Articles and Book Chapters
Articles
Neoliberalism and Banking Crisis Bailouts: Distant Enemies or Warring Neighbours?, with Andrew Walter, Public Administration, 100, no. 3, (2022), pp. 600 - 615. Available here.
Financialization, Wealth, and the Changing Political Aftermaths of Banking Crises, with Andrew Walter, Socio-Economic Review, 20, no. 1, (2022), pp. 55 - 84. Available here.
Great Expectations, Financialization and Bank Bailouts in Democracies, with Andrew Walter, Comparative Political Studies, 53, no. 8, (2020), pp. 1259 - 1297. Available here.
The Financialization of Mass Wealth, Banking Crises and Politics over the Long Run, with Andrew Walter, European Journal of International Relations, 25, no. 4, (2019), pp. 1007 - 1034. Available here.
Banking Crises and Politics: A Long Run Perspective, with Andrew Walter, International Affairs, 93, no. 5, (2017), pp. 1107 - 1125 . Available here.
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International Affairs Podcast: Banking Crises and Politics
Professional Ties that Bind: How Normative Orientations Shape IMF Conditionality, Review of International Political Economy, 22, no. 4 (2015), pp. 757 - 787. Available here.
Do INGOs Inhibit Globalization? The Case of Capital Account Liberalization in Developing Countries, with Alexander M. Hicks and Diogo Pinheiro, European Journal of International Relations, 21, no.1, (2015), pp. 146-170. Available here.
Managing and Transforming Policy Stigmas in International Finance: Emerging Markets and Controlling Capital Inflows after the Crisis, Review of International Political Economy, 22, no. 1, (2015), pp. 44-76. Available here.
Fashions and Fads in Finance: The Political Foundations of Sovereign Wealth Fund Creation, International Studies Quarterly, 58, no. 4, (2014), pp. 752-763. Available here.
Controlling Capital: The International Monetary Fund and Transformative Incremental Change from Within International Organizations, New Political Economy, 19, no. 3, (2014), pp. 445-469. Available here.
How You Stand Depends on How We See: International Capital Mobility as Social Fact, with Timothy J. Sinclair, Review of International Political Economy, 20, no. 3 (2013), pp. 457-485. Available here.
‘The Silent Revolution:’ How the Staff Exercise Informal Governance over IMF Lending, Review of International Organizations, 8, no. 2 (2013), pp. 265-290. Available here.
How Do Crises Lead to Change?: Liberalizing Capital Controls in the Early Years of New Order Indonesia, World Politics, 62, no. 3 (2010), pp. 496-527. Available here.
Organizational Change “From Within:” Exploring the World Bank’s Early Lending Policies, Review of International Political Economy, 15, no. 4 (2008), pp. 481-505. Available here.
Normative Change “From Within:” The International Monetary Fund’s Approach to Capital Account Liberalization, International Studies Quarterly, 52, no. 1 (2008), pp. 129-158. Available here.
Neoliberal Economists and Capital Account Liberalization in Emerging Markets, International Organization, 61, no. 2 (2007), pp. 443-463. Available here.
Testing and Measuring the Role of Ideas: The Case of Neoliberalism in the International Monetary Fund, International Studies Quarterly, 51, no. 1 (2007), pp. 5-30. Available here.
Counterfactuals and the Study of the American Presidency, Presidential Studies Quarterly, 32, no. 2 (2002), pp. 293-327. Available here.
Book chapters
Managing Capital Inflows: An Exercise in Productive Power. In Power in a Changing World Economy: Lessons from East Asia, edited by Benjamin J. Cohen and Eric Chiu. (London: Routledge, 2013), pp. 69-86. Available here.
Creating Policy Stigmas in Financial Governance: The International Monetary Fund and Capital Controls. In Reforming the Governance of the Financial Sector, edited by David G. Mayes and Geoffrey Wood. (London: Routledge, 2012), pp. 187-219. Available here.
The Crisis in Global Finance: Political Economy Perspectives on International Financial Regulatory Change. In Beyond National Boundaries: Building a World without Walls, edited by Center for International Affairs. (Seoul: The Academy of Korea Press, 2011), pp. 287-370. [Korean-language edition: Seoul: The Academy of Korea Press, 2011]. Available here.
Shrinking the State: Neoliberal Economists and Social Spending in Latin America. In Constructing the International Political Economy, edited by Rawi Abdelal, Mark Blyth, and Craig Parsons. (Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 2010), pp. 23-46. Available here.
International Liquidity Provision: The IMF and the World Bank in the Treasury and Marshall Systems, 1942—1957. In Orderly Change: International Monetary Relations since Bretton Woods, edited by David Andrews (Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 2008), pp. 73-116. Available here.