were distinguished during the Cold...
In my contribution to this forum on IPE, my aim is to add further to the critical interventions in t...
The study of the International Political Economy (IPE), like the IPE itself, is plural and unbounded...
Abstract In my contribution to this forum on IPE, my aim is to add further to the critical intervent...
Benjamin Cohen has provoked us into a global conversation aimed at unwrapping the practice and study...
The British school of International Political Economy (IPE) has been highly innovative in encouragin...
This article asks whether there is a discrepancy between the field of International Political Econom...
The British school of International Political Economy (IPE) has been highly innovative in encouragin...
Much historical scholarship has depicted Suez as a watershed not merely in British imperial history,...
Abstract Though welcome, Cohen's call for exchange across diverse perspectives in international poli...
An academic field of study may be said to exist when a coherent body of knowledge is constructed to ...
The following article is written as a sympathetic critique of Benjamin Cohen's recent identification...
B.J. Cohen's "British school" of theories of international political economy has much broader, class...
This article challenges three aspects of the 'American' school of international political economy (I...
Benjamin J. Cohen's story of the transatlantic divide in IPE follows a simple plot, creating ex...
Even though European and US approaches to international relations were distinguished during the Cold...
In my contribution to this forum on IPE, my aim is to add further to the critical interventions in t...
The study of the International Political Economy (IPE), like the IPE itself, is plural and unbounded...
Abstract In my contribution to this forum on IPE, my aim is to add further to the critical intervent...
Benjamin Cohen has provoked us into a global conversation aimed at unwrapping the practice and study...
The British school of International Political Economy (IPE) has been highly innovative in encouragin...
This article asks whether there is a discrepancy between the field of International Political Econom...
The British school of International Political Economy (IPE) has been highly innovative in encouragin...
Much historical scholarship has depicted Suez as a watershed not merely in British imperial history,...
Abstract Though welcome, Cohen's call for exchange across diverse perspectives in international poli...