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Tag Archives: Paul Cammack
Issue 5 for 2021 published
Issue number 5 of Volume 51 of the journal has gone to print and is available electronically at the publisher’s site. This issue includes a feature section, two other research articles and four book reviews. The articles in the feature … Continue reading
Posted in Uncategorized
Tagged Bank Ngamarunchot, business–state relationship, capitalism, Chan-Yuan Wong, China, Edmund Terence Gomez, globalisation, Guanie Lim, Hong Kong, hyperglobalisation, Jue Jiang, Kahee Jo, Kee Cheok Cheong, Kevin Tze-Wai Wong, Khemthong Tonsakulrungruang, Lam Minh Chau, Malaysia, middle-income trap, Mustafa Yagcia, Nahee Kang, Ngamtinlun Touthang, Paul Cammack, Po-San Wan, political economy, South Korea, Southeast Asia, Thailand, Trin Aiyara, Turkey, Veerayooth Kanchoochat, Victor Zheng, Vietnam
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A New Political Economy of Southeast Asia
Paul Cammack of the Global Development Institute at the University of Manchester has a new book review with JCA. He reviews The Political Economy of Southeast Asia: Politics and Uneven Development under Hyperglobalisation edited by Toby Carroll, Shahar Hameiri and … Continue reading
Issue 2 for 2016 published
Issue 2 of Volume 46 (2016) has gone to print and the issue is available electronically at the publisher’s site (with one article available for free download). The details are: Paul Cammack, World Market Regionalism at the Asian Development Bank … Continue reading
Posted in Uncategorized
Tagged Ashley South, Asian Development Bank, Bangladesh, banks, Burma, Casinos, Chang Yee Kwan, China, Christian Sorace, Claudia C. Lodia, Communist Manifesto, Damian Tobin, Eric King-Man Chong, Geoffrey Gunn, ghost cities, Hong Kong, industrial development, Islam, Jamie Doucette, Japan, Jong-Cheol Kim, Joonkoo Lee, Korea, LGBT, Ma Ngok, Macao, mobile phones, Ne Win, Paul Cammack, Paul Gallagher, Philippines, post-democracy, poverty, Pundarik Mukhopadhaya, regionalism, Robert Tierney, Se-Woong Koo, Sonny Shiu-Hing Lo, South Korea, Taiwan, Tamgid Ahmed Chowdhurya, urbanisation, William Hurst, working class, Yvonne J. Chen
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World markets and the ADB
In “World market regionalism at the Asian Development Bank” (DOI: 10.1080/00472336.2015.1086407), Paul Cammack discusses “an emerging ‘world market regionalism,’ within which regions are addressed in terms of their position within the world market, and regional projects are strategically oriented towards … Continue reading