Overview
Introduction
The MSc International Political Economy (Research) offers a multidisciplinary perspective on international economic and power relations, essential to understanding an increasingly globalised world.
The study of international political economy is the study of interactions between markets and politics; the influence of markets on politics and the influence of policy on markets. The Research stream in particular is designed as a preparation for future research work if you're entering the field from another related discipline, or if you wish to focus particularly on methodological training.
The core focus of the programme is international money and international finance, and there's a particular focus on the 2008 financial crisis, its causes and its consequences. Other central topics include international trade and investment, which looks at the drivers of market globalisation and factors which shape the flow of trade and investment, and the international political economy and the environment, specifically, what impedes a genuine agreement on climate change.
Alternatively, we offer the MSc International Political Economy programme, which has the same core course, International Political Economy, but doesn't entail a compulsory methodology course.
Preliminary readings
- J Frieden D Lake, and J B Lawrence (eds.) International Political Economy (5th edition, W.W. Norton, 2010)
- R Gilpin Global Political Economy: understanding the international economic order (Princeton University Press, 2001)
- T Oatley International Political Economy: interest and institutions in the global economy (5th edition, Pearson Longman, 2012)
- J Ravenhill Global Political Economy (3rd edition, Oxford Press, 2011)
- A Walter and G Sen Analyzing the Global Political Economy (Princeton University Press, 2009)
