Crossref Citations
This Book has been
cited by the following publications. This list is generated based on data provided by Crossref.
Redden, Stephanie M.
2016.
What’s on the Line?: Exploring the Significance of Gendered Everyday Resistance Within the Transnational Call Center Workplace.
Globalizations,
Vol. 13,
Issue. 6,
p.
846.
Elias, Juanita
and
Louth, Jonathon
2016.
Producing Migrant Domestic Work: Exploring the Everyday Political Economy of Malaysia's ‘Maid Shortage’.
Globalizations,
Vol. 13,
Issue. 6,
p.
830.
Seabrooke, Leonard
and
Thomsen, Rune Riisbjerg
2016.
Making sense of austerity: Everyday narratives in Denmark and the United Kingdom.
Politics,
Vol. 36,
Issue. 3,
p.
250.
Elias, Juanita
and
Roberts, Adrienne
2016.
Feminist Global Political Economies of the Everyday: From Bananas to Bingo.
Globalizations,
Vol. 13,
Issue. 6,
p.
787.
P. Y. Lai, Karen
and
Samers, Michael
2017.
Conceptualizing Islamic banking and finance: a comparison of its development and governance in Malaysia and Singapore.
The Pacific Review,
Vol. 30,
Issue. 3,
p.
405.
Apaydin, Fulya
2018.
Regulating Islamic banks in authoritarian settings: Malaysia and the United Arab Emirates in comparative perspective.
Regulation & Governance,
Vol. 12,
Issue. 4,
p.
466.
Spector, Regine A.
2018.
A regional production network in a predatory state: export-oriented manufacturing at the margins of the law.
Review of International Political Economy,
Vol. 25,
Issue. 2,
p.
169.
Whaley, Luke
2018.
The Critical Institutional Analysis and Development (CIAD) Framework.
International Journal of the Commons,
Vol. 12,
Issue. 2,
p.
xx.
Elias, Juanita
and
Rai, Shirin M.
2019.
Feminist everyday political economy: Space, time, and violence.
Review of International Studies,
Vol. 45,
Issue. 2,
p.
201.
Schwak, Juliette
2020.
Film in an IPE classroom: for a critical pedagogy of the everyday.
Review of International Political Economy,
Vol. 27,
Issue. 6,
p.
1330.
Dekker, Erwin
and
Kuchař, Pavel
2020.
The Epistemological Break in Economics: What Does the Public Know About the Economy and What Do Economists Know About the Public?.
SSRN Electronic Journal ,
Harry, Lucy
2021.
Rethinking the Relationship between Women, Crime and Economic Factors: The Case-Study of Women Sentenced to Death for Drug Trafficking in Malaysia.
Laws,
Vol. 10,
Issue. 1,
p.
9.
Killick, Anna
2022.
Not ‘my economy’: A political ethnographic study of interest in the economy.
The British Journal of Politics and International Relations,
Vol. 24,
Issue. 1,
p.
171.
Camba, Alvin
Gomez, Terence
Khaw, Richard
and
Cheong, Kee-Cheok
2023.
Strongmen politics and investment flows: China’s investments in Malaysia and the Philippines.
Journal of the Asia Pacific Economy,
Vol. 28,
Issue. 3,
p.
813.
Adebanwi, Wale
2024.
Everyday Life in the Underbelly of Global Capital(ism).
Comparative Studies of South Asia, Africa and the Middle East,
Vol. 44,
Issue. 1,
p.
193.
Arabi, Kasper
2024.
Overcoming methodological statism: new avenues for hegemony research.
Review of International Political Economy,
p.
1.
Rumsby, Seb
2024.
‘Freedom within the framework’? The everyday politics of religion, state repression and migration in Vietnam’s borderlands and beyond.
Religion, State and Society,
Vol. 52,
Issue. 4,
p.
275.