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ILENE GRABEL

Josef Korbel School of International Studies phone ? 303.871.2546

University of Denver fax ? 303.871.2456

2201 South Gaylord Street e-mail ? Ilene.Grabel@du.edu

Denver, CO 80208, USA website ?

EDUCATION[pic]

Ph.D., Economics, University of Massachusetts, Amherst; 1992

M.A., Economics, University of Massachusetts, Amherst; 1990

B.A., Economics; Magna Cum Laude and Honors in Economics, Queens College, City University of New York; 1985

TEACHING EXPERIENCE

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Distinguished University Professor, Josef Korbel School of International Studies, University of Denver, June 2019-Present

Professor of International Finance, 2006-Present

Associate Professor, 1998-2006

Assistant Professor, 1992-98

Graduate courses ? Graduate International Monetary Relations; Advanced Topics in the Political Economy of International Finance; Finance and Economic Development; Political Economy of Developing Country Debt Crisis; Practicum in Applied Economics Research: Denver in the Global Economy.

Convener ? Graduate Student Reading Group in International and Development Economics, October 2002-May 2003.

Undergraduate courses ? Core course in Global Conflict and Cooperation: The Contemporary Debate Over Globalization; International Finance; Italy in the Global Political Economy: Common Challenges, Unique Responses (at the Centro Internazionale per l’Impegno Civico, Università di Denver/Università di Bologna, Italy).

Affiliated Faculty, Scrivner Institute of Public Policy, Josef Korbel School of International Studies, University of Denver, February 2020-Present.

Lecturer, Summer School on Social Economics, sponsored by the Association for Social Economics, Brock University, St. Catherine’s, Canada, June 21-2, 2015.

Visiting Faculty, International Career Advancement Program, Aspen Institute, Aspen, CO, 1997-2017.

Lecturer, Cambridge Advanced Programme on Rethinking Development Economics, Cambridge University, UK, 2001-2008. I lectured in this summer program annually since its inception in July 2001. Lecture on “International capital flows” and Research workshop on “Corporate governance.”

Lecturer, Summer School on Institutionalist Economics, sponsored by the Association for Evolutionary Economics and the Jerome Levy Economics Institute of Bard College, Blithewood, NY, June 20-3, 1999. Workshop on “Recent Financial Crises—Asia and Beyond.”

Visiting Faculty, Universidad Nacional-Costa Rica, Centro Internacional en Politica Economica and Escuela de Relaciones Internacionales, Heredia, Costa Rica, Spring term 1997. Faculty development seminar on "Financial Policy in Latin America."

Visiting Faculty, Woodrow Wilson Summer Institute on Public Policy and International Affairs, University of Michigan-Ann Arbor, School of Public Policy, June 1996.

Course taught: International Public Policy Module on the Developing Country Debt Crisis.

Visiting Lecturer, Smith College, Department of Economics, 1991-92.

Courses taught: International Finance; International Trade and Commercial Policy; Introductory Macroeconomics.

Staff Economist/Instructor; Center for Popular Economics; Amherst, MA, 1987-Present.

CONSULTING AND OTHER PROFESSIONAL EXPERIENCE

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Invited Participant, Independent Evaluation Office (IEO) of the International Monetary

Fund (IMF), Exit Workshop to discuss the IEO’s draft evaluation report on “IMF Advice on

Capital Flows” IMF, Washington, DC, March 5, 2020.

Consultant, United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD), Division on

Globalization and Development Strategies. The work was in conjunction with the 2019

Trade and Development Report (Theme: “Financing a Global New Deal”). Prepared

evaluation of "Making the Global Financial System Work For All” (October 2018 report of

the G20 Eminent Persons Group on Global Financial Governance, EPG-GFG) and developed

alternatives to the policies advanced in the EPG-GFG report, January-March 2019.

Invited Participant, Independent Evaluation Office (IEO) of the International Monetary Fund, Exit Workshop to discuss the IEO’s draft evaluation report on “IMF Advice on Unconventional Monetary Policies,” November 16, 2018.

Member, United Nations Conference on Trade and Development Expert Group on Financing for Development, September 2017-Present.

Academic Partner, Progressive Society, an initiative of the Group of the Progressive Alliance of the European Parliament, March 2018-Present.

Advisor and Writing Coach, Handbook of Diverse Economies (London: Routledge), project of the Community Economies Research Network, Convento Santa Maria del Giglio, Bolsena, Italy, June 11-23.

Member, Scientific Advisory Board of Progressive Economy, an initiative of the Group of the Progressive Alliance of the European Parliament, June 2013-March 2018.

Research partner, Centro de Estudios Financieros y Económicos de América del Norte

(CEFENA), National Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM), June 2012-Present.

Lecturer, School of Democracy of the Socialists and Democrats Group of the European Parliament, University of Reggio Emilia, Reggio Emilia, Italy, April 19-22, 2017, June 5-9, 2018, and European Parliament, Brussels, Belgium, March 20-22, 2019.

Consultant, United Nations Development Program, Human Development Report Office, January-March 2012.

Advisory Council, International Career Advancement Program (ICAP), 2012-2017.

Member, Task Force on Regulating Global Capital Flows for Long-Run Development, a project of the Pardee Center for the Study of the Longer-range Future, Boston University, 2011-2.

Expert advisor, Third World Network project on capital controls and free trade agreements, November 2010-January 2011.

Consultant, ActionAid International USA program on “Getting More Doctors, Nurses and Teachers Hired in Developing Countries, March 2007.

Research Scholar, Political Economy Research Institute, University of Massachusetts, 2007-Present.

Consultant, United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), International Poverty Centre, Global Training Programme on Economic Policies for Growth, Employment and Poverty Reduction, 2006.

Consultant, UNCTAD/Intergovernmental Group of Twenty-Four on International Monetary Affairs and Development (G-24), 2004.

Consultant, Denver Mayor’s Office of Economic Development and the Pacific Council on International Policy, 2003-04.

Consultant, United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD)/Intergovernmental Group of Twenty-Four on International Monetary Affairs and Development (G-24), 2003.

Consultant, “New Rules for Global Finance” (international NGO coalition), project on “The Tobin tax,” 2002-03.

Invited speaker, “Towards a Developmentalist International Financial Architecture,” at the NGO dialogue with delegates of the Second Committee of the United Nations General Assembly on the Financing for Development (FfD) Follow-up; United Nations; NY, NY; Nov. 7, 2002.

Consultant, “New Rules for Global Finance” (international NGO coalition), project on “Alternatives to neo-liberalism,” 2002.

Participant, United Nations’ Expert Group Meeting on Financial Crisis in Emerging-Market Economies; United Nations; NY, NY, July 21-23, 1998.

United States Information Service Economic Speakers' Program, two-week lecture program at the Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico-Mexico City (UNAM), Maestria en Ciencias Economicas and Instituto de Investigaciones Economicas, May 25-June 7, 1997.

Consultant, American Trial Lawyers' Association (Colorado Division). Prepared report and testimony on inflation in Colorado, Colorado State Legislature, House Judiciary Committee, House bill 1239, February 1997.

Policy research and design consultant, Financial Democracy Campaign and Southern Finance Project, 1998-99. Authored working paper prepared for campaign, "Redesigning the Financial Sector," June 1989.

Research fellow, Andrew Brimmer and Associates; Washington, DC, 1987.

FELLOWSHIPS AND GRANTS

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Professional Research Opportunities for Faculty (PROF) Grant ($20,000), Awarded April 2016, for completion of book, When Things Don’t Fall Apart: Global Financial

Governance and Developmental Finance in an Age of Productive Incoherence.

Postdoctoral Residential Fellowship, Helen Kellogg Institute for International Studies, University of Notre Dame, 1998.

Postdoctoral summer fellowship, Stanford University, Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences, Institute on the International Economy and National Politics, 1994.

Social Science Foundation, Internationalization Grant, University of Denver; Spring 2002, Winter 1997, Summer 1995, Summer 1993.

Faculty Research Fund Grant, University of Denver, Fall 1992.

Household International Grant on Markets and the Economy, Smith College, 1992.

Faculty research grant, Smith College, 1991.

AWARDS

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International Studies Association, International Political Economy Section Best Book Award, 2019, When Things Don’t Fall Apart: Global Financial Governance and Developmental Finance in an Age of Productive Incoherence.

British International Studies Association, International Political Economy Group Book Prize, 2018, When Things Don’t Fall Apart: Global Financial Governance and Developmental Finance in an Age of Productive Incoherence.

Recipient, University Lecturer, 2011-12, University of Denver.

Recipient, United Methodist Church University Scholar/Teacher of the Year, 2005-6, University of Denver.

Recipient of Graduate Students’ Association award for “Most Useful Course at GSIS” (Practicum in Applied Economics Research: Denver in the Global Economy, co-taught with George DeMartino and Tucker Hart Adams), May 2004; Graduate Students’ Association awards for “Best Professor at GSIS,” “Best Course at GSIS” (International Monetary Relations), and “Most Useful Course at GSIS” (International Monetary Relations), April 2003; “Most Outstanding Professor at GSIS," May 1997; first Graduate Students' Association Council award for outstanding teaching in the graduate and professional schools, awarded "Most Outstanding Professor at GSIS,” May 1995.

Dean’s "commendation" for teaching excellence in graduate courses, University of Denver, Graduate School of International Studies; Fall quarter 1995, Spring quarter 1993.

Chair's Award for Teaching Excellence, University of Massachusetts, Economics Department, 1988.

PUBLICATIONS

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BOOKS

2017. When Things Don’t Fall Apart: Global Financial Governance and Developmental Finance in an Age of Productive Incoherence, Cambridge, MA and London, England: The MIT Press. Awarded the European Association for Evolutionary Political Economy Myrdal Prize, 2019; the International Studies Association International Political Economy Best Book Award, 2019; and the British International Studies Association International Political Economy Book Prize, 2018. (Paperback edition released in 2019; Open Access edition released in 2020, )

Reviewed in: European Societies by Adriana Mica, 2019, ; Review of Keynesian Economics by Guillaume Vallet, 2019, 7(3), pp. 423-6 ( ); Development by Rick Rowden, 2018, 61(1-4), pp. 179-181 (); Development and Change by Kevin P. Gallagher, “Reforming Global Economic Governance as if Development Mattered” (review essay), 2018, 49(6), pp. 1605-15 (DOI: 10.1111/dech.12460).

2014a (2004). Reclaiming Development: An Alternative Economic Policy Manual, London: Zed Books (US distributor: Palgrave Macmillan, NY). Co-authored with Ha-Joon Chang. Book has been co-published by Fernwood Publishing (Canada), Books for Change (India), World Book Publishing (Beirut), SIRD (Malaysia), Third World Network (Malaysia), David Philip (South Africa). First printing, 2004; second printing, March 2005. Translated into Turkish (Imge Publishing House), Korean (Bookei Publishing House), Spanish (CLACSO), Portuguese (SURURU), Tamil (New Horizon Media Ltd.), Malayalam (New Horizon Media Ltd.), and Bahasa/Indonesia (Insist Press). Reissued in 2014 with Foreword by Robert Wade and new Preface.

JOURNAL ARTICLES

2020b. “Irreparable Ignorance, Protean Power, and Economics,” contribution to

symposium in International Theory on Protean Power: Exploring the Uncertain and

Unexpected in World Politics (Peter J. Katzenstein and Lucia A. Seybert, eds., Cambridge:

Cambridge University Press, 2018), pp. 1-14,

. Co-authored with George F. DeMartino.

2019a. “Continuity, Discontinuity, and Incoherence in the Bretton Woods Order: A

Hirschmanian Reading,” Development and Change (Special Issue on “Beyond Bretton

Woods: Complementarity and Competition in the International Economic Order), 50(1), pp.

46-71, .

2018a. “The Upside of a Messier Global Financial Architecture,” Current History (Special Issue on “A Decade of Aftershocks Since the Global Financial Crisis,” 117(802), pp 321-4.

2018b. “Reflections on the Economics Profession, the Neoliberal Conjuncture, and the Emerging Democratic Crisis: An Analysis in the Spirit of Albert O. Hirschman,” Forum for Social Economics, Papers and Proceedings from the ASSA 2018 conference, 47(2), 173-83, .

2018c. “Toward a Pluripolar Global Financial Architecture? The Bretton Woods

Institutions and the New Landscape of Developmental Finance,” Review of Radical Political

Economics, Papers and Proceedings from the ASSA 2018 conference, 50(4), 653-59,



2018d. “El Giro No-liberal Contemporáneo en Economistas: Emergencia del

Neoliberalismo y el Posneoliberalismo en la Visión de Hirschman” (“Economists and the

Contemporary Illiberal Turn: On the Emergence of Neoliberalism and Post-Neoliberalism

Through a Hirschmanian Lens “), Ola Financiera, 11(31), 52-74.

2015e. “Post-crisis Experiments in Development Finance Architectures: A Hirschmanian

Perspective on ‘Productive Incoherence,” Review of Social Economy, special issue on

“Ethics, Finance, and the Great Recession,” 73(4), 388-414.

2015a. “Capital Controls and the Global Financial Crisis: Introduction to Symposium,”

Review of International Political Economy, Co-authored with Kevin P. Gallagher (lead author

Grabel), vol. 22, no. 1, pp. 1-6.

2015b. “The Rebranding of Capital Controls in an Era of Productive Incoherence,” Review of International Political Economy, vol. 22, no. 1, pp. 7-43.

2013e. “The Future of International Political Economy: Introduction to the 20th

Anniversary Issue of RIPE,” Review of International Political Economy, 20(5), pp. 1009-23. Co-authored with Daniel Mügge, Leonard Seabrooke, Cornelia Woll, Juliet Johnson, and Kevin P. Gallagher.

2013b. “Crisis Financiera Global y Nuevas Arquitecturas Financieras para el Desarrollo:

Segunda parte,” Ola Financiera, January-April, Number 14, pp. 87-122.

2013c. “Global Financial Governance and Development Finance in the Wake of the 2008 Financial Crisis,” Feminist Economics, special issue on “Critical and Feminist Perspectives on Financial and Economic Crises,” 19(3), pp. 32-54.

2012a. “Crisis Financiera Global y la Emergencia de Nuevas Arquitecturas Financieras para el Desarrollo: Primera Parte,” Ola Financiera, September-December, Number 13, pp. 1-49.

2011a. “Not Your Grandfather’s IMF: Global Crisis, ‘Productive Incoherence,’ and Developmental Policy Space,” Cambridge Journal of Economics,” (lead article), 35, pp. 805-830.

2009-10. “Remittances: Political Economy and Developmental Implications,” International Journal of Political Economy, special issue on “Financing for Development,” Winter 2009-10, 38(4), pp. 86-106.

2007a. “Policy Coherence or Conformance? The New World Bank-IMF-WTO Rhetoric on Trade and Investment in Developing Countries,” Review of Radical Political Economics, 39(3), pp. 335-341.

2005a. “Taxation of International Private Capital Flows and Securities Transactions in Developing Countries: Do Public Finance Considerations Augment the Macroeconomic Dividends?,” Symposium on “Finance and Development: The Role of Institutions,” International Review of Applied Economics, vol. 19, no. 4, pp. 479-499.

2005b. “El Quiebre del Modelo Financiero Neoliberal,” Economía Informa, número 337, pp. 17-24.

2004-05 . “Reclaiming Development from the Washington Consensus,” Symposium on “The 15th anniversary of the Washington Consensus: What happened? What’s next?” Journal of Post Keynesian Economics, vol. 27, no. 2, pp. 273-291. Co-authored with Ha-Joon Chang.

2003a. “Predicting Financial Crisis in Developing Economies: Astronomy or Astrology?,” Eastern Economics Journal, Symposium on “Financial Globalisation,” vol. 29, no. 2, pp. 243-258.

2003b. “Averting Crisis: Assessing Measures to Manage Financial Integration in Emerging Economies,” Cambridge Journal of Economics, (lead article), vol. 27, no. 3, pp. 317-336.

2000a. “The Political Economy of ‘Policy Credibility’: The New-Classical Macroeconomics and the Remaking of Emerging Economies, Cambridge Journal of Economics, (lead article), vol. 24, no. 1, pp. 1-19.

2000b. “Identifying Risks, Preventing Crisis: Lessons From the Asian Crisis,” Journal of Economic Issues, vol. XXXIV, no. 2, pp. 377-383.

1999a. “Mexico Redux? Making Sense of the Financial Crisis of 1997-8,”Journal of Economic Issues, vol. XXXIII, no. 2, pp. 375-381.

1997a. "Creating 'Credible' Economic Policies in Developing and Transitional Economies," Review of Radical Political Economics, vol. 29, no. 3, pp. 70-78.

1996a. "Marketing the Third World: The Contradictions of Portfolio Investment in the Global Economy," World Development, vol. 24, no. 11, pp. 1761-1776.

1996b. "Financial Markets, the State and Economic Development: Controversies within Theory and Policy," International Papers in Political Economy, vol. 3, no. 1, pp. 1-42.

1996c. "Stock Markets, Rentier Interest and the Current Mexican Crisis," Journal of Economic Issues, vol. XXX, no. 2, pp. 443-449.

1995a. "Assessing the Impact of Financial Liberalization on Stock Market Volatility in Selected Developing Countries," Journal of Development Studies, vol. 31, no. 6, pp. 903-917.

1995b. "Speculation-led Economic Development: A Post-Keynesian Interpretation of Financial Liberalization in the Third World," International Review of Applied Economics, (lead article), vol. 9, no. 2, pp. 127-149.

1994. "The Political Economy of Theories of 'Optimal' Financial Repression in the Third World," Review of Radical Political Economics, vol. 26, no. 3, pp. 47-55.

1993a. "Fast Money, 'Noisy' Growth: A Noise-led Theory of Development," Review of Radical Political Economics, (lead article), vol. 25, no. 3, pp. 1-8.

JOURNAL SPECIAL ISSUE

2015c. Co-editor (with Kevin Gallagher) of Symposium on “Capital Controls and the Global Financial Crisis,” Review of International Political Economy, vol. 22, no. 1.

BOOK CHAPTERS

2020a. “The Current Economic and Political Outlook Through a Hirschmanian Lens, Luca Meldolesi and Nicoletta Stame (eds.), Third Conference on Hirschman’s Legacy: A Passion For the Possible,” Rome: Italic Digital editions, pp. 293-9.

2019c. “Reading the Global Crisis Through a Hirschmanian Lens,” Luca Meldolesi and Nicoletta Stame (eds.), Second Conference on Hirschman’s Legacy: A Bias For Hope,” Rome: Italic Digital editions, pp. 150-5.

2018e.”Financial Crises and the Emergence of New Financial Architectures: Towards a

Post-Neoliberal World,” Solidarity and the South: New Directions in Long-Term

Development Finance, Diana Barrowclough and Ricardo Gottschalk (eds.), United Nations

Conference on Trade and Development, New York and Geneva, pp. 24-9.

2016a. “Capital Controls in a Time of Crisis,” Philip Arestis and Malcolm Sawyer (eds.), Financial Liberalisation: Past, Present and Future, Annual Edition of International Papers in Political Economy, Houndmills, Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, pp. 177-223.

2015d. “Finance, Development and Social Economics in View of the Global Crisis,” The

Elgar Companion to Social Economics, 2nd edition, John B. Davis and Wilfred Dolfsma

(eds.),Cheltenham, UK and Northampton, USA: Edward Elgar, pp. 566-92.

2013a. “Productive Incoherence in a Time of Crisis: The IMF and the Resurrection of

Capital Controls,” The Political Economy of Financial Crises, Gerald Epstein and Martin

Wolfson (eds.), Oxford and NY: Oxford University Press, pp. 563-77.

2011c. “Unsurprising to Keynes, Shocking to Economists: The Normalization of Capital Controls in the Global Financial Crisis,” Microeconomics, Macroeconomics and Economic Policy: Essays in Honour of Malcolm Sawyer, Philip Arestis (ed.), London: Palgrave MacMillan, pp. 251-67.

2011b. “Cementing Neo-liberalism in the Developing World: Ideational and Institutional Constraints on Policy Space,” Towards New Developmentalism: Market as Means Rather than Master, Shahrukh Rafi Khan and Jens Christiansen (eds.), London and NY: Routledge Press, pp. 100-18.

2010a. “Financial Systems and Economic Development in the 21st Century: Are We All Keynesians Yet?,” Twenty-firstt Century Keynesianism, Philip Arestis and Malcolm Sawyer (eds.), Palgrave/MacMillan, pp. 1-38.

2010b. “Instantiating Neo-liberal Reform Via Economic Theory and Small Group Agreements,” Giuseppe Fontanta, John McCombie and Malcolm Sawyer (eds.), Macroeconomics, Finance and Money: Essays in Honour of Philip Arestis, London: Palgrave MacMillian, pp. 269-81.

2009a. “Neo-liberal Finance and Third World (Mal)Development,” Jonathan Goldstein and Michael Hillard (eds.), Heterodox Macroeconomics: Keynes, Marx and Globalization, London: Routledge Press, pp. 250-60.

2008a. “The Developmental Potential and Political Economy of Remittances: What Do We Know, What Do We Need to Know,” Philip Arestis and John Eatwell (eds.), Issues in Finance and Industry: Essays in Honour of Ajit Singh, London: Palgrave MacMillan, pp. 115-36.

2008b. “Global Finance and Development: False Starts, Dead Ends, and Socio-Economic Alternatives,” in John B. Davis and Wilfred Dolfsma (eds.),The Elgar Companion to Social Economics, Cheltenham, UK and Northampton, USA: Edward Elgar, pp. 496-518.

2008c. “Capital Management Techniques in Developing Countries: Managing Capital Flows in Malaysia, India, and China,” in José Antonio Ocampo and Joseph Stiglitz (eds.), Capital Market Liberalization and Development, NY: Oxford University Press, pp. 139-169. Co-authored with Gerald Epstein and Jomo, K.S.

2007b. “One Step Forward, Two Steps Back: Policy (In)coherence and Financial

Crises,” in Bhumika Muchhala (ed.), Ten Years After: Revisiting the Asian Financial Crisis, Washington, DC: Wilson Center Press, pp. 95-104.

2006a. “A Post Keynesian Analysis of Financial Crisis in the Developing World and Directions for Reform,” in Philip Arestis and Malcolm Sawyer (eds.), A Handbook of Alternative Monetary Economics, Cheltenham, UK and Northampton, US: Edward Elgar, pp. 403-19.

2003c. “International Private Capital Flows and Developing Countries,” in Ha-Joon Chang (ed.), Rethinking Development Economics, London: Anthem Press, pp. 325-345.

2003d. “Ideology, Power and the Rise of Independent Monetary Institutions in Emerging Economies,” in Jonathan Kirshner (ed.), Monetary Orders: Ambiguous Economics, Ubiquitous Politics, Ithaca: Cornell University Press, pp. 25-52.

2003e. “Globalization, Regionalism and State Capacity in Developing Countries: A Note,” in Philip Arestis, Michelle Baddeley and John McCombie (eds.), Globalisation, Regionalism and Economic Activity, Cheltenham, UK and Lyme, US: Edward Elgar, pp. 266-273. Co-authored with George DeMartino.

2000c. “The Asian Financial Crisis: What Went Wrong?,” in Ron Baiman, Heather Boushey, and Dawn Saunders (eds.), Political Economy and Contemporary Capitalism, Armonk, NY: M. E. Sharpe, pp. 218-224.

1999b. “Rejecting Exceptionalism: Reinterpreting the Asian Financial Crises,” in Jonathan Michie and John Grieve Smith (eds.), Global Instability: The Political Economy of World Economic Governance, London: Routledge, pp. 37-67.

1999c. "Emerging Stock Markets and Third World Development: The Post-Keynesian Case for Pessimism," in John Harvey and Johan Deprez (eds.), Post-Keynesian Foundations in the Analysis of International Economics, London: Routlege Press, pp. 229-247.

1998. "Coercing Credibility: Neoliberal Policies and Monetary Institutions in Developing and Transitional Economies," in Philip Arestis and Malcolm Sawyer (eds.), Political Economy of Central Banking, Cheltenham: Edward Elgar, pp. 83-100.

1997b. "Savings, Investment and Functional Efficiency: A Comparative Examination of National Financial Complexes," in Robert Pollin (ed.), The Macroeconomics of Finance, Saving, and Investment, Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, pp. 251-297.

1993b. "Crossing Borders: A Case for Cooperation in International Financial Markets," in Gerald Epstein, Julie Graham and Jessica Nembhard (eds.), Creating a New World Economy: Forces of Change and Plans of Action, Philadelphia: Temple University Press, pp. 64-83.

PUBLISHED REPORTS AND DISCUSSION PAPERS

2020d. “Post-American Moments in Global Financial Governance in the New

Millennium,” Political Economy Research Institute Working Paper No. 511,

University of Massachusetts-Amherst, August. Available at:

2018f. “The Global Financial Governance Architecture, Developmental Finance, and the

Hirschmanian Mindset,” Political Economy Research Institute Working Paper No. 451,

University of Massachusetts-Amherst, January. Available at:



2016b. “Capital Controls in a Time of Crisis,” Political Economy Research Institute Working

Paper No. 416, University of Massachusetts-Amherst.

2014b. “A Call for Change: From the Crisis to a New Egalitarian Ideal for Europe,” report and proposals prepared by the Scientific Board, Group of the Progressive Alliance of the European Parliament, April 2014. Available at:

2013d. “The Rebranding of Capital Controls in an Era of Productive Incoherence,” Political

Economy Research Institute Working Paper No. 318, University of Massachusetts-Amherst.

2012b. “Financial Architectures and Development: Resilience, Policy Space, and Human

Development in the Global South,” background paper prepared for the United Nations

Development Program, Human Development Report 2012, March. Published as Human Development Report Office (UNDP), Occasional Paper, June 2013. (Also: appears as Political Economy Research Institute Working Paper No. 281, University of Massachusetts-Amherst, June 2012.)

2012c. “Dynamic Capital Controls, IMF Irrelevance and the Crisis,” essay in Kevin

Gallagher, Stephany Griffith-Jones, José Antonio Ocampo (eds.), Report of the Task force

on Regulating Global Capital Flows for Long-Run Development, Frederick S. Pardee Center

for the Study of the Longer-Range Future, pp. 59-69.

2010d. “Promising Avenues, False Starts and Dead Ends: Global Governance and Development Finance in the Wake of the Crisis,” Political Economy Research Institute Working Paper No. 241, University of Massachusetts-Amherst.

2010c. “Not Your Grandfather’s IMF: Global Crisis, ‘Productive Incoherence,’ and

Developmental Policy Space,” Political Economy Research Institute Working Paper No.

214, University of Massachusetts-Amherst.

2008d. “The Political Economy of Remittances: What Do We Know? What Do We

Need to Know?,” Political Economy Research Institute Working Paper No. 184, University

of Massachusetts-Amherst.

2006b. “Financial Policies for Pro-Poor Growth,” prepared for the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), International Poverty Centre, Global Training Programme on Economic Policies for Growth, Employment and Poverty Reduction, 2006. Co-authored with Gerald Epstein.

2004a. “Trip Wires and Speed Bumps: Managing Financial Risks and Reducing the Potential for Financial Crises in Developing Economies,” prepared for the XVIIIth Technical Group Meeting of the G-24 in Geneva, Switzerland, March 8-9, 2004. Published as G-24 Discussion Paper No. 33, November 2004, United Nations and Geneva.

2004b “Denver in the Global Economy” for the Denver Mayor’s Office of Economic Development and the Pacific Council on International Policy. Co-authored with Tucker Hart Adams and George DeMartino.

2004c “Capital Management Techniques In Developing Countries: An Assessment of Experiences from the 1990's and Lessons For the Future” prepared for the XVIth Technical Group Meeting of the Group of Twenty-four in Port of Spain, Trinidad and Tobago, February 13-14, 2003. Published as G24 Discussion Paper No. 27, March 2004, United Nations, NY and Geneva. Co-authored with Gerald Epstein and Jomo K. S.

2003f “The Revenue and Double Dividend Potential of Taxes on International Private Capital Flows and Securities Transactions,” World Institute for Development Economics Research (WIDER)/United Nations University,” Helsinki, Finland, WIDER Discussion Paper 2003-No. 83.

2000a appeared in draft form as Working Paper No. 269 of the Kellogg Institute for International Studies, University of Notre Dame.

REPRINTED, UPDATED OR CONDENSED ARTICLES

Reprint of 2016a in Gerald Epstein (ed.), The Political Economy of International Finance in an Age of Inequality: Soft Currencies, Hard Landings, Cheltenham, UK: Edward Elgar, 2018, pp. 69-105.

Reprint of 2013c in Sakiko Fukuda-Parr, James Heintz, and Stephanie Seguino (eds.), Critical and Feminist Perspectives on Financial and Economic Crises, London: Routledge, 2015, pp. 29-51.

Reprint of 2012b in Khalid Malik and Maurice Kugler (eds.), Human Progress and the

Rising South, New York: Human Development Report Office, 2013, pp. 246-299.

Condensed version of 2010c appears as “The IMF and the Global Financial Crisis,” New School Economic Review, 2010, 4(1), pp. 87-91.

Updated, condensed version of 2009-10 appears as “Remittances, Political Economy and Economic Development,” DevelopmentISSues (special issue on “Migration in a Globalizing World,” Institute for Social Studies, The Netherlands), November 2009, 11(2), pp. 16-19.

Reprint of 2004c in Kristen Nordhaug and Helene Bank (eds.), Fritt Fall: Finanskrisen og Utveier, Oslo: Forlaget Res Publica, 2009, pp. 211-39.

Reprint of Chang and Grabel 2004, “Introduction and Part I, Chapters 1-4,” in Marina Della Giusta, Uma Kambhampati and Robert Wade (eds.), The Globalization of the World Economy—Critical Perspectives on Globalization, Edward Elgar, 2006, pp. 72-107.

Reprint of 2004a in Ariel Buira (ed.), The IMF and the World Bank at Sixty, London: Anthem Press, 2005, pp. 117-149.

Condensed versions of 2004c in Ariel Buira (ed.), Challenges to the World Bank and IMF: Developing Country Perspectives, London: Anthem Press, 2003, pp. 141-174 and in Gerald Epstein (ed.), in Capital Flight and Capital Controls in Developing Countries, Edward Elgar, 2005, pp. 301-333.

Updated versions of 2003b in M. Noguchi and C. Lapavitsas (eds.), Beyond Market-Driven Development: Drawing on the Experience of Asia and Latin America, London: Routledge, 2005, pp. 189-207 (in Japanese), pp. 167- 180 [in English] and in Gerald Epstein (ed.), Financialization and the World Economy, London: Edward Elgar, 2005, pp. 357-383.

Reprint of 2003b in Institute for Social Studies Research Series No. 11, 2004, pp. 41-64.

Reprint of 2000a in Sir Hans Singer, Neelambar Hatti and Rameshwar Tandon (eds.), The Political Economy of International Monetary Interdependence , vol. 25 of the New World Order Series, India: B. R. Publishing Corporation, 2002.

Reprint of 1999b in Sir Hans Singer, Neelambar Hatti and Rameshwar Tandon (eds.), NICs after the Asian Miracle, vol. 23 of the New World Order Series, India: B. R. Publishing Corporation, 2000.

Reprint of 1996b in Philip Arestis and Malcolm Sawyer (eds.), The Political Economy of Economic Policies, Devon, England: Macmillan, 1998, pp. 202-247.

Condensed version of 1995b as “Speculation-led Economic Development: Implications for Economic Growth of Financial Liberalization Programs in the Third World," in S. Dev Gupta and N. K. Choudhry, (eds.), Liberalization and Structural Change, vol. II of book series, Globalization and Development: Growth, Equity and Sustainability, Dordrecht: The Netherlands: Kluwer Academic Publishers, 1997, pp. 111-133.

Encyclopedia and reference volume entries:

2009b. “Tobin Tax” essay in Kenneth Reinert and Ramkishen Rajan (eds.), The Princeton Encyclopedia of the World Economy, vol. II, Princeton: Princeton University Press, pp. 1093-96

2001. “Emerging Markets” essay in Jonathan Michie (ed.), Reader’s Guide to the Social Sciences, London: Fitzroy Dearborn Publishers, pp. 459-460.

2001. “Speculation” essay in Jonathan Michie (ed.), Reader’s Guide to the Social Sciences, London: Fitzroy Dearborn Publishers, pp. 1575-1776.

1999. "Speculation," essay in Phil O'Hara (ed.), Encyclopedia of Political Economy, vol. 2, London: Routledge Press, pp. 1076-1079.

PUBLISHED DISCUSSANT COMMENTS

1999. “Comments” on papers by Gerald Belanger and Joseph Smolik, “The Lessons of the Asian Crisis for Russia and East Europe” in Barry Herman (ed.), Global Financial Turmoil and Reform: A United Nations’ Perspective, Tokyo: United Nations University Press, pp. 309-313.

1998. “Comments” on Marc Schaberg, “Globalization of Financial Markets and Financial Systems: Monetary and Financial Policy in the New Environment”), in Dean Baker, Gerald Epstein, Robert Pollin (eds.), Globalization and Progressive Economic Policy: What are the Real Constraints and Opportunities, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 215-218.

Book reviews

2019b. Review of The BRICS and Collective Financial Statecraft by Cynthia Roberts, Leslie Elliot

Armijo, and Saori N. Katada (New York: Oxford University Press, 2018), International

Affairs, 95(2), pp. 486-7.

2014c. Review of Handbook of Global Economic Governance: Players, Powers and Paradigms edited by Manuela Moschella and Catherine Weaver, Routledge (2014), in Review of International Political Economy, 21(5), pp. 1126-28.

2013f. Review of Financialization and Government Borrowing Capacity in Emerging Markets by Iain Hardie, Palgrave Macmillan (2012) in Review of International Political Economy, 20(5), pp. 1136-39.

2006. Review of The New Development Economics: After the Washington Consensus by Jomo KS and Ben Fine (eds.), Zed Books, 2006 in Economic and Political Weekly, vol. XLI, nos. 27-28, pp. 3002-3003.

2002. Review of Polarizing Mexico: The Impact of Liberalization Strategy by Enrique Dussel Peters, Lynne Rienner, 2000 in Journal of Economic Issues, vol. XXXVI, no. 1, pp. 222-224.

1997. Review of Silent Revolution: The Rise of Market Economics in Latin America by Duncan Green, Monthly Review, 1995 in Journal of Economic Issues, vol. XXXI, no. 1, pp. 284-286.

Popular writing

2014d. “A Call for Policy Change in Europe,” Challenge, 57(4), July/August, pp. 5-17. Co-authored with Joseph E. Stiglitz, Jean-Paul Fitoussi, Peter Bofinger, Gøsta-Esping Andersen, James K. Galbraith.

Invited Blogger, TripleCrisis (), a blog project involving 37

economists from around the world, blog focuses on analysis and debate regarding three

simultaneous crises in finance, development, and the environment, supported by the

Global Development and Environment Institute (Tufts University), Economic Research

Foundation (India), and the Heinrich Boell Foundation (USA), February 2010-Present.

2010d. “The World Should Welcome Capital Controls,” Financial Times (US, UK and International Editions), October 26, p. 11. Co-authored with Ha-Joon Chang.

2006c. “A Proactive Role for the IMF,” Memorandum submitted on January 18, 2006 to the UK Treasury Committee’s inquiry into “Globalisation: The Role of the IMF.” Revised version appears as “At Issue Brief,” Bretton Woods Update.

2004. “Currency transaction taxes: A brief assessment of opportunities and limitations,” in James Weaver, Randall Dodd and Jamie Baker (eds.) Debating the Tobin Tax, New Rules for Global Finance Coalition, pp. 93-100.

2003. “Capital Management Techniques in Seven Developing Countries During the 1990s: Lessons for Policy Makers, Political Economy Research Institute Research Brief No. 3, University of Massachussets-Amherst. Co-authored with Gerald Epstein.

2002. “Neoliberal Finance and Crisis in the Developing World,” Monthly Review, Special issue on “The New Face of Capitalism,” vol. 53, no. 11, April, pp. 34-46.

2002. “Capital Account Controls and Related Measures to Avert Financial Crises” in James Weaver, Didier Jacobs, and Jamie Baker (eds.), After Neo-liberalism: Economic Policies that Work for the Poor, New Rules for Global Finance Coalition, October pp. 124-140.

2000. “La Crisis Financiera 1997-1998 y Medidas Preventivas,” Comercio Exterior (Banco Nacional de Comercio Exterior, Mexico), vol. 50, no. 7, July, pp. 548-551.

1998. “Portfolio Investment,” Policy Brief: Foreign Policy in Focus, Institute for Policy Studies and Interhemispheric Resource Center, vol. 3, no. 13, May. Reprinted as "The Genesis of the Mexican and Asian Financial Crises,” in Global Times, July/August 1998, no. 4, pp. 13-16 and as “Stock Market Speculation and the Asian Financial Crisis,” The Popular Economist, Spring 1999, pp. 3-6.

1989. "Taking Control: An Agenda for a Democratic Financial System," Dollars & Sense, No. 151, pp. 15-18.

1988. "The Making of Europe, Inc.," In These Times, vol. 13, no. 5, p. 16. Co-authored with David Kotz.

WORK IN PRESS

2019c. “Capital Controls and Financial Crises” essay in Matias Vernengo and Esteban

Pérez Caldentey (eds.), The New Palgrave Dictionary of Economics (4th edition),

SpringerNature.

2020c. “Interview with Ilene Grabel,” in CJ Polychroniou and Robert Pollin (eds.) Conversations with Political Economists, London: Verso Press, submitted August 2019.

WORK UNDER REVIEW

2020e. “Post-American Moments in Global Financial Governance in the New Millennium,” Peter J. Katzenstein and Jonathan Kirshner (eds.) Populism, Authoritarianism, and the End of the American Order, under review, submitted August 7, 2020.

WORK IN PROGRESS

CONFERENCE PRESENTATIONS AND INVITED LECTURES

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PRESENTATIONS ON PLENARY SESSIONS AND KEYNOTE ADDRESSES

“Trumped! The American Financial Order is Crumbling (and It’s a Good Thing, Too),

lecture delivered at the Provost’s Luncheon, University of Denver, February 18, 2020.

Remarks on When Things Don’t Fall Apart: Global Financial Governance and

Developmental Finance in an Age of Productive Incoherence delivered as a plenary

Address in connection with receipt of the Best Book Award at the conference of the

British International Studies Association International Political Economy Group, Kings

College, London, May 2, 2019.

“Reflections on the Economics Profession, the Neoliberal Conjuncture, and the Emerging

Democratic Crisis,” remarks delivered at a plenary session on “The Cross Fertilization of

the Social Sciences” at the conference on “The Rise of Economic Inequality”; conference of

the Italian Association for the History of Economic Thought, Department of Political and Social Science, University of Bologna, April 11-13, 2019.

“When Things Don’t Fall Apart: A Hirschmanian Perspective on the Global Financial Crisis, The Emerging Pluripolar Financial Governance, and Productive Incoherence,” remarks delivered on a keynote session at the conference on “The Crisis of Globalization and Development”; Instituto de Altos Estudios Nacionales del Ecuador; Quito, Ecuador, July 26-28, 2017.

“On Crotty Hall and UMass Political Economy, remarks delivered at a plenary session on “Celebrating UMass Economics’ New Home: Crotty Hall” of the conference, “UMass Political Economy at Crotty Hall: Ushering in the New, Remembering the Old”; University of Massachusetts-Amherst, April 28-9, 2017.

“The Crisis of 2008- and the Solidification of New Regional Financial Architectures in the

Developing World,” remarks delivered as the keynote lecture at the Seminar on Regional

Financial Arrangements (Seminario Acuerdos Financieros Regionales) hosted by the

Ministry of Economy and Public Finance of Argentina and the Union of South American

Nations (UNASUR), Council of Economy and Finance; Buenos Aires, September 20-21,

2012.

“Reflections on the Crisis, Development and Global Financial Governance,“ presentation at a plenary session of the conference on “Neoliberalism and the Crises of Economic Science, International Initiative for Promoting Political Economy, Istanbul University-Beyazit, May 20-22, 2011.

“Finance and Third World Development: Beyond the Washington Consensus,” presentation at a plenary session of the conference on “After ‘Deregulation’: The Financial System in the 21st Century,” Centre for Global Political Economy at the University of Sussex, Brighton, England, May 26-28, 2005.

“Reclaiming Development,” a presentation at Plenary Session II on “Global Neoliberalism: Is it Different Under Bush and Post 9/11” at the annual summer conference of the URPE, Bantam Connecticut, June 4-7, 2004.

“Development Policies in a Post-Neoliberal World,” a presentation at a plenary session on “Economic Policy” at the 1st conference of the International Coalition for the Advancement of Pluralism in Economics (ICAPE), University of Missouri-Kansas City, Kansas City, Missouri, June 5-7, 2003.

“The Future of Political Economy?,” remarks presented at the plenary session of the Twenty-fifth Anniversary Conference of the Department of Economics, University of Massachusetts-Amherst, October 22-23, 1999.

"The Economy in Crisis: Beyond the Rhetoric of Debt and Austerity" presentation at the plenary session of the conference on "The New World (Dis)order and International Political Economy: A Gender Perspective," Graduate Center of the City University of New York, New York, NY, May 12, 1995.

CONFERENCE PAPERS AND INVITED LECTURES

“Post-American Moments in Global Financial Governance in the New Millennium,” paper

presented at the Rhodes Center for International Economics and Finance, Watson Institute

for International and Public Affairs, Brown University, February 28, 2020; (virtual) workshop

on “Liberalism’s End? Populism, Authoritarianism, and the End of the American Order,”

Boston College, Department of Political Science, May 2020.

“Post-Neoliberalism, Illiberalism, and the Current Economic and Political

Conjuncture: An Exploration Through a Hirschmanian Lens,” presentation at the

“Third Conference on Albert Hirschman’s Legacy: A Passion for the Possible,” Berlin

School of Economics and Law, Berlin, Germany, October 24-5, 2019.

“How a Good Idea Got Its Groove Back: Central Banking, Capital Controls, and the

Rediscovery of Keynes,” presentation at the conference on “The Future of Central

Banking,” Talloires, France, May 26-8, 2019.

“Have Central Bankers Learned Their Lesson During the Last Financial Crisis,” remarks on

roundtable at the conference on “The Future of Central Banking,” Talloires, France, May 26-

8, 2019.

“It’s a Mess, and That’s (Mostly) a Good Thing: Global Financial Governance in the Current Hirschmanian Conjuncture,” presentation at the “Second Conference on Hirschman’s Legacy: A Bias For Hope,” World Bank, Washington, DC, October 25-6, 2018.

Book presentations, When Things Don’t Fall Apart: Global Financial Governance and Developmental Finance in an Age of Productive Incoherence: Josef Korbel School of International Studies, University of Denver, January 18, 2018; Global Development Policy Center, Frederick S. Pardee School of Global Studies, Boston University, January 30, 2018; Center of Concern, Washington, DC, April 19, 2018; Rhodes Center for International Economics and Finance, Watson Institute for International and Public Affairs, Brown University, September 13, 2018; URPE 50th Anniversary Conference, University of Massachusetts-Amherst, September 29, 2018; Annual Lyons Lecture, Department of Economics, Franklin and Marshall College, February 21, 2019; guest lecture (via video) in Professor Randall Germain’s graduate course, “Theorists and Theories of International Political Economy,” Carleton University, April 4, 2019; Cambridge University, Faculty of Economics and Politics, Cambridge UK, May 1, 2019; University of Sussex, Institute of Development Studies and ESRC STEPS Centre, Sussex, UK, May 7, 2019; University of London, School of Oriental and African Studies, London, UK, May 8, 2019; and London School of Economics and Politics, Department of Development Studies, London, UK, May 9, 2019; Freie University Berlin, presentation at the Colloquium of the Latin American Institute and guest lecture in Professor Philipp Lepenies’ graduate course on “Globalization and Transformation, May 21, 2019; Albert Hirschman Centre on Democracy, Graduate Institute of International and Development Studies, Geneva, November 19, 2019; Division on Globalization and Development Strategies, United Nations Conference on Trade and Development, Geneva, November 20, 2019; Lyndon B. Johnson School of Public Affairs-Washington, DC Center, December 6, 2019.

“It’s a Mess, and That’s a Good Thing: Global Financial Governance in the Current Hirschmanian Conjuncture,” paper presented at the workshop on “Monetary Conflict and Disorder in the New Age of Uncertainty,” Cornell University, Government Department, May 18, 2018.

“Towards a Pluripolar Global Financial Architecture: The Bretton Woods Institutions and the New Landscape of Development Finance,” remarks delivered on a panel on “The Political Economy of Exchange Rates and Global Financial Governance” at a session of the Eastern Economics Association conference, Boston, March 1-4, 2018.

“Reflections on the Economics Profession, the Neoliberal Conjuncture, and the Emerging

Democratic Crisis: An Analysis in the Spirit of Albert O. Hirschman,” remarks delivered on

panel on “Democratic Crisis and the Responsibility of Economics,” at a session of the

Association for Social Economics at the ASSA Conference, Philadelphia, January 5, 2018.

“Towards a Pluripolar Global Financial Architecture? The Bretton Woods Institutions and the New Landscape of Developmental Finance,” remarks delivered on panel on “Stabilizing and Unstable International Monetary System,” at a session of URPE at the ASSA conference, Philadelphia, January 5, 2018.

“The Continuity Thesis, Discontinuity Antithesis, and Hirschmanian Synthesis: Global Crisis, Pluripolar Financial Governance, and ‘Productive Incoherence,’” remarks delivered at the session on “Toward a New Global Economic Governance Architecture in a Multipolar Era” at the conference on “Transformations in Global Economic Governance”; Centre for Research in the Arts, Social Sciences and Humanities and Centre for Rising Powers; Cambridge University, Cambridge UK; September 28-29, 2017.

“Ten Years After the Financial Crisis: Is the World Safer for Stability and Development?”, remarks delivered at the Global Development Policy Center, Boston University, September 14, 2017.

“Productive Incoherence in the Evolving Financial Governance Architecture: A Hirschmanian Perspective,” paper presented at the workshop “Beyond Bretton Woods: Complementarity and Competition in the International Economic Order,” Boston University, Global Development Policy Center, September 15, 2017.

“Capital Controls in a Time of Crisis,” panel on “Political Economy of International Economics,” remarks delivered at the conference on “UMass Political Economy at Crotty Hall: Ushering in the New, Remembering the Old”; University of Massachusetts-Amherst, April 28-9, 2017.

“From Rising to Stumbling Powers?: The Developing World During the Global Crisis,” remarks delivered on panel on “Are We on the Verge of a Greater Recession?”, at a session of URPE at the ASSA conference, Chicago, January 8, 2017.

“Financial Crises, Architectural Transformations: Toward a Post-Neoliberal World,”remarks delivered at a session of the meeting on “Monetary and Financial Cooperation in the World: Responses From South-South Cooperation Mechanisms”; organized by the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development, the General Secretariat of the Union of South American Nations, and the Technical Commission for the New International Financial Architecture of the Ministry Foreign Affairs and Human Mobility of Ecuador; Quito, Ecuador, November 29-30, 2016.

“Reserve Pooling Arrangements and Development Banks: The Rationale and State of Play,” remarks delivered at the conference on “Developmental Financial Institutions: Leadership and Learning from the South,” organized by the Global Economic Governance Initiative of the Frederic S. Pardee School of Global Studies at Boston University and the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD); Boston, MA, 12 October 2016.

“From Rising to Stumbling Powers?: The Developing World During the Global Financial Crisis,” presentation to the Denver Association of Business Economists, University of Denver Business School, Denver, CO, April 20, 2016.

“Post-Crisis Experiments in Development Finance Architectures: A Hirschmanian Perspective on ‘Productive Incoherence,’” presentation at the Center for International Policy Studies/International Political Economy Network, University of Ottawa, Ottawa, Canada, April 7, 2016.

“Capital Controls in a Time of Crisis,” presentation at the conference on “Financial Liberalisation: Past, Present, and Future,” St. Catharine’s College, Cambridge University, March 31, 2016, and at a special session on “Financial Liberalisation” at the “13th International Conference Developments in Economic Theory and Policy,“ University of the Basque Country, 23-4 June 2016.

“Capital Controls and Policy Space in a Time of Crisis,” presentation at a panel on “Finance, Politics, and Culture,” at a session of the 15th World Congress on Social Economics, Brock University, St. Catherine’s, Canada, June 23, 2015; panel on “The Political Economy of Capital Flows, Capital Controls and Central Bank Policy in a Global and Historical Perspective, at a session of URPE at the ASSA conference, San Francisco, January 3, 2016.

“The Rebranding of Capital Controls in an Era of Productive Incoherence,” guest lecture at Harvard Law School, course in “Money, Governance, and Globalization” (Professor Christine Desan), April 10, 2015.

“Post-crisis experiments in development finance architectures: A Hirschmanian Perspective,” presentation at the panel on “Finance, ethics, and the great recession,” at a session of the Association for Social Economics at the annual Allied Social Sciences Association conference, Boston, MA, January 2-5, 2015.

“Economic crisis, political opportunity? The rise of developmental financial architectures in the post-crisis period” and “The rebranding of capital controls in an era of productive incoherence,” presentations at the seminar on “La crisis internacional” at the Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México (UNAM), Coyoacán, Mexico; February 4-5, 2014.

“The resurrection and renormalization of capital controls in an age of crisis,” presentation at the panel on “Capital account and domestic prudential regulations as counter-cyclical tools” at a session of the annual Eastern Economics Association Conference, NY, NY, May 9-11, 2013.

“The rebranding of capital controls in an era of productive incoherence,” presentation at the panel on “Capital controls and the global financial crisis” at a session of the annual International Studies Association Conference, San Francisco, CA, April 3-6, 2013.

“Developmental financial architectures and the global financial crisis,” presentation at the panel on “Political economy of emerging market development banks” at a session of the annual International Studies Association Conference, San Francisco, CA, April 3-6, 2013

“Promising avenues, false starts and dead ends: Global governance and development

finance in the wake of the crisis,” presentation at the panel on “Global governance and

policy responses,” at a session of the conference on “Critical perspectives on financial and

economic crises: Why gender matters”; conference co-sponsored by UN Women and the

International Association for Feminist Economics, held at UN Women, NY, NY, January 21-

22, 2013.

“The Financial Crisis and the Rise of New Developmental Financial Architectures,”

presentation at a session on “Integrating Real and Financial Determinants of Economic Crisis,” at the URPE at ASSA conference, San Diego, CA, January 5, 2013.

“Guiding Principles for Global Economic Governance,” remarks delivered at the “Post-2015 Expert Group Meeting,” Center for Women’s Global Leadership, Rutgers University, New Brunswick, NJ, December 13-14, 2012.

“Making Sense Out of the Global Financial Disorder,’ lecture to Café Scientifique II-Denver, November 20, 2012.

“Not your Father’s Crisis: Productive Incoherence, Developmental Policy Space, and the Global South,” remarks delivered as the University Lecture (University of Denver), May 3, 2012.

“Dynamic Capital Controls, IMF Irrelevance and the Crisis,” presentation to the Pardee Center for the Study of the Longer-Range Future, Task Force on Regulating Global Capital Flows for Long-Run Development, Boston University, September 16, 2011 (task force meeting), March 8, 2012 (task force report launch), and a session on “Capital Controls, Macroprudential Polices and Financial Stability” at the Eastern Economics Association conference, Boston, MA, March 9, 2012.

“The Global Financial Architecture: Fissures and Institutional Lacunae,” presentation at a roundtable on “The Global Financial Crisis and Financial Governance” at the conference on “Re-thinking Economics in a Time of Economic Distress,” International Confederation of Associations for Pluralism in Economics, University of Massachusetts-Amherst, USA, November 12, 2011.

“The Crisis and Development Policies,” presentation at a roundtable on “The Crisis and the Economics Profession” at the conference on “Economists of Tomorrow,” Association for Heterodox Economics, Nottingham Trent University, Nottingham, UK, July 9, 2011.

“Reflections on the Crisis, Development and Global Financial Governance,“ presentation at the University of Crete-Rethymno, Department of Economics, Rethymno, Greece, May 25, 2011.

“Development Policies After the Great Crisis,” presentation at a roundtable on “What Economics Needs: Past and Future” at the Association for Social Economics at ASSA conference, Denver, CO, January 8, 2011, the University of Utah-Salt Lake City, Department of Economics, February 11, 2011, and the St. Andrew’s Economic Forum 2011, “Emerging Markets: Can You Hear the Beat of Our Global Economy?” St. Andrews University, Scotland, April 15-17, 2011.

“Not Your Grandfather’s IMF,” presentation at a session on “New Thinking in Economics: The Theoretical Premise” at the Association for Evolutionary Economics at ASSA conference, Denver, CO, January 9, 2011.

“Not Your Grandfather’s IMF: Global Crisis, ‘Productive Incoherence’ and Developmental Policy Space,” presentation at the Seventy-Fifth Anniversary of the Central Bank of the Argentine Republic, Annual Monetary and Banking Conference 2010, “Monetary Policy, Financial Regulation and the Macroeconomy under Financial Globalisation: Lessons and Challenges Arising Out of the Present-Day Crisis,” Buenos Aires, Argentina, September 2-3, 2010.

“Not Your Grandfather’s IMF: The Emergence of Policy Space for Development,” presentation at the conference on “The Developmental State: Crisis and Renewal,” Federal University of Rio de Janeiro, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, June 10-11, 2010; “The Effect of Crisis on Distribution,” New School for Social Research, New York City, USA, March 5, 2010; and at the Political Economy Research Institute of the University of Massachusetts-Amherst, USA, May, 4, 2010.

“Productive Incoherence in an Uncertain World: Financial Governance, Policy Space and Development After the Global Crisis,” presentation at the conference on “Reforming the Financial System: Proposals, Constraints and New Directions,” International Development Economics Associates, Muttukadu, India, January 25-27, 2010.

“Productive Incoherence in an Uncertain World: Financial Governance, Policy Space and Development After the Global Crisis,” presentation at the conference on “Global Implications of the Financial Crisis,’ Cornell University, Department of Government, October 31, 2009.

“Financial Systems and Economic Development in the 21st Century: Are We All Keynesians Yet?,” presentation at the conference on “21st Century Keynesianism” at the conference on “Developments in Economic Theory and Policy,” University of the Basque Country, Bilbao, Spain, July 2-3, 2009.

“Financial Systems and Economic Development in the 21st Century: Are We All Keynesians Yet?,” presentation at the conference on “21st Century Keynesianism” at the University of London, SOAS, May 8, 2009.

“The Political Economy of Remittances: What Do We Know? What Do We Need to Know,”? presentation at a session on “Economics When People Matter” at the AFIT at WSSA conference, Albuquerque, NM, April 16, 2009.

“Remittances: Political Economy and Developmental Implications,” presentation at a session on “Ethnic Enclaves, Remittances, and Progressive Policy” at the URPE at ASSA conference, San Francisco, CA, January 4, 2009.

“Cementing Neo-liberalism: The Political Economy of Bilateral Trade and Investment Agreements,” presentation at the conference on “Markets as Means or Master? ‘Neo-developmentalism’ vs. Neoliberalism,” Mount Holyoke College, South Hadley, Massachusetts, November 14-16, 2008.

“The Political Economy of Remittances,” presentation at the conference on “Financing

Development: Where Do We Find the Money?, Laurentian University, Sudbury, Ontario,

October 17-18, 2008.

“Neo-liberal Finance and Third World (Mal)Development,” presentation at a session on “Heterodox Macroeconomic Policy” at the conference on “Rebellious Macroeconomics: Marx, Keynes and Crotty” to celebrate James Crotty, Political Economy Research Institute, University of Massachusetts-Amherst, October 19-20, 2007.

“The Developmental Potential and Political Economy of Remittances: What Do We Know, What Do We Need to Know,” presentation at the conference “Finance, Industry and Economic Development” to mark Ajit Singh’s retirement, Queens College, Cambridge University, Cambridge UK, September 14-16, 2007.

“One Step Forward, Two Steps Back: Policy (In)coherence and Financial Crises,” presentation at a session on “ Charting the Path Forward: Identifying Policy Alternatives and Regional Financial and Economic Developments” at the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars conference on “The Tenth Anniversary of the Asian Financial Crisis,” Washington, DC, May 16, 2007.

“Fiscal and Monetary Policies as a Tool for Enhancing Policy Space,” presentation at ActionAid International USA program on “Getting More Doctors, Nurses and Teachers Hired in Developing Countries: An Exploration of Macroeconomic Policies for Social Change Activists,” Washington, DC, March 13-15, 2007.

“Policy Coherence or Conformance? The New World Bank-IMF-WTO Rhetoric on Trade and Investment in Developing Countries,” presentation at a session on “Capital Markets and Policy” at the URPE meetings at the Allied Social Sciences Associations Conference Association, Chicago, Il., January 5-7, 2007.

Participant, Cornell University Money Manuscript Workshop; International Political Economy Program, April 28-30, 2006. Discussion of Constructing Monetary Interests: Cooperation, Crisis and Change from Bretton Woods to the Age of Globalization by Wes Wedmeir.

Participant, United Nations Development Program dialogue on Millennium Development Goals-based Research. Discussion held at the Political Economy Research Institute, University of Massachusetts-Amherst, November 19-20, 2005.

“Beyond a Post-Washington Consensus Agenda,” presentation at the Economics Department Seminar series, University of Utah-Salt Lake City, October 21, 2005.

Participant, Cornell University Money Manuscript Workshop; International Political Economy Program, April 29-May 1, 2005. Discussion of Capital Rules: Institutions and the International Monetary System by Rawi Abdelal.

“Reclaiming Development from the Washington Consensus,” delivered as the invited Annual Steinhardt Lecture, Economics Department, Lewis and Clark College, Portland, Oregon, March 15, 2005.

Guest lecture, Professor Martin Hart-Lansberg’s International Economics course, Economics Department, Lewis and Clark College, Portland, Oregon, March 16, 2005.

“The Rhetoric of Neo-liberalism: From ‘TINA’ to the End of History,” presentation at a joint session on “In Dispraise of the Neoliberal Great Capitalist Restoration” sponsored by the Association for Social Economics and the Association for Evolutionary Economics at the ASSA conference, Philadelphia, PA, January 7-9, 2005.

“Public Finance and the Taxation of Securities Transactions and International Private Capital Flows,” presentation at a session on “Finance and Development: Institutional Aspects, Developing and Emerging Country Cases” sponsored by the Association for Evolutionary Economics at the ASSA conference, Philadelphia, PA, January 7-9, 2005, .

“The Washington Consensus at Twenty-five,” presentation at the Transatlantic Seminar Series at the Robert Schuman Center for Advanced Studies, European University Institute, Fiesole, Italy, November 8, 2004.

“Reclaiming Development From the Washington Consensus” invited lectures to coincide with the publication of Reclaiming Development: An Alternative Economic Policy Manual at events organized in 2004 by the “New Rules for Global Finance Coalition,” Washington, DC, June 8; the Friedrich Ebert Foundation-New York Office, June 9; and the Brecht Forum, NYC, June 9. Radio interviews on book: KBOO (90.7 FM; Portland public radio; “Old Mole Variety Hour,” host Bill Resnick) aired June 28th; KPFA (94.1 FM; Pacifica Radio show, “Against the Grain)” show devoted to discussion of book, aired October 27 (interview archived )

“Trip Wires and Speed Bumps: Managing Financial Risks and Reducing the Potential for Financial Crises in Developing Economies,” presentation at the session on “Financial Instability in a Global Economy” at the conference on “Can the Recovery be Sustained? US and International Perspectives” at the Levy Institute, Annandale-on-Hudson, NY, April 23-24, 2004.

“Toward a Post-Washington Consensus Agenda,” presentation at the session on “After the Washington Consensus: Reclaiming Development” at the Socialist Scholars’ Conference, New York City, March 12-14, 2004.

“Trip Wires and Speed Bumps: Managing Financial Risks and Reducing the Potential for Financial Crises in Developing Economies,” presentation of findings at the XVIIIth Technical Group Meeting of the G-24 in Geneva, Switzerland, March 8-9, 2004.

“Development Policies in a Post-Neoliberal World,” presentation at a joint session of the Political Economy Seminar series, Department of Economics, University of Massachusetts-Amherst and the conference on “Marxism and the World Stage”; Nov. 6-8, 2003,

Guest lecture, “The IMF and World Bank: Origins, Operation and Controversy,” Professor Roscoe Hill’s course on “Social Justice,” University of Denver, October 27, 2003.

“The Revenue and Double Dividend Potential of Taxes on International Private Capital Flows and Securities Transactions,” presentation of findings at the World Institute for Development Economics Research (WIDER)/United Nations University meeting on “Innovative Sources of Development Finance,” Helsinki, Finland, May 16-17 and conference on “Sharing Global Prosperity” on September 6-7, 2003.

“Capital Management Techniques In Developing Countries: An Assessment of Experiences from the 1990's and Lessons For the Future,” presentation of findings at the XVIth Technical Group Meeting of the Group of Twenty-four in Port of Spain, Trinidad and Tobago, February 13-14, 2003. Presentation with Gerald Epstein.

“Transaction Taxes: A Brief Assessment of Opportunities and Limitations,” presentation of findings at the conference of the “New Rules for Global Finance Coalition,” Washington, DC, January 16, 2003.

“Predicting Financial Crisis: Astronomy or Astrology,” presentation at the session on “Issues in Domestic and International Financial Markets,” at the URPE at the Allied Social Sciences Associations Conference, Washington, DC, January 3-5, 2003.

“Capital Account Controls and Related Measures to Avert Financial Crises,” presentation of findings at the conference of the “New Rules for Global Finance Coalition,” Washington, DC, May 23-24, 2002.

Issues and Potential Problems in the Global Financial System, lecture to the Executive Seminar, Global Treasury Management, Co-Sponsored Daniels College of Business, University of Denver and Bank One, May 22, 2002

“Developing Economies and the World Economic Crisis,” presentation at the session on “The World Economic Crisis” at the Socialist Scholars’ Conference, NYC, April 12-4, 2002.

“Globalization, Regionalism and State Capacity,” presentation at the conference on “Globalisation, Regionalisation and Economic Growth,” Cambridge University, April 4-6, 2002.

“Predicting Financial Crisis in Globalized Financial Markets: Astronomy or Astrology,” presentation at the session on “Financial Globalisation,” at the Eastern Economic Association conference, Boston, MA, March 14-7, 2002.

“Global Financial Market Developments: Argentina and Beyond,” presentation at the Drew University “Wall Street Workshop,” NYC, February 20, 2002.

“Preventing Financial Crises in Emerging Economies,” presentation at the LBJ School of Public Affairs, University of Texas-Austin, Austin, Texas, February 15, 2001.

“Governing Financial Globalization: A Reform Agenda for Emerging Economies,” presentation at the Drew University “Wall Street Workshop,” New York Society of Securities Analysts, NYC, April 19, 2001.

“Averting Crisis?: Managing Financial Integration in Emerging Economies,” presentation at the Center for Policy Analysis, New School University, New York, NY, April 18, 2001

“Ideology and Power in Monetary Reform: Explaining the Rise of Independent Central Banks and Currency Boards in Emerging Economies,” presentation at the Development/Political Economy Seminar Series at the University of California-Riverside, Department of Economics, Riverside, CA, May 14, 2001.

“Averting Crisis: Assessing Measures to Manage Financial Integration in Emerging Economies,” and “The Global Financial System: Issues and Policy Dilemmas,” presentations at the Department of Economics, University of Missouri, Kansas City, Kansas City, Missouri, October 24-5, 2001.

“Financialization and Financial Crises: Alternative Pathways for Policymakers,” presentation at the conference on “Financialization in the Global Economy,” Political Economy Research Institute, University of Massachusetts-Amherst, December 7-8, 2001.

“Identifying Risks, Preventing Crisis: Lessons From the Asian Crisis,” presentation at the session “Preventing Future Financial Contagions,” held at the Association for Evolutionary Economics at the Allied Social Sciences Associations Conference, New York, NY, January 7-9, 2000.

“A New Financial Architecture for Emerging Markets?,” presentation at the Drew University “Wall Street Workshop,” New York Society of Securities Analysts, NYC, March 2, 2000.

“Financial Integration and Financial Crisis,” presentation at the conference on “Financial Crises and Global Governance,” London School of Economics, London, England, October 13-14, 2000.

“Ideology and Power in Monetary Reform: Explaining the Rise of Independent Central Banks and Currency Boards in Emerging Economies,” presentation at the Center for Global Studies Seminar, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland, November 9, 2000.

“Ideology and Power in Monetary Reform: Explaining the Rise of Independent Central Banks and Currency Boards in Emerging Economies,” presentations at the conference on “Power, Ideology and Conflict: The Political Foundations of 21st Century Money,” Cornell University, Ithaca, NY, conferences on March 31-April 2 and November 10-12, 2000.

“The Risks of Neoliberal Finance: A Consideration of the Structural Roots of Crisis,” presentation at the Development Seminar Series at the University of California-Riverside, Department of Economics, Riverside, CA, May 17, 1999.

“The Financial Crises in Brazil and Russia: The Next Asia?,” presentation at the Drew University “Wall Street Workshop,” New York Society of Securities Analysts, NYC, April 15, 1999.

The Political Economy of ‘Policy Credibility’: The New-Classical Macroeconomics and the Remaking of Emerging Economies,” and “Mexico Redux?: Making Sense of the Financial Crises of 1997-8,” presentations as part of the Sawyer Seminar series on “Globalization and Equity,” Duke University, Raleigh, North Carolina, March 22-23, 1999.

“Mexico Redux? Making Sense of the Financial Crises of 1997-8,” presentation at the session “International Financial Crises,” held at the Association for Evolutionary Economics at the Allied Social Sciences Associations Conference, New York, NY, January 3-5, 1999.

Participant, “Brainstorming Session on the Global Economic Crisis,” sponsored by the Political Economy Research Institute, University of Massachusetts-Amherst, the Economic Policy Institute, Washington, DC, Economics Department, New School for Social Research (session held at the University of Massachusetts-Amherst), November 9, 1998.

“Mexico Redux? Making Sense of the Financial Crises of 1997-8,” presentation at the Kellogg Institute for International Studies, University of Notre Dame, Notre Dame, IN, September 15, 1998.

Participant, “Roundtable on the International Economic Meltdown,” Kellogg Institute for International Studies, University of Notre Dame, Notre Dame, IN, September 14, 1998.

“Rejecting Exceptionalism: Reinterpreting the Asian Financial Crises,” presentation at the conference on “Global Instability and World Economic Governance,” Cambridge University, Cambridge, England, May 13, 1998.

“The Crisis of 1997-8,” presentation at the Drew University “Wall Street Workshop,” New York Society of Securities Analysts, NYC, April 23, 1998.

“Currency Boards and Independent Central Banks in the Third World,” presentation at the session “Issues in the Reform of Emerging Economies,” held at the conference of the Association for Institutionalist Thought, Denver, CO, April 16-18, 1998.

Participant and paper presenter at the “Workshop on Vietnam-US Relations,” Institute of International Relations, Hanoi, Vietnam, March 20-30, 1998. (Papers presented: “Understanding the Asian Financial Crisis,” “A Financial Reform Agenda for Asia.”)

“The Asian financial crisis and the Chinese economy,” presentation to the “China Roundtable,” sponsored by Holmes Roberts & Owen,-Denver World Trade Center, Denver, CO, April 17, 1998.

"Coercing Credibility: Neoliberal Policies and Monetary Policy-making Institutions in Developing and Former Socialist Countries," presentation at the session “The Market Mentality and the Process of Economic Development,” held at the Association for Evolutionary Economics at the Allied Social Sciences Associations Conference, Chicago, IL, January 3-5, 1998.

Guest lecture, “Trends in the Global Financial System,” Professor Kwan Kim’s course on “Money and Finance,” Department of Economics. University of Notre Dame, Notre Dame, IN, December 3, 1998.

"Coercing Credibility: Neoliberal Policies and Monetary Policy-making Institutions in Developing and Former Socialist Countries," presentation at Cambridge University, Faculty of Economics and Politics, Cambridge, England, May 19, 1997.

"Coercing Credibility: Neoliberal Policies and Monetary Policy-making Institutions in Developing and Former Socialist Countries," presentation at the conference on "The Political Economy of Central Banking," University of East London, Department of Economics, London, England, May 16, 1997.

"Financial Sector Reform and the Promotion of Economic Development," presentation at the Banco de Costa Rica (Central Bank of Costa Rica), San Jose, Costa Rica, April 29, 1997.

"North-South Financial Integration: Lessons of the Mexican Crisis," presentation at the session "The Mexican Economy and the Effects of NAFTA Integration," held at the workshop on "Economic Integration and Inequality: The EU and NAFTA," Copenhagen Business School, Frederiksberg, Denmark, March 20-22, 1997.

"The Credibility Controversy: Free Markets and Institution Building in the Third World and Former Socialist Countries," presentation at the session "Power and Credibility in the Creation of New Economies," held at the URPE meetings at the Allied Social Sciences Associations Conference, New Orleans, LA, January 4-6, 1997.

"Financial Integration and Emerging Capital Markets: Macroeconomic and Policy Dilemmas," presentation at the session "Aspects of Fiscal and Financial Policy," held at the international conference on "Economic Integration in Transition," Athens University of Economics and Business, Athens, Greece, August 21-24, 1996.

"Marketing the Third World: The Contradictions of Portfolio Investment in the Global Economy," presentation at the session "Banking, Credit and Investment: National and International Issues," held at the conference of the Association for Institutionalist Thought, Reno, Nevada, April 17-20, 1996.

"Marketing the Third World: The Contradictions of Portfolio Investment in the Global Economy," presentation at the conference on "International Political Economy: Politics in Open Economies," Washington University-St. Louis, Center in Political Economy, April 5-6, 1996.

"Stock Markets, Rentier Interest and the Current Mexican Crisis," presentation at the James H. Street Latin American session, "Mexico's Economic Crisis and Heterodox Analyses," held at the Association for Evolutionary Economics at the Allied Social Sciences Associations Conference, San Francisco, CA, January 5-7, 1996.

"The Mexican Stock Market and the Current Crisis," presentation at the session "Mexico's Economic and Financial Crisis," held at the international symposium, "Economic and Financial Cycles and NAFTA: Issues and Analysis Micro and Macroeconomic," Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico, Mexico City, Mexico, June 7-9, 1995.

"The Functional Efficiency of Financial Inter-mediation: Toward a Framework for Comparative Finance," presentation at the session "Financial Systems and Practices in Comparative Perspective: Political Economy and Policy Issues," held at the URPE meetings at the Allied Social Sciences Associations Conference, Washington, DC, January 6-8, 1995.

"The Macroeconomics of Market Socialism: A Finance-centric Approach," presentation at the conference on "International Aspects of Financial Policy," Economic Policy Institute, Washington, DC, 24-5 June 24-25, 1994. Presentation with Robert Pollin.

"The Political Economy of Economic Policy 'Credibility': A Critique and an Alternative to Anti-Democratic Theory and Policy," presentation at the "Political Economy Seminar Series," University of California-Riverside, Economics Department, May 25, 1994.

"Saving and the Financing of Productive Investment: The Importance of National Financial Complexes," presentation at the conference on "Saving and Investment," Economic Policy Institute, Washington, DC, April 21-22, 1994

"Saving and the Functional Efficiency of National Financial Systems," presentation at Colorado State University-Fort Collins, Economics Department, April 4, 1994.

“The Political Economy of Theories of 'Optimal' Financial Repression in the Third World," presentation at the session "The Political Economy of Financial Liberalization in the Global Context: Instability, Conflict, and Alternatives," held at the URPE meetings at the Allied Social Sciences Associations Conference, Boston, MA, January 3-5, 1994.

"Fast Money, Noisy Growth: A Noise-led Theory of Development," presentation at the session "Development and Market Liberalization: Radical Critiques," held at the URPE meetings at the Allied Social Sciences Associations Conference, Anaheim, CA, January 5-7, 1993.

"Fundamental Uncertainty and Asymmetric Information: Implications for Financial Liberalization in Developing Countries," presentation at the session "Fundamental Uncertainty and Macroeconomics," held at the conference on "Marxism in the New World Order," Amherst, MA, November 12-15, 1992.

Plenary speaker, "The Failure of Global Financial Deregulation,” Center for Popular Economics, International Economics Institute, Smith College, August 1991.

Workshop presentation, "Actual and Incipient Financial Crises in the 1990s," Center for Popular Economics, Summer Institute on the US Macroeconomy, Smith College, August 1991

Plenary speaker, "Understanding the US Savings and Loan Crisis," Center for Popular Economics, Summer Institute on the US Macroeconomy, Smith College, August 1990.

Workshop presentation, "A Primer on the US Financial System," Center for Popular Economics, Summer Institute on the US Macroeconomy, Smith College, August 1990.

"Critical Pedagogy and Popular Economics Education," presentation at the "Roundtable" on Popular Economics Education, held at the conference on "Marxism Now: Traditions and Difference," University of Massachusetts, Amherst, December 1989.

REFEREE AND PROFESSONAL SERVICE

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JOURNALS

Co-Editor: Review of International Political Economy (January 2013-January 2017; July 8-October 15, 2019).

Editorial Board Member: The Annals of the Fondazione Luigi Einaudi: An Interdisciplinary

Journal of Economics, History, and Political Science (May 2018-Present); Forum for Social

Economics (December 2012-Present); Ola Financiera (September 2014-Present);

Problemas del Desarrollo: Revista Latinoamericana de Economía (September 2018-

Present); Review of Political Economy (January 2008-July 2016).

Associate Editor: Economic Dynamics and Structural Change (October 2019-Present).

International Advisory Board member: Review of International Political Economy (2017-Present); Review of Evolutionary Political Economy (July 2019-Present); Review of Social Economy (July 2020-Present).

Referee: Cambridge Journal of Economics, Oxford Development Studies, Contributions to Political Economy, International Review of Applied Economics, Review of Political Economy, World Development, Journal of Post Keynesian Economics, Economic Development and Cultural Change, Review of International Political Economy, Eastern Economics Journal, Feminist Economics, New Political Economy, Journal of Economic Issues, Review of Radical Political Economics, Global Policy, Social Science Journal, American Review of Politics, Journal of Social Economics, The Manchester School, International Journal of Political Economy.

SCIENTIFIC ADVISORY BOARDS

French Association for the Development of Keynesian Studies, conference on “Economic Possibilities for our Grandchildren, 90 years Later”; Lille, France; December 9-11, 2020.

PUBLISHERS

Columbia University Press, Oxford University Press, University of Michigan Press, Cornell University Press, Kluwer Press, Elsevier Press, Anthem Press (reviewer; member, Editorial Board, International Political Economy Series 2002-Present), Fitzroy Dearborn Publishers.

TENURE AND PROMOTIONS

Kings College-London (Department of European and International Studies), University of Iceland (School of Public Policy and Governance), John Jay College (Economics), Colorado State University (Economics), Cornell University (Government), Drew University (Economics), University of Redlands (Economics). Franklin and Marshall College (Economics), University of Warwick (Political Science), Brown University (Department of Political Science), Boston University (Department of International Relations), University of Massachusetts-Boston (John W. McCormack Graduate School of Policy Studies), University of Waterloo (Department of Political Science), University of Iceland (Department of Political Science), University of Oklahoma (Economics), Tulane University (Department of Political Science), London School of Economics and Political Science (Development Studies Institute), Roosevelt University (Department of Economics), University of Massachusetts (Political Economy Research Institute), New College of Florida (Division of Social Sciences), Hampshire College (School of Social Science), Willamette University (Department of Economics).

EXTERNAL REVIEW OF DOCTORAL DISSERTATIONS AND FUNDING APPLICATIONS

Université Grenoble Alpes–France, Department of Economics, external dissertation committee member, Bruno Thiago Tomio, May 2020--Present; dissertation defense external jury, Marcos Centurion Vicencio, July 2020; external dissertation committee member, Gaëlle Despierre Corporon, May 2018-Present. Social Science and Humanities Research Council of Canada, January 2015, evaluation of proposal in Political Science/International Relations/Public Administration. Macquarie University, Department of Economics, Spring 2008, external reviewer of dissertation, Alison Mary Vicary.

PROFESSIONAL ORGANIZATIONS

Association for Evolutionary Economics (Board of Directors 2013-15, 2000-03; Financial Advisory Committee 2001-2003; Committee on Membership 2000-3; Veblen-Commons Award Committee member in 1999, chair in 2012; James Street Scholar Committee, 2013-2015), Economic and Social Research Council of the UK (External Reviewer, 2006), Association for Institutionalist Thought (Nominating Committee 1997-1998).

NON-GOVERNMENTAL ORGANIZATIONS

Interhemispheric Research Council/Institute for Policy Studies (Referee for Policy Briefs), New Rules for Global Finance Coalition (Planning Committee 2002-2003), Center for Popular Economics (Advisory Board 2001-03), Socially Conscious Coffee (Board of Directors August 2003-June 2004).

MEDIA AND MEDIA MENTIONS

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“When Things Don’t Fall Apart: Global Financial Incoherence in the Covid-19 Era”; webinar for the Young Scholars Initiative of the Institute for New Economic Thinking, Working Group on Finance, Law and Economics; June 24, 2020.



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“The Covid-19 Crisis: Economic Fallout and Policy Responses”; speaker at webinar for DU alumni, Josef Korbel School, and the DU Department of Economics, April 17, 2020.

“Global Economic Policy Responses to Covid-19,” Korbel School Covid Video Series, April 2020.

“A Rosy View Amongst a Sea of Pessimism,” Research and Scholarship Matters, University of Denver, Winter 2020, volume 10, p. 3.

"Post-American Moments in Global Financial Governance in the New Millennium," Youtube, Rhodes Center for International Economics and Finance at the Watson Institute, Brown University, February 28. 2020.

Rhodes Center Podcast, "What’s Next? The Post-American Global Economy,” conversation with Ilene Grabel, Jonathan Kirshner of Boston College, and Mark Blyth of Brown University, recorded at the Rhodes Center for International Economics and Finance at the Watson Institute, Brown University, February 28. 2020.

Book talk on When Things Don’t Fall Apart, live stream and YouTube, hosted by the Political

Economy Research Institute of the University of Massachusetts-Amherst, the Lyndon B.

Johnson (LBJ) School of Public Affairs at the University of Texas-Austin, and the LBJ

Washington DC Center; Washington, DC; December 6, 2019.



Book talk on When Things Don’t Fall Apart and interview at the Albert Hirschman Centre on

Democracy; Graduate Institute; Geneva, Switzerland; November 19, 2019.



“Das Weltfinanzsystem Hat Sich Vernä” by Andreas Neinhaus, Finanz und Wirtschaft,

January 19, 2019, p 19.

veraendert/

Interview with Professor Mark Blyth, Rhodes Center for International Economics and

Finance Podcast, Rhodes Center, Watson Institute, Brown University on When Things

Don’t Fall Apart, September 13, 2018.



Podcast on the New Books Network, interview with Andrea Bernardi on When Things Don’t

Fall Apart, aired August 7, 2018.

“Lack of Diversity in Your Summer Economics Reading List,” letter to Martin Wolf by Dr.

Carolina Alves, Besiana Balla, Devika Dutt, and Dr. Ingrid Harvold Kvangraven published in Financial Times (FT), July 17, 2018. . FT letter with hyperlink to “An Alternative Economics

Summer Reading List,”

“Global Financial Governance Ten Years After the Crisis: An Interview with Ilene Grabel” by

C. J. Polychroniou, Global Policy Journal, June 4, 2018. (Reposted in the Rozenberg Quarterly, Triple Crisis, Political Economy Research Institute, , , )

“After the 2008 Financial Crisis, a State of ‘Productive Incoherence,” Interviews on the Real News Network, aired April 9, 2018.





Video from book launch at the Global Development Policy Center of the Frederick S. Pardee

School of Global Studies at Boston University, January 30, 2018. .

“Has Global Finance Reformed Itself More Than it Appears, Weblog post by Professor Dani

Rodrik, Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University, January 18, 2018.



“Here’s What Could Make the Next Global Recession Even Worse” by Peter Coy, Business

Week/Bloomberg, January 17, 2018.

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