Embedding Global Markets

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Active Labor Market Programs
Bretton Woods Regime
Category=KCL
Civil Society
compromise
constructivist theory
corporate
dani
embedded
Embedded Liberalism
Embedded Liberalism Compromise
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eq_business-finance-law
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External Risk
Fixed Country Effects
globalisation impact
GNP Ratio
government
High Income non-OECD Countries
IMF Staff
Income
international political economy
ISSP Data Set
Keynesian economics
Legitimate Social Purpose
liberalism
Long Run Dynamics
Neoclassical Synthesis
Net Replacement Rate
Nineteenth Century Laissez Faire
North American Free Trade Agreement
OECD 2003b
PLP
postwar economic governance
Postwar Trade Regime
responsibility
rodrik
social
spending
Trade Lawyers
trade policy analysis
Trade Regime
VECM Form
Welfare Spending
welfare state decline

Product details

  • ISBN 9780754674542
  • Weight: 566g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 20 Nov 2008
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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John Ruggie introduced the concept of embedded liberalism in a 1982 article that has become one of the most frequently cited sources in the study of international political economy. The concept was intended to convey the manner by which capitalist countries learned to combine the efficiency of markets with the broader values of the community that socially sustainable markets themselves require in order to survive and thrive. Examining the concept and the institutionalized practice of embedded liberalism, this collection provides a survey of the macro patterns in industrialized countries. Leading scholars combine to demonstrate the benefits of embedded liberalism in practice as well as its gradual erosion at national levels, and to analyze public opinion. They provide a better understanding of what embedded liberalism means, why it matters and how to reconstitute it in the context of the global economy. The contributors contextualize the current challenge historically and theoretically so that students, scholars and policy makers alike are reminded of what is at stake and what is required.
John G. Ruggie, Harvard University, USA