References
- Bailey, D., 2015. The environmental paradox of the welfare state: the dynamics of sustainability. New political economy, 20 (6), 793–811.
- Balaam, D.N. and Veseth, M., 2008. Introduction to international political economy. 4th ed. International ed. Harlow: Pearson.
- Blaug, M., 1997. Economic theory in retrospect. 5th ed. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
- Bonnyman, B., 2014. The third Duke of Buccleuch and Adam Smith: estate management and improvement in Enlightenment Scotland. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press.
- Bookchin, M., 1982. The ecology of freedom: the emergence and dissolution of hierarchy. Palo Alto, CA: Cheshire Books.
- Christensen, P., 1991. Driving forces, increasing returns and ecological sustainability. In: R Costanza, ed. Ecological economics: the science and management of sustainability. New York: Columbia University Press, 75–87.
- Clarke, C., 2015. Ethics and economic governance : using Adam Smith to understand the global financial crisis. London: Routledge.
- Dale, G., 2012. Adam Smith’s Green Thumb and Malthus’s Three Horsemen: cautionary tales from classical political economy. Journal of economic issues, 46 (4), 859–879.
- Davidson, N., 2005. The Scottish Path to capitalist agriculture 3: the Enlightenment as the theory and practice of improvement. Journal of agrarian change, 5 (1), 1–72.
- Drayton, R.H., 2000. Nature’s government: science, imperial Britain, and the ‘improvement’ of the world. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press.
- Foster, J.B., 2000. Marx’s ecology: materialism and nature. New York: Monthly Review Press.
- Foster, J.B., 2007. Earth. Historical materialism, 15 (3), 255–262.
- Frieden, J.A., 2007. Global capitalism: its fall and rise in the twentieth century. New York: W. W. Norton & Company.
- Garnsey, P., 2007. Thinking about property: from antiquity to the age of revolution. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
- Gilpin, R., 2001. Global political economy: understanding the international economic order. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.
- Gómez-Baggethun, E., et al., 2010. The history of ecosystem services in economic theory and practice: from early notions to markets and payment schemes. Ecological economics, 69 (6), 1209–1218.
- Grieve, R.H., 2019. ‘On Terry Peach’s unconvincing “reconsideration” of Adam Smith’s theory of value’. History of political economy, 51 (4), 753–777.
- Grigg, D., 1979. Sir James Steuart and land use theory: a note. Scottish geographical magazine, 95 (2), 108–110.
- Haakonssen, K., 1981. The science of a legislator: the natural jurisprudence of David Hume and Adam Smith. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
- Haberl, H., et al., ed. 2016. Social ecology: society-nature relations across time and space. Switzerland: Springer.
- Harvey, D., 2007. Neoliberalism as creative destruction. The annals of the American academy of political and social science, 610, 22–44.
- Heilbroner, R.L., 2000. The worldly philosophers: the lives, times, and ideas of the great economics thinkers. London: Penguin Books.
- Hickel, J. and Kallis, G., 2020. Is Green growth possible? New political economy, 25 (4), 469–486.
- Hollander, S., 2016 [1992]. Classical economics. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.
- Hont, I. and Ignatieff, M., 1983. Needs and justice in the Wealth of Nations: an introductory essay. In: I. Hont and M. Ignatieff, eds. Wealth and virtue: the shaping of political economy in the Scottish Enlightenment. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1–44.
- Hornborg, A., 2017. Political ecology and unequal exchange. In: C.L Spash, ed. Routledge handbook of ecological economics: nature and society. Abingdon: Routledge, 39–47.
- Jones, P.M., 2016. Agricultural enlightenment: knowledge, technology, and nature, 1750–1840. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
- Jonsson, F.A., 2010. Rival ecologies of global commerce: Adam Smith and the natural historians. The American historical review, 115 (5), 1342–1363.
- Jonsson, F.A., 2013. Enlightenment’s frontier: the Scottish highlands and the origins of environmentalism. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press.
- Kirshner, J., 2009. Realist political economy. In: M. Blyth, ed. Routledge handbook of international political economy (IPE): IPE as a global conversation. London: Routledge, 36–47.
- Klein, N., 2014. This changes everything: capitalism vs. the climate. Toronto, Canada: Random House.
- Linklater, A., 2014. Owning the earth: the transforming history of land ownership. London: Bloomsbury.
- Locke, J., 2017 [1689]. Two treatises of government. P. Laslett, ed. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
- Malm, A., 2015. Exploding in the air: beyond the carbon trail of neoliberal globalisation. In: L. Pradella and T. Marois, eds. Polarizing development: alternatives to neoliberalism and the crisis. London: Pluto Press, 108-118.
- Meek, R.L., 1971. Smith, Turgot, and the “four stages” theory. History of political economy, 3 (1), 9–27.
- Meek, R.L., 1976. New light on Adam Smith’s Glasgow Lectures on jurisprudence. History of political economy, 8 (4), 439–477.
- Miller, R.C., 2008. International political economy: contrasting world views. Abingdon, Oxon: Routledge.
- Monbiot, G., 2017. Out of the wreckage: a new politics for an age of crisis. London: Verso.
- Montesquieu, C., 2000 [1752]. The Spirit of laws. Translated by T. Nugent. Kitchener, Canada: Batoche Books.
- Moore, J.W., 2015. Capitalism in the web of life: ecology and the accumulation of capital. New York: Verso.
- Palmeri, F., 2016. State of nature, stages of society: Enlightenment conjectural history and modern social discourse. New York: Columbia University Press.
- Pauchant, T.C., 2017. Adam Smith’s four-stages theory of socio-cultural evolution. In: F. Forman, ed. The Adam Smith review. volume 9. London: Routledge, 49–74.
- Peach, T., 2009. Adam Smith and the labor theory of (real) value: a reconsideration. History of political economy, 41 (2), 383–406.
- Pettman, R., 1996. Understanding international political economy: with readings for the fatigued. Boulder, CO: Lynne Rienner.
- Pocock, J.G.A., 2006. Adam Smith and history. In: K. Haakonssen, ed. The Cambridge companion to Adam Smith. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 270–287.
- Polanyi, K., 2001 [1944]. The great transformation: the political and economic origins of our time. Boston, MA: Beacon Press.
- Ravenhill, J., ed., 2020. Global political economy. 6th ed. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
- Ricardo, D., 2004 [1817]. On the principles of political economy and taxation. In: P. Sraffa and M. Dobb, eds. The works and correspondence of David Ricardo, Vol. 1. Indianapolis, IN: Liberty Fund, 1–447.
- Roncaglia, A., 2017. A brief history of economic thought. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
- Salter, J., 2010. Adam Smith and the Grotian theory of property. The British journal of politics and international relations, 12 (1), 3–21.
- Samuelson, P.A., 1978. The Canonical Classical model of political economy. Journal of Economic Literature, 16 (4), 1415–1434.
- Schabas, M., 2003. Adam Smith’s debts to nature. In: M. Schabas and N. De Marchi, eds. Oeconomies in the age of Newton. Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 262–281.
- Schabas, M., 2009. The natural origins of economics. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
- Sieferle, R.P., 2001 [1982]. The subterranean forest: energy systems and the industrial revolution. Cambridge: White Horse Press.
- Skinner, A.S., 1996. A system of social science: papers relating to Adam Smith. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
- Smith, A., 2014 [1759]. The Glasgow edition of the works and correspondence of Adam Smith. Vol. 1: The theory of moral sentiments. D.D. Raphael and A.L. Macfie, eds. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
- Smith, A., 2014 [1762]. Lectures on jurisprudence: report of 1762–3. In: R.L. Meek, D.D. Raphael, and P. Stein, eds. The Glasgow edition of the works and correspondence of Adam Smith. Vol. 5: Lectures on jurisprudence. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1–394.
- Smith, A., 2014 [1776]. The Glasgow edition of the works and correspondence of Adam Smith. Vol. 2: An inquiry into the nature and causes of the wealth of nations. W.B. Todd, ed. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
- Smith, C., 2020. Adam Smith. Cambridge, UK: Polity.
- Stiglitz, J.E., 2006. Making globalization work. London: Allen Lane.
- Strange, S., 2015 [1988]. States and markets. London: Bloomsbury.
- Thomas, K., 1984. Man and the natural world: changing attitudes in England 1500-1800. Harmondsworth: Penguin Books.
- Thompson, E.P., 1982 [1963]. The making of the English working class. Harmondsworth: Penguin Books.
- Todd, W.B., 2014 [1976]. Introduction. In: A. Smith, ed. The Glasgow edition of the works and correspondence of Adam Smith. Vol. 2, An inquiry into the nature and causes of the wealth of nations. W.B. Todd, ed. Oxford: Oxford University Press, A1–A66.
- Tribe, K., 1978. Land, labour and economic discourse. London: Routledge.
- Tribe, K., 1999. Adam Smith: critical theorist? Journal of economic literature, 37 (2), 609–632.
- Watson, J.W., 1976. Land use and Adam Smith: a bicentennial note. Scottish geographical magazine, 92 (2), 129–134.
- Watson, M., 2005. Foundations of international political economy. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan.
- Watson, M., 2018. The market. Newcastle upon Tyne: Agenda Publishing.
- Williams, M. and O’Brien, R., 2020. Global political economy: evolution and dynamics. London: Macmillan Education UK.
- Winch, D., 1978. Adam Smith’s politics: an essay in historiographic revision. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
- Winch, D., 1997. Adam Smith’s problems and ours. Scottish journal of political economy, 44 (4), 384–402.
- Worster, D., 1994. Nature’s economy: a history of ecological ideas. 2nd ed. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
- Wrigley, E.A., 2016. The Path to sustained growth: England’s transition from an organic economy to an industrial revolution. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.