Drawing on recent debates in critical International Political
Economy, this book mobilizes the idea that the economy does not
exist separately from society and politics to develop a detailed
intellectual history of how the economy came to be seen as an
independent domain.
In contrast to typical approaches to writing the history of
economic thought, which assume the reality of the economy, the
author describes the forms of intellectual argument that made it
possible to conceive of the national and international economies as
objects of intellectual inquiry. At the centre of this process was
the analytical separation of power and wealth. Walter thus offers a
broad historical perspective on the emergence of current IPE
theory, while linking the field with contextualist intellectual
history.
This important and innovative volume will be of strong interest
to students and scholars of International Political Economy,
International Relations, Economics, History and Political
Theory."
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