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Intro
Preface
Acknowledgements
Contents
Abbreviations
List of Figures
List of Tables
1 Introduction: Why "Second Image IPE"?
1.1 The Need for a Second Image International Political Economy
1.1.1 Why We Need Mid-Range Political Economy Theorizing
1.1.2 Why International Political Economy Needs Comparative Political Economy
1.1.3 Why Comparative Political Economy Needs International Political Economy
1.2 The State of the Second Image IPE Literature
1.2.1 Second Image: Intellectual Predecessors and Their Limitations

1.2.2 Second Image Reversed: Intellectual Predecessors and Their Limitations
1.2.3 Recent CPE/IPE Combinations in the Context of the Discussion on Growth odels
1.3 The Plan of the Book
References
2 Building Blocks for a Recombination of Comparative and International Political Economy
2.1 Comparative Political Economy: The Diversity of National Capitalisms
2.1.1 A Brief Sketch of Relevant Theory Development in Comparative Political Economy
2.1.2 Selected Core Features of National Models of Capitalism

2.2 International Political Economy: International Institutions and Economic Processes
2.2.1 A Brief Sketch of Relevant Theory Development in International Political Economy
2.2.2 Selected Core Features of International Institutions and Economic Processes
References
3 Security
3.1 Second Image Reversed: War and the Historical Evolution of Export-Led Capitalism
3.1.1 The Puzzle: Emergence of Pronounced Export-Led German Capitalism in Spite of Manifold Disadvantages
3.1.2 Security Considerations and the Historical Evolution of the German Export Model

3.1.3 Security Considerations and the Emergence of Export Models in Small Emerging Economies
3.2 Second Image: Export-Led Capitalism and Foreign Policy
3.2.1 Foreign Policy Prerogatives of Export-Oriented Growth Models
3.2.2 Germany's Foreign Policy in the European Single Market
3.2.3 External Monetary Policy: Germany, Bretton Woods and the European Monetary System
3.2.4 The Relationship Between the German Export Model and German Security Policy
References
4 Finance
4.1 Second Image: Liberal Market Economies and Postnational Economic Norms

4.1.1 The US Economic Model and Policy Prescriptions of World Bank and IMF
4.1.2 Liberal Versus Coordinated Economies in the Regulation of Hedge Funds
4.1.3 Anglo-American Financialized Economies and the Rise of Transnational Private Governance
4.2 Second Image Reversed: Financialization and the Destabilization of National Capitalisms
4.2.1 The Erosion of Traditional Rhenish Corporate Governance
4.2.2 Fair Value Accounting Standards and Coordinated German Capitalism
4.2.3 Transnationally Mobile Capital and State-Permeated Capitalism in Brazil
References

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