> Publishers' series
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145 (May 2022):
Economic development and political violence in Ethiopia Ermias Woldesenbet, Goitom Gebreluel and Biniam Bedasso
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University of Oxford, [2022]
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142 (April 2020):
Transforming the global plastics economy the political economy and governance of plastics production and pollution Diana Barrowclough and Carolyn Deere Birkbeck
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University of Oxford, [2020]
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143 (July 2020):
Industrial policy and risk sharing in public development banks: lessons for the post-COVID response from the EIB and EFSI Stephany Griffith-Jones and Natalya Naqvi
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University of Oxford, [2020]
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144 (September 2020):
Ripe for reform: UK scrutiny of international trade agreements Emily Jones and Anna Sands
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University of Oxford, [2020]
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141 (May 2019):
Financial convergence in the financial periphery how interdependence shapes regulators' decisions Emily Jones and Alexandra O. Zeitz
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University of Oxford, [2019]
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140 (April 2019):
Guarding the money guardian how the Ombudsman is enhancing the legal framework for European Central Bank transparency Camila Villard Duran and Daniel Fideles Steinberg
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University of Oxford, [2019]
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137 (March 2018):
Legalization, diplomacy, and development do investment treaties de-politicize investment disputes? Geoffrey Gertz, Srividya Jandhyala and Lauge N. Skovgaard Poulsen
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University of Oxford, [2018]
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138 (October 2018):
Legal developments in the enforcement of international environmental commitments Maria A. Gwynn
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University of Oxford, [2018]
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139 (November 2018):
State directed credit in a world of globalised finance developmental policy autonomy and business power in Bolivia Natalya Naqvi
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University of Oxford, [2018]
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134 (September 2017):
From shadow banking to digital financial inclusion regulatory framework contestation between China and the FSB Peter Knaack and Julian Gruin
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University of Oxford, [2017]
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133 (August 2017):
Labour provisions in the US and EU FTAs a two-level games perspective Nghia Trong Pham
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University of Oxford, [2017]
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135 (October 2017):
China and Brazil's infrastructure initiatives and the role of regional counterparts Maria A. Gwynn
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University of Oxford, [2017]
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136 (October 2017):
The Fund as "junior partner"? IMF-RFA crisis lending and regime complexity Ivaylo Iaydjiev
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University of Oxford, [2017]
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131 (August 2017):
The political economy of Basel adoption in Kenya a case of alignment of donor, government and banking sector interests Radha Upadhyaya
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University of Oxford, [2017]
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124 (March 2017):
Trade and labour rights the case of the TPP Nghia Trong Pham
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University of Oxford, [2017]
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130:
Granting reassurance while posing challenge explaining China's creation of the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank Zheng Chen and Yanchuan Liu
Oxford: University of Oxford, June 2017
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132 (July 2017):
Investment disputes, sovereignty costs, and the strategies of states Maria A. Gwynn
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University of Oxford, [2017]
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126 (March 2017):
Misalignment of exchange rates what lessons for growth and policy mix in the WAEMU? Kako Kossivi Nubukpo
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University of Oxford, [2017]
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127 (April 2017):
The future of global financial regulation Emily Jones and Peter Knaack
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University of Oxford, [2017]
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129 (May 2017):
Brexit and the limits of financial power in the UK Scott James and Lucia Quaglia
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University of Oxford, [2017]
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105:
WIPO's Development Agenda and the push for development-oriented capacitybuilding on intellectual property how poor governance, weak management, and inconsistent demand hindered progress Carolyn Deere Birkbeck
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University of Oxford, [2016]
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119 (August 2016):
Commercial diplomacy and American foreign policy Geoffrey Gertz
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University of Oxford, [2016]
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118 (April 2016):
The risk of regulatory ritualism proposals for a treaty on business and human rights Jolyon Ford
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University of Oxford, [2016]
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114 (March 2016):
Host's dilemma in international political economy the regulation of cross-border banking in emerging Europe, 2004-2010 Ivaylo Iaydjiev
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University of Oxford, [2016]
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117 (March 2016):
Improving the fragile states' budget transparency lessons from Afghanistan Nematullah Bizhan
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University of Oxford, [2016]
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120 (September 2016):
The tangibility of the intangibles what drives banks' sustainability disclosure in the emerging economies? Adam Ng
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University of Oxford, [2016]
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121 (September 2016):
"Countries don't go bankrupt" sovereign debt crises and perceptions of sovereignty in an era of globalisation Katharina Obermeier
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University of Oxford, [2016]
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123 (October 2016):
Crowdsourcing government accountability experimental evidence from Pakistan Ali Hasanain, Yasir Khan, Arman Rezaee
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University of Oxford, [2016]
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122 (December 2016):
Relative treatment of aliens firm-level evidence from developing countries Emma Aisbett and Poulsen Lauge
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University of Oxford, [2016]
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114 (November 2016):
20 years of debate on environment, trade and sustainable development at the WTO a literature review (1995-2015) Carolyn Deere Birkbeck
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University of Oxford, [2016]
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115 (March 2016):
The successes and failures of economic reform in Nigeria's post-military political settlement Zainab Usman
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University of Oxford, [2016]
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2015, 107 (August 2015):
The political economy of industrial development in Vietnam impact of state business relationship on industrial performance, 1986-2012 Tu-Anh Vu-Thanh
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University of Oxford, [2015]
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2015, 108 (July 2015):
The international lender of last resort for emerging countries a bilateral currency swap? Camila Villard Duran
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University of Oxford, [2015]
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2015, 109 (October 2015):
Continuity, aid and revival state building in South Korea, Taiwan, Iraq and Afghanistan Nematullah Bizhan
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University of Oxford, [2015]
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2015, 106 (August 2015):
Bilateral donors in the "beyond aid" agenda the importance of institutional autonomy for donor effectiveness Nilima Gulrajani
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University of Oxford, [2015]
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110 (October 2015):
Civil regulation and Chinese resource investment in Myanmar and Vietnam Pichamon Yeophantong
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University of Oxford, [2015]
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111 (November 2015):
Changing demands on the global trade and investment architecture mapping an evolving ecosystem Carolyn Deere Birkbeck and Kimberley Botwright
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University of Oxford, [2015]
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112 (December 2015):
Diplomats want treaties diplomatic agendas and perks in the investment regime Lauge Poulsen and Emma Aisbett
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University of Oxford, [2015]
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2015, 101 (April 2015):
Ripe for refinement the state's role in interpretation of FET, MFN, and shareholder rights Lise Johnson
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University of Oxford, [2015]
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2015, 102 (June 2015):
Protecting the funds of mobile money customers in civil law jurisdictions David Ramos, Javier Solana, Ross P. Buckley and Jonathan Greenacre
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University of Oxford, [2015]
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2015, 103 (June 2015):
Socio-political economy and dynamics of government-driven land grabbing in Nigeria since 2000 Akachi Odoemene
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University of Oxford, [2015]
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2015, 96 (January 2015):
The international investment regime is stronger than you think understanding the interplay of diplomatic, insurance and legal approaches for protecting FDI Geoffrey Gertz
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University of Oxford, [2015]
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2015, 97 (January 2015):
Process matters South Africa's experience exiting its BITs Mohammad Mossallam
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University of Oxford, [2015]
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2015, 99 (March 2015):
Managing risks, preventing crises a political economy account of Basel III financial regulations Jure Jeric
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University of Oxford, [2015]
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2015, 100 (March 2015):
Can dreams come true? eliminating extreme poverty in Africa by 2030 Mthuli Ncube, Zuzana Brixiova and Zorobabel Bicaba
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University of Oxford, [2015]
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104 (June 2015):
A new politics of aids? the changing international political economy of development assistance : the Ghanaian case Alexandra Olivia Zeitz
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University of Oxford, [2015]
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2014, 93 (November 2014):
The governance of the World Intellectual Property Organization a reference guide Carolyn Deere Birkbeck
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University of Oxford, [2014]
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2014, 92 (October 2014):
WTO accession and the political economy of state-owned enterprise reform in Vietnam Vu Thanh Tu Anh
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University of Oxford, [2014]
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2014, 94 (December 2014):
Institutional entrepreneurship and the forgotten origins of investment treaty arbitration Taylor St. John
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University of Oxford, [2014]
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2014, 95 (December 2014):
When do "weak" states win? a history of African, Caribbean and Pacific countries manoeuvring in trade negotiations with Europe Emily Jones
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University of Oxford, [2014]
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2014, 98 (December 2014):
Blocking the pathway out of the resource curse what hinders diversification in resource-rich developing countries? Anar Ahmadov
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University of Oxford, [2014]
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2014, 90 (January 2014):
The distributional consequences of international finance an analysis of regulatory influence Ranjit Lall
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University of Oxford, [2014]
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2014, 89 (September 2014):
Global economic governance after the 2008 crisis a new action plan for the reform of global economic governance Ngaire Woods
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University of Oxford, [2014]
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2014, 91 (September 2014):
Global banking standards and low income countries helping or hindering effective regulation? Emily Jones
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University of Oxford, [2014]
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2013, 80 (April 2013):
Health financing in Ghana, South Africa and Nigeria are they meeting the Abuja target? Rachael Burke and Devi Sridhar
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University of Oxford, [2013]
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2013, 73:
Enterprise hegemony and embedded hierarchy network the political economy and process of global compact governance in China Hongsheng Ren
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University of Oxford, [2013]
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2013, 74:
The political economy of healthcare commercialization in Vietnam Le Thanh Forsberg
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University of Oxford, [2013]
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2013, 76:
Out of the Penkelemes the ECOWAS project as transformation Abdourahmane Idrissa
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University of Oxford, [2013]
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2013, 82:
China, corporate responsibility and the contentious politics of hydropower development transnational activism in the Mekong region Pichamon Yeophantong
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University of Oxford, [2013]
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2013, 83 (July 2013):
Shadow banking, financial risk, and regulation in China and other developing countries Steven L. Schwarcz
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University of Oxford, [2013]
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2013, 75:
Role of rules and relations in global trade governance Pooja Sharma
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University of Oxford, [2013]
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2013, 72 (March 2013):
Trojan multilateralism global cooperation in health Devi Sridhar and Ngaire Woods
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University College, [2013]
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2013, 77:
Divided commitment UEMOA, the Franc Zone, and ECOWAS Abdourahmane Idrissa
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University of Oxford, [2013]
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2013, 78:
Re-conceptualizing regional integration in Africa the European model and Africa's priorities Dima Noggo Sarbo
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University of Oxford, [2013]
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2013, 79:
The Eritrea-Ethiopia conflict domestic and regional ramifications and the role of the international community Dima Noggo Sarbo
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University of Oxford, [2013]
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2013, 81 (July 2015):
China and the politics of hydropower development governing water and contesting responsibilities in the Mekong River Basin Pichamon Yeophantong
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University College, [2013]
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2013, 87 (December 2013):
Organising for donor effectiveness an analytical framework for improving aid effectiveness policies Nilima Gulrajani
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University of Oxford, [2013]
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2013, 86 (June 2013):
Varieties of regulation how states pursue and set international financial standards Rahul Prabhakar
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University of Oxford, [2013]
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2013, 85:
Moving away from corrupt equilibrium "big bang" push factors and progress maintenance Alexander Kupatadze
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University of Oxford, [2013]
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2013, 88 (November 2013):
The India-Brazil-South Africa Forum - a decade on mismatched partners or the rise of the South? Folashadé Soule-Kohndou
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University of Oxford, [2013]
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2013, 84:
Global governance exit a Bolivian case study George Gray Molina
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University of Oxford, [2013]
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2012, 71 (June 2012):
International regime complexity and enhanced enforcement of intellectual property rights the use of networks at the multilateral level Valéria Guimarães de Lima e Silva
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University College, [2012]
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2012, 70 (June 2012):
Trade remedies in Africa experience, challenges and prospects Ousseni Illy
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University College, [2012]
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2012, 68 (April 2012):
Motives behind national and regional approaches to health and foreign policy Devi Sridhar and Kate Smolina
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University College, [2012]
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2012, 69 (May 2012):
Beyond the Eighth Ministerial Conference on the WTO a forward looking agenda for development Carolyn Deere Birkbeck and Emily Jones
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University College, [2012]
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2011, 65 (September 2011):
Buying better governance the political economy of budget reforms in aid-dependent countries Paolo de Renzio
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University College, [2011]
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2011, 67 (November 2011):
Accountability in faith-based development organizations in Nigeria: preliminary explorations Omobolaji Olarinmoye
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University College, [2011]
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2011, 64 (July 2011):
Development-oriented perspectives on global trade governance a summary of proposals for making global trade governance work for development Carolyn Deere Birkbeck
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University College, [2011]
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2011, 60 (May 2011):
Climate finance mobilizing private investment to transform development Michele de Nevers
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University College, [2011]
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2011, 63 (July 2011):
Developing country coalitions in the WTO strategies for improving the influenence of the WTO's weakest and poorest members Carolyn Deere Birkbeck and Meg Harbourd
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University College, [2011]
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2011, 66 (November 2011):
Rethinking aid coordination Ngaire Woods
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University of Oxford, [2011]
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2011, 62 (July 2011):
Determinants of oversight on a reactive legislature the case of Brazil, 1988 - 2005 Leany Lemos and Timothy J. Power
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University College, [2011]
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2010, 58 (June 2010):
Brazilian congress and foreign affairs abdication or delegation? Leany Lemos
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University College, [2010]
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2010, 56:
Challenging global accountability the intersection of contracts and culture in the World Bank Nilima Gulrajani
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University College, [2010]
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2010, 59 (October 2010):
The G20 Leaders and global governance Ngaire Woods
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University College, [2010]
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2010, 57 (June 2010):
Parliamentarians' expenses recent reforms a briefing on Australia, Canada, United Kingdom and Brazil Leany Lemos and Rosara Joseph
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University College, [2010]
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[2009, 55]:
Health financing in Brazil, Russia and India what role does the international community play? Devi Sridhar and Eduardo J. Gómez
[Oxford]: [The Global Economic Governance Programme, University College], [2010]
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2009, 50 (July 2009):
Reinvigorating debate on WTO reform the contours of a functional and normative approach to analyzing the WTO system Carolyn Deere-Birkbeck
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University College, [2009]
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2009, 54 (December 2009):
Global governance after the financial crisis a new multilateralism or the last gasp of the great powers? Ngaire Woods
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University College, [2009]
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2009, 53 (October 2009):
Avoiding dangerous climate change why financing for technology transfer matters Arunabha Ghosh and Kevin Watkins
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University College, [2009]
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2009, 49 (January 2009):
Improving institutional coherence managing interplay between trade and climate change Matthew Stilwell
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University College, [2009]
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2009, 48 (January 2009):
La mise en application de l'Accord sur les ADPIC em Afrique francophone Carolyn Deere
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University College, [2009]
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2009, 51 (September 2009):
Governing climate change: lessons from other governance regimes Arunabha Ghosh and Ngaire Woods
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University College, [2009]
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2009, 52:
Why Basel II failed and why any Basel III is doomed Ranjit Lall
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University College, [2009]
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2009, 47 (January 2009):
Developing countries in the WTO Dispute Settlement System Hunter Nottage
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University College, [2009]
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2008, 42 (July 2008):
The politics of aid African strategies for dealing with donors Alastair Fraser and Lindsay Whitfield
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University College, [2008]
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2008, 43 (November 2008):
Global migration governance Alexander Betts
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University College, [2008]
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2008, 44 (November 2008):
International cooperation in the global refugee regime Alexander Betts
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University College, [2008]
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2008, 41 (June 2008):
Mali patterns and limits of donor-driven ownership Isaline Bergamaschi
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University College, [2008]
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2008, 45 (November 2008):
Making global accountability street-smart re-conceptualising dilemmas and explaining dynamics Nilima Gulrajani
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University College, [2008]
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2008, 38:
The International Monetary Fund retrospect and prospect in a time of reform W. Max Corden, Brett House and David Vines
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University College, [2008]
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2008, 37:
The corporate goverance of the World Bank Group Domenico Lombardi
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University College, [2008]
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2008, 40 (May 2008):
Information gaps, information systems, and the WTO's trade policy review mechanism Arunabha Ghosh
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University College, [2008]
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2007, 27 (June 2007):
The aid relationship in Afghanistan struggling for government leadership Clare Lockhart
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University College, [2007]
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2007, 36:
The shifting politics of foreign aid Ngaire Woods
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University College, [2007]
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2007, 30 (June 2007):
Zambia: back to the future? Alastair Fraser
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University College, [2007]
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2007, 29 (June 2007):
Tanzania: a genuine case of recipient leadership in the aid system? Graham Harrison and Sarah Mulley
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University College, [2007]
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2007, 28 (June 2007):
Ethiopia: aid, ownership, and sovereignty Xavier Furtado and James Smith
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University College, [2007]
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2007, 32:
Ghana: the political dimensions of aid dependence Lindsay Whitfield and Emily Jones
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University College, [2007]
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2007, 31 (June 2007):
Mali: patterns and limits of donor-driven ownership Isaline Bergamaschi
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University College, [2007]
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2007, 26 (June 2007):
"Milking the cow" negotiating ownership of aid and policy in Rwanda Rachel Hayman
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University College, [2007]
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2007, 25 (January 2007):
Contested sovereignty in Mozambique the dilemmas of aid dependence Paolo de Renzio and Joseph Hanlon
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University College, [2007]
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2007, 35 (September 2007):
Misfinancing global health the case for transparency in disbursements and decision making Devi Sridhar and Rajaie Batniji
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University College, [2007]
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2007, 34 (June 2007):
Political authority and global finance crisis prevention in Europe and beyond Louis W. Pauly
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University College, [2007]
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2007, 33:
New faces in the green room developing country coalitions and decision-making in the WTO Mayur Patel
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University College, [2007]
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2006, 23 (July 2006):
Aid-recipient sovereignty in global governance Alastair Fraser
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University College, [2006]
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2006, 22 (June 2006):
"Ownership", sovereignty and global governance David Williams
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University College, [2006]
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2006, 21 (March 2006):
Donor co-ordination and good governance donor-led and recipient-led approaches Paolo de Renzio and Sarah Mulley
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University College, [2006]
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2006, 24 (October 2006):
Aid's political consequences the embedded aid system Lindsay Whitfeld
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University College, [2006]
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2005, 17 (20 October 2005):
Effective representation and the role of coalitions within the IMF Ngaire Woods and Domenico Lombardi
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University College, [2005]
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2005, 13 (3 May 2005):
Combining global and local forces the case of labor rights in Cambodia Sandra Polaski
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University College, [2005]
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2005, 19 (10 May 2005):
Reconciling effective aid and global security implications for the emerging international development architecture Ngaire Woods (director, Global Economic Governance Programme) and research team (Global Economic Governance Programme)
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University College, [2005]
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2005, 16 (3 May 2005):
Locally accountable good governance strengthening non-governmental systems of labor regulation Dara O'Rourke
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University College, [2005]
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2005, 15 (3 May 2005):
Responsive regulation and developing economics John Braithwaite
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University College, [2005]
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2005, 20:
Democratising the IMF involving parliamentarians Andrew Eggers, Ann Florini and Ngaire Woods
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University College, [2005]
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2005, 18 (23 February 2005):
Focusing aid on good governance can foreign aid instruments be used to enhance "good governance" in recipient countries? Sue Unsworth
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University College, [2005]
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2005, 14 (3 May 2005):
Making corporate self-regulation effective in developing countries David Graham and Ngaire Woods
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University College, [2005]
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2004, 02 (12 September 2005):
Argentina's pathway through financial crisis Brad Setser and Anna Gelpern
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University College, [2004]
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2004, 01 (10 May 2005):
Pathways through financial crises an overview Ngaire Woods
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University College, [2004]
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2004, 12:
The prospects for industry self-regulation of environmental externalities Michael Lenox
[Oxford]: [The Global Economic Governance Programme, University College], [2004]
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2004, 04 (10 April 2004):
Russia's pathway through financial crisis Alexander Zaslavsky and Ngaire Woods
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University College, [2004]
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2004, 09 (3 May 2004):
When do governments implement voluntary codes and standards? the experience of financial codes in East Asia Andrew Walker
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University College, [2004]
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2004, 07 (1 June 2004):
South Africa's pathway through financial crisis Cyrus Rustomjee
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University College, [2004]
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2004, 11 (1 August 2004):
Protecting investors and the environment through financial disclosure Robert Repetto
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University College, [2004]
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2004, 10 (1 April 2004):
Global business, local constraints the case of water in South Africa Bronwen Morgen
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University College, [2004]
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2004, 06 (1 June 2004):
India's pathway through financial crisis Arunabha Ghosh
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University College, [2004]
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2004, 08 (1 June 2004):
Malaysia's pathway through financial crisis Jomo Kwame Sundaram
Oxford: The Global Economic Governance Programme, University College, [2004]