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  1. Adam Smith: So what if the sovereign shares in ignorance?Lev Marder - 2018 - Journal of International Political Theory 14 (1):20-40.
    Unfortunately, Adam Smith’s undeserved legacy as a proponent of laissez-faire and liberal institutions at the international scope inhibits profiting from his refined analysis of international affairs. I argue that the Wealth of Nations’ chapter on colonies contains Smith’s discussion of the sovereign’s adaptation to ignorance in global politics. I examine the sense in which the sovereign is ignorant according to Smith and how sovereigns adapt to ignorance with varying success. His comparative analysis suggests that reduction of one’s share in ignorance (...)
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  • Karl Polanyi, the “always-embedded market economy,” and the re-writing of The Great Transformation.Hannes Lacher - 2019 - Theory and Society 48 (5):671-707.
    This article seeks to subject Fred Block and Margaret Somers’ influential reconstruction of Karl Polanyi’s The Great Transformation to a systematic review. I show that Block & Somers’s central claim—that Polanyi’s thinking underwent a “theoretical shift” as he wrote his seminal book—is not supported by archival evidence. I demonstrate that all the narrative keys that Block & Somers advance to lend plausibility to their discovery of a “theory of the always-embedded market economy” in The Great Transformation, wither under critical probing. (...)
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  • The power of money: Critical theory, capitalism, and the politics of debt.Steven Klein - 2020 - Constellations 27 (1):19-35.
  • The paradox of emancipation: Populism, democracy and the soul of the Left.Albena Azmanova - 2019 - Philosophy and Social Criticism 45 (9-10):1186-1207.
    What is the connection between the surge of populism and the deflation of electoral support to traditional left-leaning ideological positions? How can we explain the downfall of the Left in conditions that should be propelling it to power? In its reaction both to the neo-liberal hegemony and to the rise of populism, I claim that the Left is afflicted by what Nietzsche called ‘a democratic prejudice’ – the reflex of reading history as the advent of democracy and its crisis. As (...)
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