Seminário Internacional: The International Politics of Economic Globalization and Emerging Market Economies

Tipo de Evento: Cursos

Data : 19 e 20 de março de 2015

Local: FEA-USP, sala da Congregação - Av. Prof. Luciano Gualberto, 908, 1ºAndar, Cidade Universitária, Butantã, São Paulo, SP, Brasil

 

Sobre o Evento:

The international conference on “The International Politics of the Globalized  Economy and  Emerging Market Countries, to be held on the 19th and 20th March 2015, at the University of São Paulo is  one of the key initiatives  undertaken by experts in international political economy, under the aegis of a cooperative scientific program between the Niehaus Center for Globalization and Government, at Princeton University, on one hand , and on the other  the University of São Paulo , represented by the Institute of International Relations - IRI, the Center for Public Policy Research – NUPPs, and the Institut of Advanced Studies - IEA. Participants are scholars from Brazil, the US and Europe, whose contribution to an essentially trans-disciplinary area  such as international political economy is widely acknowledged, including political scientists, international relations experts and economists. The Conference will focus on the transformative processes engendered by globalization and its impact in the emerging countries. The Conference aims at providing a thorough discussion about alternative frameworks to anchor a theoretically informed empirical research on the emerging market countries in the post-2008 scenario.

From this perspective, it will endeavor to provide a sounder base for the analysis of the current and prospective standing of Brazil in the international system.

 

Inscrição:

Faça sua inscrição através do link [http://goo.gl/forms/JmBbi11VbO]

 

Programação:

Clique aqui e acesse o link do banner da programação


DAY 1 – Thursday, 19th March, 2015
9:00am: Opening Session – USP and Princeton authorities

 

9:45am-10:30am – Key Note: Andrew Hurrell (Oxford University)
Global Governance: Can the Centre Hold?


Coffee break: 10:30am-10:45am


10:45am-12:45pm: Panel 1 – The Political Economy of Integration, and of International Diffusion 
Presenters

Etel Solingen (University of California Irvine): Of Dominoes and Firewalls: The Domestic, Regional, and Global Politics of International Diffusion.
Marcelo de Paiva Abreu (PUC-Rio): Autarkic obsession: a long-term view of Brazil in the world economy.
Marcos Lisboa (INSPER), João M. P. de Mello (INSPER): Was Brazil different? The
synthetic versus the real.
Nita Rudra (Georgetown University), Daniela Donno (University of Pittsburg): Are Rising Powers Changing the Shape of the World Economy?

Discussants
Emilie Hafner-Burton (University of California San Diego) and Christina Davis (Princeton University)

 

Lunch: 12:45pm-2:00pm

 

2:00pm-4:00pm: Panel 2 - Trade Liberalization and Global Production Networks
Presenters

Pedro Motta Veiga (CINDES), Sandra Rios (CINDES): The political economy of trade policy in Brazil: will it ever change?
Amâncio Jorge de Oliveira (Caeni/IRI/USP), Francisco Urdinez (Caeni/IRI/USP),
Janina Onuki (Caeni/IRI/USP): Domestic coalitions and international trade.
Layna Mosley (University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill): Labour rights and Multinational Production
Megumi Naoi (University of California San Diego): Framing Business Interests: How Campaigns  ffect Firms’ Positions on Preferential Trade Agreements.

Discussants
Stephen Chaudoin (University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaing) and Judith Goldstein (Stanford University)


Coffee break: 4:00pm-4:15pm


4:15pm-5:00pm – Keynote: Helen Milner (Princeton University)
IPE: Where do we Stand?


5:15pm-5:45pm - Brazilian Music Concert at FEA/USP: Performance of Chorinho

 

Day 2 – Friday, 20th March, 2015

9:15am-11:15am: Panel 3 - Power Transitions, State Capabilities and International Institutions in a Changing World Order
Presenters

Clodoaldo Hugueney (FGV-SP): Rebalancing and the Political Economy of Trade: a Diplomatic Perspective.
Vera Thorstensen (FGV-SP): OMC governance, and the impact of mega-trade agreements on emerging countries.
Maria Hermínia Tavares de Almeida (IRI/USP), Feliciano Sá Guimarães (IRI/USP):
Brazil’s entrepreneurial power in global and regional arenas: successes and failures in three scenarios.
Faisal Z. Ahmed (Princeton University): The Perils of International Capital.

Discussants
Robert Kaufman (Rutgers University) and Grigore Pops-Eleches (Princeton University)


Coffee Break: 11:15am-11:30am

 

11:30am-1:30pm: Panel 4 - Ideas on Trade, Monetary Policies and Global Economic Governance 
Presenters

Matthew Taylor (American University/ USP): Ideas as Non-Tariff Barriers: Trade Policy Change in Latin America, 1960-2010.
Judith Goldstein (Stanford University), Robert Gulotty (Stanford University): Back To School: The role of economic ideas in American trade policymaking.
Lourdes Sola (NUPPs/USP) and Sérgio Vale (MBA/USP): Shifting narratives of emergence: looking for the global inside the regional and the national.
Christina Davis (Princeton University): More than Just a Rich Country Club: Membership Conditionality and Institutional Reform in the OECD.

Discussants
Dan Nielson (Brigham Young University) and Ed Mansfield (University of Pennsylvania)


Lunch: 1:30pm-2:30pm


2:30pm-4:15pm: Panel 5 - Preferences Towards Redistribution, Economic Governance and Aid 
Presenters

Marcus Melo (UFPE): The politics of redistribution: the interplay of domestic and international factors in Latin America and beyond.
Nora Lustig (Tulane University): Taxes, Transfers, Inequality and the Poor in the Developing World.
Helen Milner (Princeton University), Dan Nielson (Brigham Young University),Adam Harris (New York University), Mike Findley (University of Texas, Austin): Elite and Mass Support for Foreign Aid versus Government Programs: Experimental Evidence from Uganda.
Daniela Campello (FGV-Rio): Globalization and Democracy: The Politics of Market Discipline in Latin America.
Elizabeth Balbachevsky (DCP/NUPPs/USP), Nina Ranieri (FD/NUPPs/USP): Brazil: education system, skills regime and the new democracy-driven educational regime.

Discussants
Megumi Naoi (University of California San Diego) and Stephanie Rickard (London School of Economics)


Coffee Break: 4:15pm-4:30pm


4:30pm-6:30pm: Panel 6 - The Political Economy of Energy, Environment and Climate Change 
Presenters

Eduardo Viola (IRel/UNB) and Larissa Basso (IRel/UNB): Decarbonization in large emerging economies: comparing China, India, Russia, Brazil and Mexico.
Jacques Marcovitch (USP): Financing the struggle against deforestation: Brazil and Indonesia.
José Goldemberg (USP) and Patricia Guardabassi (USP): Burden sharing in the implementation of the Climate Convention.
David Victor (University of California San Diego): Making America Relevant to International Climate Diplomacy Again.

Discussants
Xander Slaski (Princeton University) and Dustin Tingley (Harvard University).

 

Comitê Científico e Organizador

Presidente: Lourdes Sola (USP)

Amâncio Jorge de Oliveira (IRI/USP)

José Álvaro Moisés (NUPPS/USP)

Janina Onuki (IRI/USP)

Helen Milner (Princeton University)

 

Equipe Organizadora

Adriana Vargas de Castilho (IRI/USP)

Camilo Flamarion (Síntese Eventos)

Cláudia Tavares (IEA/USP)

Gabriela Rosa (Síntese Eventos)

Márcia Staaks (DCP/USP)

Nayara Alvim (Síntese Eventos)

Vera Cecília da Silva (NUPPs/USP)

Vinicius Martins (Síntese Eventos)

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