PL EN RU
The position of the state in global capitalism: a Polanyian perspective
 
 
Więcej
Ukryj
1
Department of Political Theory and Political Thought of the Faculty of Political Science and International Studies at the University of Warsaw
 
 
Data publikacji: 05-07-2021
 
 
Studia Politologiczne 2021;60
 
SŁOWA KLUCZOWE
STRESZCZENIE
The aim of the article is to analyze the changing position of the state in the capitalist world economy form the perspective of Karl Polanyi’s political theory. The main thesis of the article is that the position of the state largely depends on the character of rules constituting global political economy. Three world regimes were singled out (gold standard, Bretton Woods system, and hyperglobalization), and the position of the state within each system was analyzed. If we agree with Robert Cox that each world order is a product of ideas, institutions and power relations, then we may expect the institutional structure of the world economy to evolve following the changes in the underlying constellation of ideas and social forces.
INFORMACJE O RECENZOWANIU
Sprawdzono w systemie antyplagiatowym
 
REFERENCJE (16)
1.
Arrighi G., Silver B.J., Polanyi’s «Double Movement»: The Belle Époques of British and U.S Hegemony Compared, «Politics and Society» 2003, vol. 31, Issue 2.
 
2.
Block F., Capitalism The Future of Illusion, University of California Press 2018.
 
3.
Cohen B.J., International Political Economy. An Intellectual History, Princeton University Press 2008.
 
4.
Cox R., Gramsci, Hegemony, International Relations: An Essay in Method, «Millennium – Journal International Studies» 1983, vol. 12, No. 2.
 
5.
Cox R., Social forces, states and world orders: beyond international relations theory [in:] R. Cox, T. Sinclair, Approaches to world order, Cambridge University Press 1996.
 
6.
Crotty J., Epstein G., In Defence of Capital Controls, «Socialist Register» 1996, vol. 32.
 
7.
Eichengreen B., Globalizing Capital. A History of the International Monetary System, Princeton University Press 2019.
 
8.
Gill S., Market civilization, new constitutionalism, and the world order, [in:] S. Gill, A. Claire Cutler (eds.), New Constitutionalism and the World Order, Cambridge University Press 2014.
 
9.
Helleiner E., Life and Times of Embedded Liberalism: Legacies and Innovations Since Bretton Woods, «Review of International Political Economy» 2019, vol. 26, No. 6.
 
10.
Keohane R., After Hegemony. Cooperation and Discord in World Political Economy, Princeton University Press 1984.
 
11.
Polanyi K., British Labour and American New Dealers, [in:] M. Cangiani, C. Thomasberger (eds.), K. Polanyi, Economy and Society. Selected Writings, Cambridge University Press 2018.
 
12.
Polanyi K., The Great Transformation. The Political and Economic Origin of Our Time, foreword by Joseph Stiglitz, with a new introduction by Fred Block, Beacon Press 2001.
 
13.
Polanyi K., Universal Capitalism or Regional Planning, [in:] M. Cangiani, C. Thomasberger (eds.), K. Polanyi, Economy and Society. Selected Writings, Cambridge University Press 2018.
 
14.
Rodrik D., The Globalization Paradox. Why Global Markets, States and Democracy Can’t Coexist, Oxford University Press 2011.
 
15.
Ruggie J.G., International Regimes, Transactions and Change: Embedded Liberalism in the Postwar Economic Order, «International Organization» Spring 1982, No. 36.
 
16.
Streeck W., Buying Time. The Delayed Crisis of Democratic Capitalism, London and New York 2014.
 
ISSN:1640-8888
Journals System - logo
Scroll to top