All Stories

  1. RIPE 30th anniversary special feature: looking back and looking forward in IPE
  2. Everyday Economic Survival in Myanmar. By Ardeth Maung Thawnghmung. Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, 2019. 320p. $79.95 cloth.
  3. Introduction: The production and contestation of exemplary centres in Southeast Asia
  4. Feminist everyday political economy: Space, time, and violence
  5. Who gets ‘Left behind’? Promises and pitfalls in making the global development agenda work for sex workers – reflections from Southeast Asia
  6. Handbook on the International Political Economy of Gender
  7. Continuing the Conversation … Some Reflections
  8. Governing Domestic Worker Migration in Southeast Asia: Public–Private Partnerships, Regulatory Grey Zones and the Household
  9. Undoing ruination in Jakarta: the gendered remaking of life on a wasted landscape
  10. Whose Crisis? Whose Recovery? Lessons Learned (and Not) from the Asian crisis
  11. Feminist Global Political Economies of the Everyday: From Bananas to Bingo
  12. Producing Migrant Domestic Work: Exploring the Everyday Political Economy of Malaysia's ‘Maid Shortage’
  13. The Everyday Political Economy of Southeast Asia
  14. Introduction: Feminist Security Studies and Feminist Political Economy: Crossing Divides and Rebuilding Bridges
  15. The Everyday Gendered Political Economy of Violence
  16. Realising Women’s Human Rights in Malaysia: The EMPOWER Report
  17. Civil Society and the Gender Politics of Economic Competitiveness in Malaysia
  18. The Politics of Accountability in Southeast Asia: The Dominance of Moral Ideologies
  19. Foreign Policy and the Domestic Worker
  20. Governing the World?
  21. Davos Woman to the Rescue of Global Capitalism: Postfeminist Politics and Competitiveness Promotion at the World Economic Forum
  22. The gender politics of economic competitiveness in Malaysia's transition to a knowledge economy
  23. Transnational Migration, Gender, and Rights: Advocacy and Activism in the Malaysian Context
  24. Making migrant domestic work visible: The rights based approach to migration and the ‘challenges of social reproduction’1
  25. On Re-engaging Asia
  26. From multilateralism to microcosms in the world economy: the sociological turn in Australian international political economy scholarship
  27. Gendered political economy and the politics of migrant worker rights: the view from South-East Asia
  28. Hegemonic Masculinity and Globalization: ‘Transnational Business Masculinities’ and Beyond
  29. Gendering Liberalisation and Labour Reform in Malaysia: fostering ‘competitiveness’ in the productive and reproductive economies
  30. Struggles over the rights of foreign domestic workers in Malaysia: the possibilities and limitations of ‘rights talk’
  31. Hegemonic Masculinities, the Multinational Corporation, and the Developmental State
  32. Introduction
  33. Women workers and labour standards: the problem of ‘human rights’
  34. Nanotechnology
  35. The gendered political economy of control and resistance on the shop floor of the multinational firm: A case-study from Malaysia
  36. Stitching-up the labour market
  37. Evaluating human capital: an exploratory study of management practice
  38. 2000 BISA Gender and International Relations Working Group Workshop: Methodologies in Feminist Research
  39. Southeast Asia and Everyday Political Economy