A time of reproductive unrest: the articulation of capital accumulation, social reproduction, and the Irish state
In: New political economy, Band 28, Heft 1, S. 112-125
ISSN: 1469-9923
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In: New political economy, Band 28, Heft 1, S. 112-125
ISSN: 1469-9923
In: Globalizations, Band 19, Heft 5, S. 797-813
ISSN: 1474-774X
In: Journal of common market studies: JCMS, Band 59, Heft 2, S. 316-334
ISSN: 1468-5965
World Affairs Online
In: Journal of common market studies: JCMS, Band 59, Heft 2, S. 316-334
ISSN: 1468-5965
AbstractThis article examines Irish and Portuguese protesters' perceptions of the EU in the decade since the European debt crisis. Building on EU politics, social movement and protest literatures, we ask how domestic protesters in both countries perceive the EU during its age of crisis protest timescape. We find that critical Europeanism, which rejects technocratic and neoliberal Europe and works towards an alternative, social Europe, has travelled beyond austerity/bailout protests into women's rights and housing protests in both countries, although to varying degrees. We suggest that the expansion of critical European perceptions in these traditionally Europhile member states forms part of the social and political legacy of the European debt crisis, but also contributes to the continued Europeanization of the European social movement space. It could have positive impacts on the EU's legitimacy deficit if EU institutions engaged meaningfully with critical European voices.
In: European journal of social security, Band 25, Heft 4, S. 506-522
ISSN: 2399-2948
While critical political economy (CPE) has yet to play a prominent role in eco-social policy research, this paper argues that a deeper engagement with CPE and a better understanding of the global political economy can enhance eco-social policy debates. CPE can help us to see the contradictions in and impediments to integrating environmental and social policies, and particularly why both of these categories continue to be mediated and shaped by economic logics. In order to develop these arguments, we analyse recent international discourses on agricultural subsidies promoted by key policy actors such as the Food and Agriculture Organisation, the World Bank, and the International Fund for Agricultural Development. By examining agriculture as a nodal point between diverse scales and domains such as the local, global, environmental, social, and economic spheres, we explore how certain positions are prioritised over others. We argue that the discourse on 'repurposing subsidies' in global agricultural policy expresses a 'new critical orthodoxy' that recognises the need for transformation but fails to address the structural conditions of the global political economy responsible for environmental and social crises. Instead, the proposed solutions rely on existing institutions and capitalist logics to resolve current crises, even if the latter are underpinned by these logics. Our analysis underlines the need for eco-social policy scholarship to be cognizant of how environmental and social policy integration is always embedded within a particular global political economy that reproduces certain inequalities and is not a neutral policy terrain.
Die gedruckte Ausg. ist im Rainer Hampp Verlag, Augsbur, München (www.Hampp-Verlag.de) erschienen.
BASE
In: Review of international political economy, Band 30, Heft 2, S. 584-607
ISSN: 1466-4526