Blind spots in International Political Economy: second Special Issue published in New Political Economy

In March 2019 SPERI was honoured to welcome a group of world-leading scholars to Sheffield for a landmark workshop that reflected on blind spots in the field of political economy.

Photo of political protest

SPERI hosted the workshop in collaboration with the editorial boards of the leading journals,  and . The workshop has led to a double special issue of NPE and RIPE on ‘Blind spots in International Political Economy’.

Today, the  has been published in New Political Economy, following the publication of the first Special Issue in RIPE last month. Both Special Issues are co-edited by the organisers of the ‘blindspots’ initiative:  (ϳԹ of Ottawa), Professor Colin Hay (SPERI, ϳԹ of Sheffield), Professor Genevieve LeBaron (SPERI, ϳԹ of Sheffield), and  (ϳԹ of Amsterdam).

The NPE special issue is entitled, Blind Spots in Political Economy: Revisiting the Historical Foundations of Current Thought.

The abstract for the introduction, “,” is below:

Contemporary political economy is predicated on widely shared ideas and assumptions, some explicit but many implicit, about the past. Our aim in this Special Issue is to draw attention to, and to assess critically, these historical assumptions. In doing so, we hope to contribute to a political economy that is more attentive to the analytic assumptions on which it is premised, more aware of the potential oversights, biases, and omissions they contain, and more reflexive about the potential costs of these blind spots. This is an Introduction to one of two Special Issues that are being published simultaneously by New Political Economy and Review of International Political Economy reflecting on blind spots in international political economy. Together, these Special Issues seek to identify the key blind spots in the field and to make sense of how many scholars missed or misconstrued important dynamics.

. Initially, all articles in both special issues will be available open-access.

The full list of contributors for both special issues is below.

Special issue editors Title Institution
Jacqueline Best Professor of Political Science ϳԹ of Ottawa
Colin Hay Professor of Political Analysis ϳԹ of Sheffield
Genevieve LeBaron Professor of Politics ϳԹ of Sheffield
Daniel Mügge Professor of Political Arithmetic ϳԹ of Amsterdam
Special issue contributors Title Institution
Maha Rafi Atal Postdoctoral Research Fellow Copenhagen Business School
Kate Bedford Professor of Law ϳԹ of Birmingham
Gurminder K. Bhambra Professor of Postcolonial and Decolonial Studies ϳԹ of Sussex
André Broome Associate Professor of International Political Economy ϳԹ of Warwick
Andrew Gamble Professor of Politics ϳԹ of Sheffield
Marieke de Goede Professor of Politics ϳԹ of Amsterdam
Eric Helleiner Professor in Political Science ϳԹ of Waterloo
Kristen Hopewell Canada Research Chair in Global Policy ϳԹ of British Columbia
Paul Langley Professor of Economic Geography ϳԹ of Durham
Erin Lockwood Assistant Professor of Political Science ϳԹ of California, Irvine
Matthew Paterson Professor of Internatinal Politics ϳԹ of Manchester
Louis Pauly J. Stefan Distinguished Professor of Political Economy ϳԹ of Toronto
V. Spike Peterson Professor of International Relations ϳԹ of Arizona

Elisabeth Prügl
Professor of International Relations Graduate Institute of International and Development Studies, Geneva
Leonard Seabrooke Professor of International Political Economy and Economic Sociology Copenhagen Business School
Robbie Shilliam Professor of International Relations Johns Hopkins ϳԹ
JP Singh Professor of International Commerce and Policy George Mason ϳԹ
Kevin Young Associate Professor of Political Science ϳԹ of Massachusetts Amherst

Watch our short video about the landmark ‘blind spots’ workshop that SPERI hosted in 2019 .