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1

Palmer, Monte. Comparative politics: Political economy, political culture, and political interdependence. 2nd ed. Itasca, Ill: F.E. Peacock Publishers, 2001.

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2

Palmer, Monte. Comparative politics: Political economy, political culture, and political interdependence. 3rd ed. Belmont, CA: Thomson Higher Education, 2006.

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3

Hamada, Koichi. The political economy of international monetary interdependence. Cambridge, Mass: MIT, 1985.

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4

Reuveny, Rafael. The political economy of Israeli-Palestinian interdependence. Bloomington, Ind: School of Public and Environmental Affairs, Indiana University, 1998.

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5

Keohane, Robert O. Power and interdependence. 2nd ed. Glenview, Ill: Scott, Foresman, 1989.

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6

S, Nye Joseph, ed. Power and interdependence. 3rd ed. New York: Longman, 2001.

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7

Shih, Chih-yu. Interdependence, independence and Chinese neorealism. Toronto: Joint Centre for Asia Pacific Studies, 1993.

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8

Purvis, Hoyt H. Interdependence: An introduction to international relations. Fort Worth: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich College Publishers, 1992.

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9

Höhmann, Hans-Hermann. Economics and politics in "perestroika": Developments, interdependencies, Western perceptions. Köln: Bundesinstitut für Ostwissenschaftliche und Internationale Studien, 1988.

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10

G, Goodman David S., Segal Gerald 1953-, and International Institute for Strategic Studies., eds. China rising: Nationalism and interdependence. London: Routledge, 1997.

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11

Simon, Bromley, ed. Making the international: Economic interdependence and political order : a world of whose making? London: Pluto Press in association with the Open University, 2004.

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12

1954-, Lho Kyongsoo, and Möller Kay, eds. Northeast Asia towards 2000: Interdependence and conflict? Baden-Baden: Nomos, 1999.

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13

A, Bustamante Jorge, Reynolds Clark Winton, and Hinojosa Ojeda, Raúl A., 1956-, eds. U.S.-Mexico relations: Labor market interdependence. Stanford, Calif: Stanford University Press, 1992.

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14

Karl-Otto, Apel, and Morales Patricia, eds. Pueblos indígenas, derechos humanos e interdependencia global. México, D.F: Siglo XXI Editores, 2001.

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15

Smith, Andy, 1963 July 24-, ed. Politics and the European Commission: Actors, interdependence, legitimacy. London: Routledge, 2004.

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16

Miranda, Carlos E. La interdependencia y sus implicaciones en la política mundial. Santiago, Chile: Instituto de Ciencia Política, Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile, 1986.

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17

Matlary, Janne Haaland. Norway's new interdependence with the European Community: The political and economic implications of gas trade. [Oslo]: Norsk Utenrikspolitisk Institutt, 1990.

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18

Dabène, Olivier. La región América Latina: Interdependencia y cambios políticos. Buenos Aires: Ediciones Corregidor, 2001.

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19

Kavakci-Islam, Merve Safa. International Relations in the Global Village: Changing Interdependencies. Cognella Academic Publishing, 2013.

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20

Newton, Kenneth, Dietlind Stolle, and Sonja Zmerli. Social and Political Trust. Edited by Eric M. Uslaner. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780190274801.013.20.

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During recent years, empirical trust research has significantly advanced our understanding about the interdependencies of social and political trust. This progress can mostly be attributed to major improvements of measurement instruments in survey research. Research on the causes of both forms of trust have examined the top-down approach of trust building, which places importance on fair and impartial political institutions, such as the police and judiciary, as well as societal accounts of trust building that relate to the role of social networks and parents as well as perceptions of inequality. While there is a modest relationship between social forms of trust and political forms of trust, research has not entirely disentangled the flow of causality between the two. Recent insights into contextual and individual-level covariates of social and political trust may hold answers regarding future developments and political and societal consequences.
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21

Palmer, Monte. Comparative Politics: Political Economy, Political Culture, and Political Interdependence. 2nd ed. Wadsworth Publishing, 2000.

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22

Comparative politics: Political economy, political culture, and political interdependence. Itasca, Ill: F.E. Peacock Publishers, 1997.

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23

Hamada, Koichi, Charles Yuri Horioka, and Kwan Chi Hung. Political Economy of International Monetary Interdependence. MIT Press, 1985.

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24

Masterson, James Robert. Chinese Economic Interdependence and Political Conflict. Taylor & Francis Group, 2018.

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25

Huckfeldt, Robert. Taking Interdependence Seriously. Edited by Kate Kenski and Kathleen Hall Jamieson. Oxford University Press, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199793471.013.012.

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Networks of communication among interdependent citizens constitute the connecting tissue between citizens and electorates, revealing an electoral whole that is different from the sum of its citizen parts. These communication networks, in turn, reflect the social contexts within which an actor is imbedded, thereby bridging the micro-macro divide in our understanding of electoral politics. Belonging to a group and developing corresponding political loyalties is not simply a matter of individual characteristics and circumstance. Rather, it is a matter of being connected to the group through networks of communication and association. These patterns of interdependence produce profound implications that are not only substantive and theoretical but also methodological and profoundly dynamic. Indeed, new platforms for studying political communication continue to emerge, and they carry the potential for further transformations in the ways that we understand the consequences of political communication for individual voters as well as for electorates.
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26

Palmer, Monte. Thomson Advantage Books: Comparative Politics: Political Economy, Political Culture, and Political Interdependence. 3rd ed. Wadsworth Publishing, 2005.

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27

Toit, Fanie du. When Political Transitions Work: Reconciliation As Interdependence. Oxford University Press, Incorporated, 2021.

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28

The political economy of international monetary interdependence. Cambridge, Mass: MIT Press, 1985.

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29

When Political Transitions Work: Reconciliation As Interdependence. Oxford University Press, Incorporated, 2018.

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30

du Toit, Fanie. Reconciliation as Interdependence. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190881856.003.0009.

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This chapter endeavors to develop a coherent framework for political transition—as reconciliation. I argue that reconciliation explains how relationships emerge in unfavorable conditions; how once a modest beginning is achieved, cooperation can grow, trust strengthened, and understanding deepened through appropriate processes and institutional arrangements; and how eventually a fundamentally more just society is built—all as part of a comprehensive transitional agenda. In South Africa, reconciliation politics propagated the idea, diametrically opposed to apartheid, that racial groups were fundamentally and comprehensively interdependent. This provided a compelling rationale for taking reconciliation seriously—and twenty-four years on, it still does. Reconciliation embraces a shared future on the basis that this is not only desirable but unavoidable, and turns to deal with a troubled past because it obstructs this future. More broadly, therefore, reconciliation can be described as “working toward fairness and inclusivity, reconciliation entails the mutual acknowledgment, the progressive institutionalization, and the long-term socialization of a comprehensive and fundamental interdependence.”
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31

(Editor), Simon Bromley, Maureen Mackintosh (Editor), William Brown (Editor), and Marc Wuyts (Editor), eds. Making The International: Economic Interdependence and Political Order. Pluto Press, 2004.

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32

Panzironi, Francesca. Networks. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/acrefore/9780190846626.013.270.

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A network may refer to “a group of interdependent actors and the relationships among them,” or to a set of nodes linked by a web of interdependencies. The concept of networks has its origins in earlier philosophical and sociological ideas such as Jean-Jacques Rousseau’s “general will” and Émile Durkheim’s “social facts”, which adressed social and political communities and how decisions are mediated and ideas are structured within them. Networks encompass a wide range of theoretical interpretations and critical applications across different disciplines, including governance networks, policy networks, public administration networks, social movement networks, intergovernmental networks, social networks, trade networks, computer networks, information networks, and neural networks. Governance networks have been proposed as alternative pluricentric governance models representing a new form of negotiated governance based on interdependence, negotiation and trust. Such networks differ from the competitive market regulation and state hierarchical control in three aspects: the relationship between the actors, decision-making processes, and compliance. The decision-making processes within governance networks are founded on a reflexive rationality rather than the “procedural rationality” which characterizes the competitive market regulation and the “substantial rationality” which underpins authoritative state regulation. Network theory has proved especially useful for scholars in positing the existence of loosely defined and informal webs of experts or advocates that can have a real and substantial influence on international relations discourse and policy. Two examples of the use of network theory in action are transnational advocacy networks and epistemic communities.
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33

Cohen, Benjamin J. Crossing Frontiers: Explorations in International Political Economy (Political Economy of Global Interdependence). Westview Pr (Short Disc), 1990.

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34

Scott, Andrew M. Dynamics of Interdependence. University of North Carolina Press, 2018.

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35

Nitzan, Shmuel, and Jacob Paroush. Collective Decision-Making and Jury Theorems. Edited by Francesco Parisi. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199684267.013.035.

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Issues related to collective decision making and to Condorcet jury theorems have been studied and publicly discussed for over two hundred years. Recently, there is a burgeoning interest in the topic by academicians as well as practitioners in the fields of Law, Economics, Political Science, and Psychology. Typical questions are: What is the optimal size of a panel of decision makers such as a jury, a political committee, or a board of directors? Which decision rule to utilize? Who should be the members of the team, representatives or professionals? What is the effect of strategic behaviour, group dynamics, conflict of interests, free riding, social interactions, and personal interdependencies on the final collective decision? This article presents current thinking in the field, offers suggestions for further research, and alludes to possible future developments regarding public choice and collective decision making.
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36

Linklater, Andrew. The Idea of Civilization and the Making of the Global Order. Policy Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1332/policypress/9781529213874.001.0001.

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This book analyses the impact of the idea of civilization on the global political order. The inquiry explains Norbert Elias’s pioneering examination of the rise of European civilized self-images. It extends the perspective by discussing the interdependencies between state formation which was central to Elias’s explanation and two inter-related phenomena – European colonial expansion and the evolution of the first universal society of states. Special emphasis is placed on European convictions that other societies would become civilized as a result of colonial civilizing offensives and the mimetic behaviour of non-European regimes. The nineteenth century standard of civilization which embodied that belief was an important junction between state formation, colonial expansion and international society. The book concludes with reflections on the cultural
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37

Mueller, John E. Peace, Prosperity, and Politics (Political Economy of Global Interdependence). Westview Press, 1999.

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38

Copeland, Dale C. Economic Interdependence and War. Princeton University Press, 2014.

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39

Copeland, Dale C. Economic Interdependence and War. Princeton University Press, 2014.

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40

Copeland, Dale C. Economic Interdependence and War. Princeton University Press, 2014.

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41

Economic Interdependence and War. Princeton University Press, 2014.

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42

Keohane, Robert O. Power and interdependence. 2nd ed. HarperCollins, 1989.

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43

Mehta, Smith, Alisa Perren, Michael Curtin, Marwan M. Kraidy, Michael Keane, Darrell Davis, Anne Jäckel, et al. The New Screen Ecology in India. Bloomsbury Publishing Plc, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.5040/9781839025693.

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This book provides an in depth look into the digital transformation of the Indian media industries, arguing that it has primarily been facilitated by the advent of social media platforms and a resulting shift in the creator dynamics of contemporary film and television production. Drawing on first-hand research within three categories of agents: creators, platform and portal executives, and intermediaries (talent agents, and multi-channel networks), Smith Mehta develops the concept of the ‘new screen ecology’ to show how the Indian screen industries are affected by social relations between these actors and how industrial practices blur the amateur-professional divide through creator and content interdependencies. Mehta interrogates the production practices of 13 different platforms and portals, including Hotstar, Netflix, YouTube, and TVFPlay, analyzing the extent to which they benefit from the lack of censorship and restrictive industrial practices characteristic of traditional media structures. In doing so, he examines the dynamics of digital transformation in the screen industries in a region-specific context and contributes to a body of literature on Indian digital production cultures. This book investigates the political, social and economic transactions that led to the digital transformation of the Indian audio-visual industries. It traces the interdependences between two social (YouTube, Facebook) and eleven digital (Hotstar, Spuul, Hoichoi, Addatimes, TVFPlay, Reliance Jio, Zee5, Voot, Netflix, Amazon Prime Video, AltBalaji) video streaming services, in platforming content drawn from both professional and professionalizing-amateur sources. Drawing on approaches from critical media industries studies, political economy and cultural studies, it interrogates the shifting creator dynamics in contemporary Indian film and television production with the advent of internet-based local and global video distribution services. In doing so, it brings to light the contribution of Indian intermediaries such as talent agents and third-party service providers that manage YouTube channels, also referred to as multichannel networks, in facilitating the localisation strategies of global portals such as Netflix and Amazon Prime, enabling the movement of creators from platforms to portals and expanding their value propositions through investments in content and talent-led ventures.
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44

Ward, Michael D. Statistical Analysis of International Interdependencies. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/acrefore/9780190846626.013.303.

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The origin of the statistical analysis of international relations can be traced back to 1920s with the work of Quincy Wright, who founded the University of Chicago’s Committee on International Relations. He led an interdisciplinary study of war that provided a first compendium of what was then known about the causes of war. Wright's studies and those that came after them were based on the assumption that systematic data were required to advance our knowledge about the causes of violent conflicts, and that an analysis of the dynamics of strategic decision making were essential; in short, systematic data coupled with a theoretical framework that focused on the decision-making calculus. However, debates soon raged over whether this scientific approach was better than the classical approach, which was based on philosophy, history, and law, and did not conform to strict standards of verification and proof. Since then, the literature has evolved into studies with a strong theoretical motivation, often expressed via game theoretical analytics, examined empirically with statistical frameworks that are specifically sculpted to probe those strategic dependencies. As such, existing models have resolved the levels of analysis problem that appeared daunting to earlier generations by actually focusing on the modeling of aspects of world politics that enjoin many different levels simultaneously.
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45

Scott, W. Richard, and Raymond E. Levitt. Institutional Challenges and Solutions for Global Megaprojects. Edited by Bent Flyvbjerg. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780198732242.013.4.

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Megaprojects are characterized by complex technical interdependencies—both compatible and contentious—novel technologies and systems, cross-cutting regional and political forces, and the presence of multiple institutional frameworks. This chapter stresses the role played by institutions. Employing a broad conception, it views institutions as consisting of three types of elements: regulatory (rules, laws, orders), normative (norms and values) and cultural-cognitive (beliefs, schemas, frames). As a form, megaprojects incorporate and are subject to a diverse, complex, and conflicting combination of elements. Viewed as an organization field, megaprojects confront a highly diverse set of participants who exhibit varying degrees of embeddedness in their local environment and are obliged to manage their operations across multiple changing phases which entail shifts over time in their power and influence. These challenges require that successful megaprojects develop flexible legal-contractual managerial controls, common norms and values, and shared identities anchored in a robust project culture.
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46

Vaubel, Roland. The Political Economy of International Organizations: A Public Choice Approach (Political Economy of Global Interdependence). Westview Pr (Short Disc), 1991.

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47

Michael, Murray. Equity Diversity and Interdependence. Taylor & Francis Group, 2017.

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48

Kastner, Scott L. Political Conflict and Economic Interdependence Across the Taiwan Strait and Beyond. Stanford University Press, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/9781503627321.

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49

Globalisation and interdependence in the international political economy: Rhetoric and reality. London: Pinter Publishers, 1995.

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50

The divergence of Judaism and Islam: Interdependence, modernity, and political turmoil. Gainesville: University Press of Florida, 2011.

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