Review of International Political Economy
Review of International Political Economy | |
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Abbreviated title (ISO 4) | RIPE |
Discipline | Political science, International Relations |
Language | English |
Publication details | |
Publisher | |
Publication history | 1994 |
Frequency | Bimonthly |
no | |
Indexing | |
ISSN |
(electronic) 0969-2290 (paper) 1466-4526 (electronic) 0969-2290 (paper) |
Links | |
The Review of International Political Economy (RIPE)[1] has successfully established itself as a leading international journal dedicated to the systematic exploration of the international political economy from a plurality of perspectives. The journal encourages a global and interdisciplinary approach across issues and fields of inquiry. It seeks to act as a point of convergence for political economists, international relations scholars, geographers, and sociologists, and is committed to the publication of work that explores such issues as international trade and finance, production and consumption, and global governance and regulation, in conjunction with issues of culture, identity, gender, and ecology. The journal eschews monolithic perspectives and seeks innovative work that is both pluralist in its orientation and engages with the broad literatures of IPE.
All research articles in this journal undergo rigorous peer review, based on initial screening by editors and subsequent double-blind refereeing by multiple reviewers.[2]
Current editors of the journal are Daniel Mügge as lead editor (University of Amsterdam), Gregory Chin (York University, Toronto), Kevin Gallagher (Boston University), Ilene Grabel (University of Denver), and Cornelia Woll (SciencesPo, Paris). RIPE's international advisory board includes forty leading IPE scholars from around the world. The journal publishes six issues per year.