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2017 Nominations Longlist for the Australian International Political Economy Network (AIPEN) — Richard Higgott Journal Article Prize

by Adam David Morton on June 11, 2017

2017 Nominations Longlist for the Australian International Political Economy Network (AIPEN) — Richard Higgott Journal Article Prize

Adam David Morton | June 11, 2017

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IPE
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The 2017 Australian International Political Economy Network (AIPEN) — Richard Higgott Journal Article Prize

Following the launch of The Australian International Political Economy Network (AIPEN) — Richard Higgott Journal Article Prize, it is with great pleasure that the longlist of articles for 2017 can now be circulated.

To recap, the Prize will be awarded to the best article published in IPE as deemed by a selection committee of IPE scholars (consisting of Penny Griffin, Shahar Hameiri, Adam Morton, Wesley Widmaier, and Jacqui True) with the award given to any article in IPE, understood in a pluralist sense to include the political economy of security, geography, literature, sociology, anthropology, post-coloniality, gender, finance, trade, regional studies or economic theory.

Before that decision can be made, we now require AIPEN members to vote on the longlist to establish the final shortlist of articles for deliberation. The voting will proceed as follows:

  • Voting is open from 11 June to 7 August, the latter closing at 3:00pm;
  • Nominated candidates are permitted to vote for themselves but voters must be members of AIPEN, which only requires subscription to the listserv at no cost;
  • Voting should take the form of three choices indicating a first, second and third preference (in rank order) with the first ranked choice receiving 5 points; the second ranked choice receiving 3 points; and the third ranked choice receiving 1 point;
  • Votes should be sent to Adam Morton: Adam.Morton@sydney.edu.au

The 2017 longlist for The Australian International Political Economy Network (AIPEN) — Richard Higgott Journal Article Prize is as follows

  • Michael Beggs, ‘The State as a Creature of Money’, New Political Economy, (2016), Online early. DOI: 1080/13563467.2017.1240670.
  • Samanthi J. Gunawardana, ‘“To Finish, We Must Finish”: Everyday Practices of Depletion in Sri Lankan Export-Processing Zones’, Globalizations, 13:6 (2016): 861-75.
  • Jenny Hedström, ‘The Political Economy of the Kachin Revolutionary Household’, The Pacific Review, (2016), Online early. DOI: 1080/09512748.2016.1273254.
  • Elizabeth Humphrys and Damien Cahill, ‘How Labour Made Neoliberalism’, Critical Sociology, (2016), Online early. DOI: 1177/0896920516655859.
  • Anitra Nelson, ‘“Your money or your life”: Money and Socialist Transformation’, Capitalism, Nature, Socialism, 27:4 (2016): pp. 40–60.
  • Hironori Onuki, ‘The Neoliberal Governance of Global Labor Mobility: Migrant Workers and the New Constitutional Moments of Primitive Accumulation’, Alternatives: Global, Local, Political, 41(1): 3-28.
  • Samid Suliman, ‘Mobility and the kinetic politics of migration and development’, Review of International Studies, 42:4 (2016): 702-723.

We look forward to receiving your votes!

Past Awardees

2016 – Gareth Bryant, ‘“Fixing” the Climate Crisis: Capital, States and Carbon Offsetting in India’ (co-authored with Siddhartha Dabhi and Steffen Böhm), Environment and Planning A, 47:10 (2015).

2015 – Ainsley Elbra, ‘Interests Need Not be Pursued if They Can be Created: Private Governance in African Gold Mining’, Business and Politics, 16:2 (2014).

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Author: Adam David Morton

Adam David Morton is Professor of Political Economy at the University of Sydney. He is author of Unravelling Gramsci: Hegemony and Passive Revolution in the Global Political Economy (2007); Revolution and State in Modern Mexico: The Political Economy of Uneven Development (2011), recipient of the 2012 Book Prize of the British International Studies Association (BISA) International Political Economy Group (IPEG); and co-author of Global Capitalism, Global War, Global Crisis (2018) with Andreas Bieler. The volume Henri Lefebvre, On the Rural: Economy, Sociology, Geography is out in 2022 with University of Minnesota Press, co-edited with Stuart Elden.

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  • Home
  • About
  • Manchester University Press Book Series
  • Past & Present Reading Group
  • A Political Economy of Australian Capitalism
  • Journal of Australian Political Economy (JAPE)
    • Journal of Australian Political Economy (JAPE)
    • JAPE Issues
    • JAPE Submission Guidelines
    • JAPE Young Scholar Award
  • Australian IPE Network (AIPEN)
  • Forums
    • Forums
    • Debating Anatomies of Revolution
    • Debating Debtfare States
    • Debating Economic Ideas in Political Time
    • Debating Mass Strikes and Social Movements in Brazil and India
    • Debating Social Movements in Latin America
    • Debating The Making of Modern Finance
    • Debating War and Social Change in Modern Europe
    • Feminist Global “Secureconomy”
    • Gendered Circuits of Labour and Violence in Global Crises
    • Scandalous Economics
    • The Military Roots of Neoliberal Governance
    • Politicising artistic pedagogies
  • Literary Geographies of Political Economy
  • Pedagogy
    • Five Minute Honours Theses
    • Piketty Forum
    • Radical Economics Pedagogy
    • Unconventional Wisdom
    • Journal Club
    • Marxism Reading Group
  • Wheelwright Lecture
  • Events
  • Contributors
  • Links
    • Political Economy At Sydney
    • PHD in Political Economy
    • Master of Political Economy
    • Centre for Future Work
    • Centre for the Study of Social and Global Justice (CSSGJ)
    • Climate Justice Research Centre (UTS)
 

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