1st Edition

Classical Liberalism and International Economic Order Studies in Theory and Intellectual History

By Razeen Sally Copyright 1998
    240 Pages
    by Routledge

    236 Pages
    by Routledge

    This book makes an innovative link between classical liberalism and questions of international economic order. The author begins with an outline of classical liberalism as applied to domestic economic order. He then surveys the classical liberal tradition from the Scottish Enlightenment to modern thinkers like Knight, Hayekn and Viner. Finally, he brings together the insights of thinkers in this tradition to provide a synthetic overview of classical liberalism and international economic order.
    The author's deployment of classical liberalism strikes a different note to other 'liberal' interpretations in economics and political science. In particular, classical liberalism points to the domestic preconditions of international order, and advocates unilateral liberalisation in the context of an institutional competition between states.

    1. Introduction Section I: The Foundations Of Classical Liberalism2. What Is Classical Liberalism? 3. The International Political Economy Of David Hume And Adam Smith: Commercial Openness, Institutional Change And Unilateral Free Trade Section II: American Excursions: Knight And Viner 4. The Political Economy Of Frank Knight: Classical Liberalism From Chicago 5. Jacob Viner As Historian Of Ideas And International Political Economist Section III: German Neoliberalism: Eucken, Bohm, Ropke 6. Ordoliberalism And The Social Market: Classical Liberalism From Germany 7. The International Political Economy Of Wilhelm Ropke: Liberalism From Below Section IV: Constitutionalism And International Political Economy: Tumlir 8. Jan Tumlir: Democratic Constitutionalism And International Economic Order Section V: Conclusion 9. Classical Liberalism And International Economic Order: A Synthesis

    Biography

    Razeen Sally is Lecturer in International Political Economy at the London School of Economics and Political Science.

    '...a clear, readable and well documented account of the thinking on international economic issues.' - International Finance [2:3, 1999:pp. 449-470]