A Global Currents Lecture With:
Tony Porter, Ph.D. – Professor of Political Science and Associate Dean for Graduate Studies
and Research, Faculty of Social Sciences, McMaster University
Thursday February 27, 2014
Clark Hall, Room 309
4:30 – 6:00 p.m.
This forum is free and open to the public.
To advocates like Tom Friedman, “Globalization” is a wonderful and natural process to which people need to adjust. To some critics, it is a dangerous pattern that needs to be resisted through public authority. And to others it is a process that is not natural at all, but encouraged by public policy that serves some interests at the expense of others.
If globalization were governed, how would that work, and in whose interest? Are there, in fact, efforts to govern aspects of globalization, such as international finance or global environmental threats, now? If so, how do or can they work, in the absence of world government? Tony Porter is one of the world’s leading scholars of business regulation and global governance, especially financial regulation and processes of hybrid public/private rule-making that cross international borders. Some of his recent research has studied creation of transnational rules produced by business associations and international standard-setting bodies; the Financial Stability Board created to coordinate central banks and national financial regulators in the wake of the financial crisis; and influences on international elites from processes such as OECD peer reviews of “best practices” in national governance. Professor Porter’s newest edited volume, Transnational Financial Regulation after the Crisis (Routledge), includes a chapter by our own Professor Lavelle and will be released shortly before his visit to CWRU.
This program is made possible by the generosity of Ms. Eloise Briskin.
About Our Guest
Tony Porter conducts research on business regulation and global governance, including especially financial regulation, private and hybrid public/private rulemaking, the organizational effects in governance of technologies, and safety and environmental standards in the automobile industry. He is the author of Globalization and Finance (Polity Press, 2005), Technology, Governance and Political Conflict in International Industries, (Routledge, 2002), and States, Markets, and Regimes in Global Finance, (Macmillan, 1993). He co-edited The Challenges of Global Business Authority: Democratic Renewal, Stalemate or Decay? (SUNY Press, 2010) with Kirsten Ronit, and Private Authority in International Affairs (SUNY Press, 1999) with A. Claire Cutler and Virginia Haufler. His most recent works include a new book with Heather McKeen-Edwards, Transnational Financial Associations and the Governance of Global Finance: Assembling Wealth and Power (Routledge 2013), and an edited volume on Transnational Financial Regulation after the Crisis (Routledge, release scheduled for February 2014).