From: Gerald_A_Levy@MSN.COM
Date: Mon Nov 15 2004 - 12:01:49 EST
The Canadian journal _Studies on Political Economy_ is celebrating its 25th year of publication. Happy birthday _SPE_! See the content below that begins with "SPE at 25" to get some sense of the history and meaning of SPE. In solidarity, Jerry PS: speaking of birthdays, there is a nice communication in the Spring, 2004 (Volume 68, #1) issue of _Science & Society_ by Ajit on the 20th anniversary of _Research in Political Economy_. 20 years. Well done, Paul Z! ========================================== Current Issue - #74 ** Mail date: the week of November 15, 2004 * SPE at 25 * Colin Leys, Jeanne Laux, Mel Watkins, John Saul, Wendy Larner * In Memoriam: Paul Sweezy, 1910-2004 * Michael A. Lebowitz, Gregory Albo, Fletcher Barager * What Happens when Public Goods are Privatized? * Elmar Altvater * Of Borders and Business: Canadian Corporate Proposals for North American "Deep Integration" * Christina Gabriel and Laura Macdonald * Power Relations Under NAFTA: Reassessing the Efficacy of Contentious Transnationalism * Jeffrey Ayres * Forum: Reorganizing Unions * Andrew Jackson, Pradeep Kumar, Gregor Murray, Charlotte Yates, Chris Schenk * "Israel is the New Jew:" The Canadian Israeli Lobby Today * Reg Whitaker * After Oslo: The Present Phase of the israeli-Palestinian Conflict * Avishai Ehrlich SPE at 25 Studies in Political Economy first appeared in the spring of 1979, 25 years ago. The impetus for starting the journal came in 1978 when Phil Ehrensaft, an editor of the now defunct Cahiers du Socialisme, approached Leo Panitch about starting a parallel journal in English. The idea was that each journal would be independent but that the editors would attempt to include articles, in translation, from the other journal. Phil was to act as the board liaison with Cahiers. The idea of the new journal, including its name, was fleshed out by Leo, Reg Whitaker, Colin Leys, Grant Amyot, and Rianne Mahon over lunch at "The Happy Four," a Chinese restaurant near Carleton University. The addition of Liora Salter, Alan Moscovitch, Wallace Clement, Mel Watkins, John Saul, Hugh Armstrong, Jim Sacouman, and Henry Veltmeyer gave the board a pan-Canadian reach. As various board members left the editorial board, many to join its advisory board, new names were added, often bringing the influence of new intellectual and political currents to the journal. From an original focus on debates internal to what was then called "the new Canadian political economy," the journal opened up to feminist critiques; an engagement with poststructuralism; intersections of race, class and gender; international political economy; political ecology, and culture. We celebrate 25 years of publishing with pride, and, with the editorial board revitalized by a new generation of political economists, look forward with enthusiasm to the next 25. Colin Leys (Joined SPE's editorial board in 1978) I have always felt that being invited to join in starting SPE in 1978 saved my sanity. In those days, Queen's University, where I had recently arrived, was still stuck in the 1950s, and working on SPE with a group of progressive social scientists felt like a holiday in fresh air. Once a month, I would drive up to Ottawa on a Friday afternoon and stay with Leo Panitch--then at Carleton and sharing a house with Donald Swartz--and spend Saturday morning with the editorial collective. Three times a year, we would also spend the afternoon stuffing the new issue into envelopes to mail out to subscribers. For the first two or three years, Rianne and I were the manuscript editors. The idea was to establish SPE as a well-respected Canadian outlet for the work of progressive Canadian social scientists whose work didn't conform to mainstream ideas, and eventually we succeeded. SPE rode on the wave of Left nationalist sentiment generated in the 1960s--many of those in Ottawa were in the Ottawa Committee for Labour Action (OCLA) which derived from the Waffle--and at the January board meetings, I got to know some of the most interesting, committed, and congenial people from across Canada. The debates were often excited. It took me, as a well-behaved Englishman, some time to realize that calling someone a "schmuck" was a term of endearment. I hope present and future SPE editors have as much fun. Jeanne Laux (Joined SPE's editorial board in 1990) SPE: Where the intellectual is political Where politics means people Where social is not only an "-ism" Mel Watkins (Joined SPE's editorial board in 1978) The story of SPE "from conception to thriving age of 25" is a chapter, and a most important one, in the creation of the New Canadian Political Economy as an intellectual paradigm. When does a new scholarly project, in a world where legitimacy comes from being a distinct discipline or paradigm, succeed so well that, even if avowedly interdisciplinary, it becomes a paradigm in its own right? Numerous criteria come to mind: when a course can be taught in it; when scholars working in it have their own professional association that holds its own meetings; when publications are sufficient to warrant a bibliography; when there is a separate journal where researchers can publish their results: the better to get tenure; when there is a program in which degrees can be granted and theses written, and when--and this is the ultimate capstone--there is a textbook to facilitate the common instruction of the next generation. There is not space here to demonstrate that the New Canadian Political Economy has, beginning in approximately 1970, met all of these criteria, with the possible exception of the last. A decisive moment occurred when Leo Panitch and Reg Whitaker took leadership in founding SPE as the official refereed journal of the political economy network, and Carleton University became its home. The rest is already history. Then, and now, we need to keep the context (the material and cultural circumstances) in mind. The New Canadian Political Economy grew out of the dissent of the 1960s and grew with the social movements, including the current anti-globalization and anti-war protests. The moral is clear: the practice/praxis of political economy requires not only studying the world with a critical stance, but working actively to change it for the better, so write for SPE. Edit it. Read it. Draw inspiration for the struggle and from the struggle. John Saul (Joined SPE's editorial board in 1978) I have always considered it an honour to have been involved in the founding of SPE and to have had the opportunity to play some small role as both editor and contributor during its first fledgling years. To be sure, my own ideas for its development were, at the time, somewhat at odds with those of my fellow editors. I envisaged less a New Left Review of the North than a rather more overtly and actively political journal. Instead of fighting for such a vision, engaged with other things (including other editorial collectives, first at This Magazine and subsequently South Africa Report), I chose to drift away. The editors were correct: there was a need, as they grasped, for a top-flight refereed journal of the Left in Canada and for sustained production of strong materials on the terrain of political economy that would, even if at a remove, help undergird Left political practice. Important contributions have been made by innumerable authors in SPE's pages, and real and important debates sustained. The journal has served as a testing ground for new generations of Left-scholars, eager to have their political commitments inform their scientific practice and to have their scientific practice inform their political commitments. In consequence, I was pleased when, several years ago, the editors asked me to return to the fold as a member of the advisory board. I won't claim that this has given me any very active role to play in the current workings of SPE, but it feels good all the same to be once again associated with such an important Canadian initiative. Wendy Larner, University of Auckland (Joined SPE's international advisory board in 2003) It is a privilege to be asked to contribute to the 25th anniversary edition of Studies in Political Economy. As readers will know, SPE as a high quality interdisciplinary journal serves as an important locus for critical engagements that have influenced political economic scholarship through Canada and well beyond. SPE represents an intellectual vision that has always been broad in its scope, encompassing not only Marxist and neoMarxist analyses, but also supporting feminist and poststructuralist engagements. The sustained commitment to an open reviewing process is also exemplary. Perhaps less visible to readers is the important contribution SPE has made to the building of academic community during a period when institutional pressures have often pushed otherwise. The events and forums organized by SPE, many of which have actively involved graduate students, illustrate the important work a journal can do to draw together people across disciplinary and theoretical boundaries in order to further intellectual understandings. It is notable that many of the early contributors to SPE are now leading Canadian scholars, and that a new generation is following in their footsteps. In this regard, SPE exemplifies the intellectual and institutional initiatives required to develop relevant and rigorous analyses of economy, society, state, and culture. While the next 25 years will inevitably bring challenges for the journal, given the strong basis established to date I am confident that Studies in Political Economy will continue to challenge our understandings and stimulate debate. Congratulations! <http://www.carleton.ca/spe/current.htm#top>top
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