Global Political Economy I: Theory and Approaches (YorkU, AS/POLS 3270 3.0, Undergraduate)
Nitzan, Jonathan.
(2005).
Political Science. York University.
(Course; English).
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Abstract or Brief Description
What is ‘capitalism’ and how is it different from other social orders? How did capitalism develop? How does it function at different levels? What theories are used to explain capitalism, and how is it justified and critiqued by different ideologies? What are the roles of power, cooperation and incessant change in capitalism? This course examines such questions from the viewpoint of political economy. It begins by develop-ing the basic concepts of surplus and class, supply and demand, prices and profit, investment and capital accumulation. Using these basic concepts, the course proceeds to explore the nature of the corporation and business organization, the process of capitalist production, the role of inequality, the macro analysis of aggregate processes, government policies and the various ‘anomalies’ of political economy, such as stagflation and accumulation-through-crisis.
Language
EnglishPublication Type
CourseKeywords
accumulation business capital capitalism class corporation demand distribution development economy finance global growth inflation international investment labour military money political poverty policy power profit production state stagflation stagnation supply surplus TNC transnational warSubject
BN LawBN Geography
BN Theory
BN Data & Statistics
BN State & Government
BN Cooperation & Collective Action
BN Industrial Organization
BN Civil Society
BN Institutions
BN Macro
BN War & Peace
BN Conflict & Violence
BN Science & Technology
BN History
BN Methodology
BN Agency
BN Comparative
BN Capital & Accumulation
BN Class
BN Labour
BN Growth
BN Civilization & Social Systems
BN Hegemony
BN Power
BN International & Global
BN Ecology & Environment
BN Region - North America
BN Business Enterprise
BN Value & Price
BN Crisis
BN Production
BN Money & Finance
BN Ideology
BN Distribution
BN Micro
BN Policy
Depositing User
Jonathan NitzanDate Deposited
25 Nov 2005Last Modified
01 Apr 2016 22:15URL:
https://bnarchives.net/id/eprint/190Available Versions of this Item
- Global Political Economy I: Theory and Approaches (YorkU, AS/POLS 3270 3.0, Undergraduate). (deposited 25 Nov 2005) [Currently Displayed]
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