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.