1 / 13

Political economy and the comparative method

Political economy and the comparative method. Dr Roberto Espíndola Department of Development and Economic Studies Room P1.32 Pemberton ext. 3823 R.Espindola@Bradford.ac.uk. The Political Economy perspective... Or rather International Political Economy (IPE).

cameo
Télécharger la présentation

Political economy and the comparative method

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Political economy and the comparative method Dr Roberto Espíndola Department of Development and Economic Studies Room P1.32 Pemberton ext. 3823 R.Espindola@Bradford.ac.uk

  2. The Political Economy perspective... Or rather International Political Economy (IPE) • It studies the interaction of political and economic structures • It considers that interaction both historically and comparatively

  3. Dominant theories in IPE • Mercantilism or economic nationalism • Liberalism • Critical theories (Marxism, feminism, environmentalism)

  4. Economic nationalism or merchantilism • Key actor: the state • Primacy of the political, the state is prior to the market • Market relations shaped by political power • IPE constituted through actions of rational states • Conflict and cooperation? Realism

  5. Liberalism • Focus on individuals, and from the state to corporations, interest groups, NGOs • Centred on the market, economic progress results from interaction of market actors • Oppose intervention in markets • View IPE as essentially cooperative, e.g. theory of comparative advantage

  6. Critical perspective • Focus on collectives, e.g. classes, gender groups • Consider the market as exploitative and in need of control • Explain IPE in terms of dependency, relations of dominance and exploitation

  7. Our emphases to study the IPE of European integration • Processes and institutions, rather than history or a characterisation of actors • Seeking to study interactions at the supranational, national (intergovernmental) and subnational levels • And we’ll do it from a comparative perspective

  8. How de we compare in the Social Sciences? • Well... • We can compare like with like... • Or can we compare different units?

  9. In terms of method: • Most similar systems design (MSSD) • Most different systems design(MDSD)

  10. Most similar systems design (MSSD) • Researchers take cases that appear to be similar in as many ways as possible, in order to explain differences between them • Example: Morlino's study of democratisation in Southern Europe

  11. Most different systems design (MDS) • Researchers take cases that are different, but where similar phenomena have occurred, seeking to explain those phenomena. Most different, similar outcomes. • Example: Skocpol's analysis of revolutions in France, Russia and China

  12. MSSD → individualising, variation finding • MDSD → universalising, encompassing

  13. MSSD MDSD Case 1 Case 2 Var I a b Var II c d Var III e f Var X x3 x3 Var Y y3 y3 Case 1 Case 2 • Var I a a • Var II b b • Var III c c • Var X x1 x2 • Var Y y1 y2

More Related