Ronnie Lipschutz
(Crown College;
459-3275; rlipsch@ucsc.edu)
Office Hours: Monday,
1-2; Thurs.,
12:30-1:30, or by appt.
(Last updated April 25, 2005)
This core
seminar introduces students to the
theories and methodologies of political economy. It focuses on the
relationship
between states, markets and societies, addresses the history of the
social
formation we call the “liberal state,” and considers the politics of
economic
choices and institutions germane to both national and global political
institutions. The course also addresses
the origins and development of markets and capitalism; the historical
evolution
of states and their economies; the relationship between labor, capital,
production, and consumption; regulation of production; macroeconomics
and
management of economies; and issues of social welfare, both national
and
global.
Students are required to submit a 2-3 page critique of the readings for seven of the nine sections, as well as a 10-12 page theoretical paper at the end of the quarter. Each week, two students (who may collaborate or not, as they wish) will be asked to prepare a set of questions to present to the class and to lead the discussion. Students will also be divided into three groups to organize and present materials on the case studies. The theoretical paper—this is not a research paper—should focus on a question of interest to the student. It should draw on the course readings, as well as outside materials.
REQUIRED TEXTS:
The following texts are available for purchase from the Literary Guillotine, 204 Locust St., SC. All texts and some of the recommended readings are on reserve at McHenry Library. Some of the assigned articles are available on-line, as indicated.
Karl Polanyi, The Great Transformation: The Political and Economic Origins of Our Times (Beacon Press, 2001, 2nd ed.)
Ellen Meskins Wood, The Origin of Capitalism—a longer view (Verso, 2002).
Reinhardt Koselleck, Critique and Crises (MIT, 1998).
Jerry Muller, The Mind and the Market (Anchor, 2002).
Sandra Halperin, War and Social Change in Modern Europe (Cambridge, 2004).
Peter Drahos with John Braithwaite, Information Feudalism (Norton, 2003).
Amy Dru Stanley. From Bondage to Contract—Wage Labor, Marriage and the Market in the Age of Slave Emancipation (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1998).
COURSE SYLLABUS:
Required readings are designated by an *
Please read The Great Transformation for the first class meeting.
I. GENEALOGIES
3/28: “In the
beginning”—what is political economy?
Required reading:
*Muller, The Mind and the Market, introduction, ch. 1-2.
*Polanyi, The Great Transformation
*Wood,” The Origin of Capitalism,” Part II, ch. 8
*Anna M. Agthangelou and Lilly H.M. Ling, “The House of IR: From Family Power Politics to the Poisies of Worldism,” International Studies Review 6, #4 (2004): 21-49, at: http://ic.ucsc.edu/~rlipsch/Pol200D/Agathangelou%20and%20Ling.pdf
Additional
resources:
James Caporasso and David Levine, Theories
of Political Economy (1992) [A good introduction to major theories.
The
discussion of Keynes is exemplary.]
Randall Collins, Weberian
Sociological Theory, chap 2 “Weber’s Last Theory of Capitalism”
Robert Gilpin & Jean Gilpin, The
Political Economy of International Relations (1987), chap. 1 “The
Nature of
Political Economy”
F.A. Hayek, The Fatal Conceit:
The Errors of Socialism (1988)
Robert Heilbroner, The Nature
and
Logic of Capitalism (1985)
Albert O. Hirschman, The
Passions
and the Interests: Political Arguments for Capitalism before its Triumph
(1977)
_________________, Rival Views
of
Market Society and Other Essays (1988)
John Maynard Keynes, The General
Theory of Employment, Interest, and Money (1936)
Friedrich List, The
National System of Political Economy
Charles Lindblom, The
Market System: What It Is, How It Works, and What to Make of It
(2001)
K. Marx, Capital,
Vol. I-III
Deborah A. Redman, The
Rise of Political Economy as a Science: Methodology and the Classical
Economists (1997)
Joseph A. Schumpeter, Capitalism,
Socialism and Democracy (1942)
Adam Smith, The
Wealth of Nations
Richard Swedberg, Max
Weber and the Idea of Economic Sociology (1998)
James Tobin, “The Invisible Hand in Modern
Macroeconomics” in Michael Fry ed. Adam
Smith’s Legacy (1992), pp. 117-29.
Max Weber, The
Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism
_________, Economy
and Society (1978)
4/4: Origins of
“liberalism” and political economy
Required reading:
*Halperin, War and Social Change in Modern Europe, ch. 1-2.
*Koselleck,
Critique and
Crises
*Benjamin Lozano, “The Ego and the Market,” on-line at: http://ic.ucsc.edu/~rlipsch/Pol200D/Ego%20and%20the%20Market1.doc
*Muller, The Mind and the Market, ch. 3
*Justin Rosenberg, The Empire of Civil Society (Verso, 1994), ch. 3-5.
Additional
resources:
Richard Bensel, The
Political Economy of American Industrialization, 1877-1900 (2000)
F. Braudel, Afterthoughts
on Material Civilization and Capitalism (1977)
Peter Evans, Embedded
Autonomy: States and Industrial Transformation
(1996)
Alexander Gershenkron, Economic
Backwardness in Historical Perspective (1962), esp. chap.
1
Liah Greenfeld, The
Spirit of Capitalism: Nationalism and Economic Growth (Harvard 2001)
Albert Hirschmann, National
Power and the Structure of Foreign Trade (California, 1980).
Charles Kindleberger, The World
in Depression (UC Press, 1973).
Douglass C. North, Institutions,
Institutional Change, and Economic Performance (1990)
Michael Mann, The
Sources of Social Power (Cambridge, 1993)
Charles S. Maier, In
Search of Stability: Explorations in Historical Political Economy
(1987)
Mancur Olson, The
Rise and Decline of Nations (Yale, 1982).
Martin J. Sklar, The
Corporate Reconstruction of American Capitalism, 1890-1916 (1992)
Daniel Verdier, Democracy
and International Trade: Britain, France, and the United States,
1860-1990
(Princeton, 1994).
Immanuel
Wallerstein, Modern World-System, Vol. I-III
Max Weber, General Economic
History, Frank H.
Knight, ed. (1919)
4/11: Liberal political economy & its critics (Cassie and Sandra)
Required reading:
*Muller, The Mind and the Market, ch. 4-5, 7
*F.A. Hayek, “The Use of Knowledge in Society,” American Economic Review 35 (1945): 519-530, at: http://ic.ucsc.edu/~rlipsch/Pol200D/Hayek.pdf
*Emma Rothschild, Economic Sentiments: Adam Smith, Condorecet, and the Enlightenment (2002), chap. 5 “The Bloody and Invisible Hand,” at: http://www.compilerpress.atfreeweb.com/Anno%20Rothschild%20Bloody%20&%20Invisible%201.htm
*Douglas North, “Institutions,” Journal of Economic Perspectives 5, #1 (1991): 97-112, at: http://ic.ucsc.edu/~rlipsch/Pol200D/North.pdf
*Karl
Marx and Friedrich Engels, The German
Ideology, at: http://www.marxists.org/archive/marx/works/1845/german-ideology/
*Jonathan Nitzan and Shimshon Bichler, “Capital Accumulation: Breaking the Dualism of ‘Economics’ and ‘Politics’,” in: Ronan Palan (ed.), Global Political Economy: Contemporary Theories (Routledge, 2000), ch. 5. (Xerox)
Additional
resources:
Janet abu-Lughod, Before
European Hegemony (Oxford, 1989).
Walter Adamson, Hegemony
and Revolution: A Study of Gramsci’s Political and Cultural Theory
(UC
Press, 1980).
Giovanni Arrighi, The
Long Twentieth Century (Verso, 1994).
Fred Block, The
Origins of International Economic Disorder (UC Press, 1977).
Robert Cox, Production,
Power and World Order (Columbia, 1987).
G. William Domhoff, The Power
Elite: How Policy is Made in America (1990)
_________, State Autonomy or Class Dominance? Case
Studies on Policy Making in America (1996)
Stephen Gill, ed., Gramsci,
Historical Materialism and International Relations, (Cambridge,
1993).
Stephen Gill & David Law, The
Global Political Economy (Hopkins, 1988).
Sandra Halperin, In
the Mirror of the Third World (Cornell, 1997).
Jonathan Nitzan & Shimson Bichler, The Global Political Economy of Israel
(Pluto Press, 2002), ch. 1.
II. INSTITUTIONS
& SOCIAL FORCES
4/18:
States and markets
* Muller, The Mind and the Market, ch. 8
*Wood, The Origins of Capitalism, ch. 8-9
<>*Philip Cerny, “Structuring the Political Arena,” in: Ronen Palan, ed, Global Political Economy: Contemporary Theories (Routledge, 2000), ch. 2. (Xerox)*Timothy Mitchell, “Society, Economy, and the State Effect,” pp. 76-97, in: George Steinmetz (ed.), State/Culture—State-Formation after the Cultural Turn (Ithaca: Cornell, 1999). (Xerox)
* Adam Przeworski, The State and the Economy Under Capitalism (1990). (Xerox)
*Fred Block, “The Roles of the State in the Economy” in Neil J. Smelser and Richard Swedberg, eds., The Handbook of Economic Sociology (1994), pp. 691-710. (Xerox)
Additional
resources:
Robert Boyer and Daniel
Drache
(eds.), States against markets : the
limits of globalization (Routledge, 1996).
Fred Block, Postindustrial
Possibilities: A Critique of Economic Discourse (1990)
__________, “The Role of Interests,
Institutions, and
Ideas in the Comparative Political Economy of Industrialized Nations,”
in Mark
Lichback & Alan S. Zuckerman, eds., Comparative
Politics (1997), pp .174-207.
Fred Hirsch, Social
Limits to Growth (1978)
John Goldthorpe, ed., Order and
Conflict in Contemporary Capitalism (1984)
Peter A. Hall, ed. The
Political Power of Economic Ideas (1992)
Fred Hirsch and John Goldthorpe, eds., The Political Economy of Inflation
(1978)
David M. Kotz, Terrence McDonough &
Michael Reich,
Social Structures of Accumulation: The
Political Economy of Growth and Crisis (1994)
Stephen Krasner, “State Power and the
Structure of
International Trade,” World Politics
28, #3 (April 1976): 317-43.
Charles Lindblom, Politics
and Markets: The World's Political-Economic Systems (1978)
James O'Connor, The
Fiscal Crisis of the State (1973)
Torsten Persson & Guido Tabellini, Political Economics: Explaining Economic
Policy (2000)
Adam Przeworski Capitalism
and Social Democracy (1986)
Andrew Shonfield, Modern
Capitalism: The Changing Balance of Public and Private Power (1965)
Sven Steinmo, Taxation
and Democracy: Swedish, British, and American Approaches to Financing
the
Modern State (1993)
Susan Strange, States
and Markets (Pinter, 1988).
__________, Casino
Capitalism (Blackwell, 1989).
Herman Schwartz, States versus
Markets (St. Martin’s,
1994).
Ronen Palan & Jason Abbott,
State Strategies in the Global Political Economy (Pinter, 1999).
Peter Katzenstein, ed., Between
Power and Plenty (Cornell, 1978).
________, Small
States in World Markets (Cornell, 1986).
4/25:
Capital, labor, property
Required reading:
*Halperin, War and Social Change, ch. 4-5.
*Claus Offe, “The Political Economy of the Labour Market,” in Disorganized Capitalism (1985), pp. 10-51
*Thorstein Veblen, “The Beginnings of Ownership,” American Journal of Sociology 4, #3 (Nov. 1989): 352-65, at http://ic.ucsc.edu/~rlipsch/Pol200D/Veblen.pdf
*Stanley, From Bondage to Contract, ch. 1-2.
*John
G. Ruggie, “Territoriality and beyond: problematizing modernity in
international relations,” International Organization 47#1
(1993), pp.
139-174, at: http://ic.ucsc.edu/~rlipsch/Pol200D/Ruggie.pdf
*Chris
Tilly and Charles Tilly, “Capitalist Work and Labor Markets,” in Neil
J.
Smelser and Richard Swedberg, eds., The
Handbook of Economic Sociology (1994), pp. 283-312 (Xerox).
Additional
resources:
Michael Kalecki, "Political Aspects of Full
Employment" from The Last Phase in
the Development of Capitalism
Peter A. Hall, Governing
the Economy: The Politics of State Intervention in Britain and France,
(1986),
Colin
Gordon, New Deals: Business, Labor, and
Politics in America, 1920- 1935 (1994)
Kees
van der Pijl, Transnational Classes and
International Relations (Routledge, 1998)
Torben Iversen, Jonas Pontusson, David
Soskice, eds., Unions, Employers, and Central Banks
(2000)
Mark Rupert, Producing Hegemony
(Cambridge, 1995)
5/2:
Social policy and the welfare state
Required reading:
*Muller, The Mind and the Market, ch. 9-12
*Halperin, War and Social Change, ch. 6-8
*David
Cameron,
"The Expansion of the Political Economy: A Comparative Analysis," APSR 72 (1978), pp. 1243-61, at: http://ic.ucsc.edu/~rlipsch/Pol200D/Cameron.pdf
Additional
resources:
Peter Baldwin, The
Politics of Social Solidarity: Class Bases of the European Welfare
States,
1975-1975 (1990)
Michael K. Brown, Race,
Money, and the American Welfare State (1999),
Alexander Hicks,
Social Democracy and Welfare Capitalism: A Century of Income Security
Politics (1999)
Evelyne Huber & John D. Stephens, Development and Crisis of the Welfare State
(2001)
Claus Offe, Contradictions
of the Welfare State (1984)
Theda Skocpol, Protecting
Soldiers and Mothers (1992)
Peter A. Swenson, Capitalists
Against Markets: The Making of Labor Markets and Welfare States in the
United
States and Sweden (2002)
Harold Wilensky, The
Welfare State and Equality (1975)
Peter Gourevitch, “The Macropolitics of
Microinstitutional Differences in the Analysis of Comparative
Capitalism,” in
Suzanne Berger and Ronald Dore, National
Diversity and Global Capitalism (1996), pp. 239-262.
Peter A. Hall & David Soskice, eds., Varieties of Capitalism: The Institutional
Foundations of Comparative Advantage (2001).
Roger Burrows and Brian Loader, Towards
a Post-Fordist Welfare State? (1994)
Richard Clayton & Jonas Pontusson,
"Welfare-State Retrenchment Revisited: Entitlement Cuts, Public Sector
Restructuring, and Inegalitarian Trends in Advanced Capitalist
Societies,"
World Politics 51 (1998), pp. 67-98.
Alfred Pfaller, Ian Gough & Goran
Therborn, Can the Welfare State Compete?
A
Comparative Study of Five Advanced Countries
(1991).
Paul Pierson, "The New
Politics of
the Welfare State," World Politics
48 (1996), pp. 143-79.
__________, Dismantling
the Welfare State (1994)
__________, ed., The New
Politics of the Welfare State
(2001)
Gosta Esping-Andersen, ed., Welfare
States in Transition: National Adaptations in Global Economies
(1996).
Duane Swank, Global
Capital, Political Institutions, and Policy Change in Developed Welfare
States
(2002)
Carles Boix, Political
Parties, Growth and Equality: Conservative and Social Democratic
Economic
Strategies in the World Economy (1998)
Colin Crouch & Wolfgang Streeck,
Political Economy of Modern Capitalism:
Mapping Convergence and Diversity (1997)
Herbert Kitschelt, et.al.,
eds.,
Continuity and Change in Contemporary Capitalism (1999)
Geoffrey Garrett, Partisan
Politics in the Global Economy (1998)
III.
Cases
5/9:
Gendering political economy/gender and political economy/the political
economy
of gender
Required reading:
*Stanley,
From Bondage to Contract, ch. 3-6.
*Ann
Shola Orloff, “Gender and the
Social Rights of Citizenship,” American
Sociological Review 58, #3 (June 1993):303-28, at: http://ic.ucsc.edu/~rlipsch/Pol200D/Orloff.pdf
*Joan
W. Scott, “Gender: A Useful
Category of Historical Analysis,” American Historical Review
91, #5
(Dec. 1986):1053-75, at: http://ic.ucsc.edu/~rlipsch/Pol200D/Scott.pdf
*Caitlin Flanagan, “How Serfdom Saved the Women’s Movement,” Atlantic (March 2004) (Xerox)
*Anna
Agathangelou, The Global
Political Economy of Sex (New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2004), ch.
1,3.
(Xerox)
Additional
resources:
Bridget Anderson, Doing
the Dirty Work? The Global Politics of
Domestic Labour (London: Zed, 2000).
M. Dalla Costa and G.F. Dalla Costa (eds.), Women, Development, and Labor or
Reproduction (Trenton, N.J.: Africa World Press, 1999).
Joanne Cook, Jennifer Roberts, and Georgina
Waylen
(eds.), Towards a Gendered Political
Economy (Basingstoke: Macmillan, 2000).
Marianne Marchand and Ann Sisson Runyan
(eds.), Gender and Global Restructuring (London:
Routledge, 2000).
V. Spike Peterson, A
Critical Rewriting of Global Political Economy (London: Routledge,
2003).
5/16:
Commodification, knowledge, and power
Required reading:
*Drahos,
Information
Feudalism
*John Conybeare,
“International organization and the theory of property
rights,” International
Organization 34, #3 (Summer 1980):
307-334, at: http://ic.ucsc.edu/~rlipsch/Pol200D/Conybeare.pdf
Additional
resources:
Stephen Krasner, Structural
Conflict—The Third World Against Global Liberalism (UC Press, 1985),
Philip McMichael, Development
and Social Change: A Global Perspective (Pine Forge Press, 1996).
Robert O. Kohane, "The World Political
Economy
and the Crisis of Embedded Liberalism," in John H. Goldthorpe (ed.) Order and Conflict in Contemporary
Capitalism (1984) pp. 15-38.
5/23:
Globalization & imperialism
Required reading:
*Muller, The Mind and the Market, ch. 13.
*Joseph Schumpeter, "The Crisis of the Tax State" in R. Swedberg, ed., Joseph A. Schumpeter: The Economics and Sociology of Capitalism (1991), pp. 99-141 (xerox).
*Paul Hirst & Grahame Thompson, Globalization in Question (Polity, 1999, 2nd ed.), ch. 1 (xerox forthcoming).
*J.A. Hobson, Imperialism (Michigan, 1967), pp. 71-93 (exros forthcoming).
*David Landes, “Some Thoughts on the Nature of Economic Imperialism,” Journal of Economic History 21, #4 (1961):496-512, at: http://ic.ucsc.edu/~rlipsch/Pol200D/Landes.pdf
Additional
resources:
Robert Gilpin, The
Political Economy of International Relations (Princeton, 1987).
Ronen Palan, ed, Global
Political Economy: Contemporary Theories (Routledge, 2000).
R. Albritton, et
al, eds., Phases of Capitalist Development (Palgrave,
2001).
Jaghdish Bhagwati, In Defense of
Globalization (Oxford,
2004).
James Braithwaite
& Peter
Drahos, Global Business Regulation
(Cambridge, 2000).
Manuel Castells, The Rise of the
Network Society
(Blackwell, 2000, 2nd ed), ch. 2.
Benjamin J. Cohen, The Geography
of Money (Cornell, 1998).
J. Gallagher & R. Robinson, “The
Imperialism of
Free Trade,” in: The Decline, Revival and
Fall of the British Empire (Cambridge, 1952), pp. 1-18.
Robert Gilpin, U.S. Power and
the Multinational Corporation
(Basic, 1975).
Eric Hobsbawn, The Age of
Empire—1875-1914 (Vintage,
1989).
Robert Keohane, After Hegemony
(Princeton, 1984)
Kenichi Ohmae, The Borderless
World (Basic, 1990).
Louis Pauly, Who Elected the
Bankers? (Cornell,
1997).
Justin Rosenberg, The Follies of
Globalaization Theory
(Verso, 2000).
Mark Rupert, Ideologies of
Globalization (Routledge,
2000).
5/30:
Memorial Day
6/1
(Wednesday): Student presentations