(re)regulation in the wake of neoliberalism. consequences of

35
STANDING GROUP R E G U L A T O R Y G O V E R N A N C E Second Biennial Conference June 5-7 University College / Utrecht University (Re)Regulation in the Wake of Neoliberalism. Consequences of Three Decades of Privatization and Market Liberalization USG Utrecht School of Governance    Dept. of Public Administration UCU University College Utrecht ASW Department of General Social Science 1

Upload: hatuong

Post on 10-Dec-2016

219 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: (Re)Regulation in the Wake of Neoliberalism. Consequences of

STANDING GROUP 

R E G U L A T O R Y G O V E R N A N C E

Second Biennial ConferenceJune 5-7

University College / Utrecht University

(Re)Regulation in the Wake of Neoliberalism. Consequences of Three Decades of Privatization and Market Liberalization

USG Utrecht School of Governance    Dept. of Public Administration UCU University College UtrechtASW Department of General Social Science

1

Page 2: (Re)Regulation in the Wake of Neoliberalism. Consequences of

Welcome from the Local Organizer

Dear participants,

Welcome to Utrecht. We are pleased to have our historically rich city hosting the Second Biennial Conference of the ECPR Standing Group on Regulatory Governance.

Utrecht has hosted many regulators, governors, and rulers before, ever since it was founded, two millennia ago by the Romans, as Ultrajectum, a border town of the Roman Empire on the Rhine. Ruled by these Romans, one of its aims was to extend order among the unruly German tribes on the other side. Some centuries later, it became the seat of bishop Willibrord, who spread Christian doctrine from here to the Frisians in the north. Ever since, Utrecht has been the seat of the ruler of the Dutch Roman Catholic church province, the only archbishop of the country. In 1579, shortly after the protestants had raided and squatted catholic churches, seven Netherlands’ provinces united and concluded the Treaty of Utrecht, which became the de facto constitution of the Dutch Republic, which existed between 1581 and 1795. The city was not only a haven for rulers, but also for their critics, such as Descartes and Leibniz, and for deposed rulers. In a nearby castle the last German emperor passed the last 24 years of his life in solitude.

Not only ecclesiastic and worldly authorities housed in, and passed through, the city. So did goods and services. Utrecht is also an old marketplace, as a visit to the inner city will make clear. The canals - branches of the old Rhine - are bordered by warehouses below the street level. Where once foodstuffs were stored, now food is being served. But be sure, both are thoroughly regulated, now, as they were in the past in the past.

This city of governance is hence a suitable location for reflection upon regulation, deregulation, re-regulation, and responsive regulation. And where better to do that than in one of the oldest universities of the country, and its largest, Utrecht University, founded in 1636.

Old and venerable, the university has kept its innovative capacity. Within this old and large institution, a young and small one has emerged, University College, the location of our conference. This international honours college, founded in 1989 and housing and teaching 650 students, is an educational experiment, as such recognized by the Dutch Ministry of Education. As the first liberal arts and sciences college in the Netherlands it is the Dutch experiment with American style education. It is also in several other ways a first: the first residential college, and the first institution that has the right to select its students at the gate.

Now that the students are gone, the term is just over, and graduation takes place during the conference, at the theatre in the city, the location is available for our conference. We thank the college for allowing us to do use their premises, and here we would also like to gratefully acknowledge the support and assistance from a few other sponsors, the Utrecht School of Governance, the Utrecht Department of General Social Science, and the Public Administration Department of the Erasmus University in Rotterdam.

I wish you all a successful and inspiring conference and a pleasant stay in our relaxed city. I just hope that the weather will not be too Dutch.

Frans van Waarden

2

Page 3: (Re)Regulation in the Wake of Neoliberalism. Consequences of

Contents

Welcome from the Local Organizer 3Welcome from the Standing Group Convenors 5Organizing Committee 6Timetable 7Plenary speakers 8Stream overview 9Detailed panel overview 11Keynote speech by Prof. Majone 25Keynote speech by Prof. Braithwaite 27Practical Information 29List of Participants 31

3

Page 4: (Re)Regulation in the Wake of Neoliberalism. Consequences of

Welcome from the Standing Group Convenors

Welcome,

We are delighted to welcome you to the second biennial conference of the ECPR

Standing Group on Regulation at the University of Utrecht. The birth of this group goes back seven years, when we organized two small conferences, in Oxford and Barcelona, on the politics of regulation. The widespread attention that these conferences attracted was evidence of growing interest in the study of regulation and governance, in Europe as well as in other parts of the world. Gradually we came to understand and to appreciate that the study of regulation and governance is rapidly becoming a central issue in the social sciences.

We fully expect that this second Standing Group conference at the University of Utrecht will be as successful as the first one, which was held two years ago in Bath. Indeed, the large number of participants, the diversity of subjects and the quality of papers we have seen so far promise a lively intellectual exchange. We take it as yet another indication of the consolidation of the Standing Group and of the creation of a lively, strong and interdisciplinary community of scholars working on the analysis of regulatory governance. We would like to thank and acknowledge the work of the local organizing committee including Markus Haverland, Kutsal Yesilkagit, Youri Hildebrand, Moritz Knapp, Anne Poorta, Jen Boutylkova and especially the leadership and excellent work of Professor Frans van Waarden, the academic convener of the conference.

Our third biennial conference will be held at the Hebrew University in Jerusalem in June 2010. We hope to see you there again, if not before.

Jacint Jordana & David Levi-Faur

Standing Group Convenors

4

Page 5: (Re)Regulation in the Wake of Neoliberalism. Consequences of

Local Organizers

Frans van Waarden Utrecht UniversityMarkus Haverland Erasmus University RotterdamKutsal Yesilkagit Utrecht School of GovernanceYouri Hildebrand Utrecht UniversityMoritz Knapp University College UtrechtAnne Poorta University College UtrechtJen Boutylkova University College UtrechtBerend Snijders Utrecht School of Governance

Academic Steering Committee

Ian Bartle University of Bath, Britain Anthony Cheung City University Hong Kong Joergen Christensen University of Aarhus, Denmark Cary Coglianese University of Pennsylvania, USA David Coen University College London, Britain Per Laegreid University of Bergen, Norway David Levi-Faur Hebrew University, Israel Jacint Jordana Univ Pompeu Fabra, Barcelona, Spain Tony Porter McMaster University, Hamilton, Canada Claudio Radaelli University of Exeter, Britain M. Ramesh National University of Singapore Colin Scott University College Dublin, Ireland

Student Staff

Floortje BeemsterboerTeodora DimitrovaMarcin PawlowskiEelke van Well

The organizers would like to thank the conference sponsors:

USG Utrecht School of Governance    Dept. of Public Administration UCU University College UtrechtASW Department of General Social Science

5

Page 6: (Re)Regulation in the Wake of Neoliberalism. Consequences of

Timetable

Thursday

Time Program16:00­18:30 Registration18:30­19:30 Reception

Friday

Time Program08:30­09:30 Late Registration and Coffee and Tea09:30­09:40 Formal Opening09:40­10:30 Plenary Lecture: Prof. John Braithwaite10:30­11:00 Coffee and Tea11:00­12:30 Session A12:30­14:00 Lunch

     13:00­14:00 During lunch: Standing Group business meeting in Lounge, all invited

14:00­15:30 Session B15:30­16:00 Coffee, Tea, Cold drinks16:00­17:30 Session C17:30­18:00 Coffee, Tea, Cold drinks18:00­19:00 Plenary Lecture Prof. Giandomenico Majone19:00­20:00 Drinks20:00­22:00 Conference Dinner

Saturday

Time Program08:30­09:00 Coffee and Tea09:00­10:30 Session D10:30­11:00 Coffee and Tea11:00­12:30 Session E12:30­14:00 Lunch14:00­15:30 Session F15:30­16:00 Coffee, Tea, Cold drinks16:00­17:30 Session G17:30­18:00 Conference Closing

6

Page 7: (Re)Regulation in the Wake of Neoliberalism. Consequences of

Plenary Speakers

John Braithwaite

John Braithwaite is an Australian Research Council Federation Fellow and Founder of RegNet (the Regulatory Institutions Network) at the Australian National University. He is embarked upon a 20-year comparative project on Peacebuilding and Responsive Governance with Hilary Charlesworth, Valerie Braithwaite and Leah Dunn. Braithwaite’s books have won a number of prizes in the US and Europe from the Society for the Study of Social

Problems, the American Sociological Association, the Law and Society Association, the American Society of Criminology, the Socio-Legal Studies Association and most recently the Grawemeyer Award for Ideas for Improving World Order (with Peter Drahos) and the first Stockholm Prize for Criminology. He served between 1983 and 1987 as a member of the Economic Planning Advisory Council which was chaired by the Prime Minister, was a Part-time Commissioner with the Trade Practices Commission (ACCC, Australia’s national antitrust and consumer protection agency) between 1985 and 1995 and served as a member of the Council on Business Regulation (1994-1996) which reported directly to Cabinet on a review of all laws which impose a regulatory impact on business. He has been active for 40 years in social movement politics in Australia and internationally.

Giandomenico Majone

Born in 1932, is a graduate in political economy (University of Padua) and mathematics (Carnegie Institute of Technology). He took his doctorate in statistics at the University of California at Berkeley (1964). He taught at Rome University (1965-1975) and continued his research at the Russell Sage Foundation, New York (1977-1978), and the International Institute for Advanced Systems Analysis, Laxenburg, Austria (1983-1984). He has been visiting professor at the J.F. Kennedy School of

Government of Harvard University, at Yale University, at the Wissenschaftszentrum Berlin, and at the Centre for Interdisciplinary Research at the University of Bielefeld. He was Professor of Public Policy Analysis at the European University Institute (1986-1995). When he left the Institute he was nominated external professor. In addition he holds a chair as Visiting Distinguished Professor at the EU Center and Graduate School of Public and International Affairs in the University of Pittsburgh. He is the author of, among others, “Dilemmas of European Integration” (Oxford University Press, 2005) and “Regulating Europe” (Routledge, 1996).

7

Page 8: (Re)Regulation in the Wake of Neoliberalism. Consequences of

Stream Overview

Stream Panel TitlePanel

NumberGeneral Issues on Regulation I Naming and Shaming A1

General Issues on Regulation II Regulation and Politics of Standard-Setting A5

General Issues on Regulation III The Age of Public – Private Partnerships? A7

General Issues on Regulation IV Sustainable Development, Climate Change and Environmental Protection

B1

General Issues on Regulation V Privatization and Regulation: Contrasting Experiences

C1

General Issues on Regulation VI Comparing Modes of Governance C7

General Issues on Regulation VII Regulation, Enforcement, and Litigation D1

General Issues on Regulation VIII Regulatory Reform: Contrasting Experiences E1

General Issues on Regulation IX Regulation Under Pressure: Comparing Strategies For Improving The Regulatory Environment In Europe

F1

General Issues on Regulation X Regulation and Adjudication G7

Sector Regulation I Risk and Regulation: Assessing the Impact of Regulatory & Compliance Regimes on Private Sector Participants I

A2

Sector Regulation II Risk and Regulation: Assessing the Impact of Regulatory & Compliance Regimes on Private Sector Participants II

B2

Sector Regulation III Responsive governance of nanotechnologies B6

Sector Regulation IV Comparative Studies of Regulatory Reform C2

Sector Regulation V Regulation of Telecommunications I D2

Sector Regulation VI Regulation and Risk-Regimes in Food and Gambling Markets

D7

Sector Regulation VII Regulation of Telecommunications II E2

Sector Regulation VIII Regulating European Utilities F2

Sector Regulation IX Re-regulation F3

Sector Regulation X Regulatory Reform of Infrastructure Sectors G1

Sector Regulation XI Consequences of public services liberalization G2

Welfare States I Towards a Regulatory Welfare State? B3

Welfare States II Regulating Health Care I C3

Welfare States III Regulating Health Care II E3

Welfare States IV National Welfare States meet the European Union G3

8

Page 9: (Re)Regulation in the Wake of Neoliberalism. Consequences of

Regulatory Agencies I Theoretical and empirical perspectives on specialisation, coordination and collaboration (Coordination stream I)

A4

Regulatory Agencies II Regulatory governance through EU-level agencies A6

Regulatory Agencies III Analysing organisational proliferation and joining up as contradicting reforms in the welfare and other sectors (Coordination Stream II)

B4

Regulatory Agencies IV Impacts of specialisation and coordination on sector performance and on individual public (regulatory) bodies (Coordination Stream III)

C4

Regulatory Agencies V Regulation and regulators in a world without borders (roundtable)

C6

Regulatory Agencies VI EU agencies actually: between autonomy and accountability

D4

Regulatory Agencies VII Changing Perceptions of and towards Regulatory Agencies

D6

Regulatory Agencies VIII Accountability and Control of Regulatory Agencies I E4

Regulatory Agencies IX Accountability and Control of Regulatory Agencies II F4

Regulatory Agencies X Accountability and Control of Regulatory Agencies III G4

International Regulation I Regulation and the international political economy B5

International Regulation II The international regulation of services C5

International Regulation III Private and transnational regulatory governance D5

International Regulation IV Regulating Europe E5

International Regulation V The Marketisation of Economic Policies in Europe and Beyond - A Critical Encounter

E6

International Regulation VI Global Governance E7

International Regulation VII Regulation and Global Value Chains: A Neo-liberal Productive Order?

F5

International Regulation VIII The Transnational Dimensions of Regulation and Neoliberalism

G5

9

Page 10: (Re)Regulation in the Wake of Neoliberalism. Consequences of

Detailed Programme

Friday, June 6: 11.00-12.30 Session A

A1: General Issues on Regulation I: Naming and ShamingRoom 1Chair: Albert Meijer, Judith van Erp and Mirjam Oude Vrielink1. Regulating Money Laundering and Terrorist Financing: The Role of BlacklistingBrigitte Unger & Joras FerwerdaUtrecht School of Economics2. Transparency as a Form of Naming and Shaming?Albert MeijerUtrecht School of Governance3. Effects of Disclosure in Financial RegulationJudith van ErpErasmus University Rotterdam4. How ‘Naming and Shaming’ can help Electricity RegulatorsRajesh KumarCUTS International

A2: Sector Regulation I: Risk and Regulation: Assessing the Impact of Regulatory & Compliance Regimes on Private Sector Participants IRoom 2Chair: Trudie Knijn1. The mining sector in Indonesia and the Philippines: Regulatory Risks and Regulatory CostsDarryl S.L.Jarvis, Terry F. O’Callaghan & Vlado Vivoda NU Singapore / University of South Australia2. Private Pensions in Southeast AsiaMukul AsherNU Singapore3. Private Health Care in ThailandM. RameshNU Singapore

A4: Regulatory Agencies I: Theoretical and empirical perspectives on specialisation, coordination and collaboration (Coordination stream I)Room 4Chair: Paul Roness and Julia Fleischer1. The Impact of Horizontal Coordination in AustraliaJohn HalliganUniversity of Canberra2. Between self-organisation and government: a complexity perspective on the rise and fall of the hierarchical stateFrank Boons & Lasse GerritsErasmus University Rotterdam3. Multi-level regulatory governance in liberalised infrastructure sectors: on the way to the transgovernmental stateUte HartenbergerTU Munich4. Specialization and coordination of regulatory bodiesJan Rommel & Koen VerhoestKatholieke Universiteit Leuven

10

Page 11: (Re)Regulation in the Wake of Neoliberalism. Consequences of

A5: General Issues on Regulation II: Regulation and Politics of Standard-SettingRoom 5Chair: Bärbel Dorbeck-Jung1. Regulating privacy across the Atlantic: Of pyrrhic victories, arena switching, and their effects on policyAndreas BuschUniversity of Oxford2. Escaping Rules in a World of StandardsSusanna AlexiusStockholm School of Economics3. Regulating Urban Land Market: Renewed Policy Tools and Governance Changes. The Case of BrusselsSébastien PradellaFUCaM – Sciences Po Paris

A6: Regulatory Agencies II: Regulatory governance through EU-level agenciesRoom 6Chair: Martijn Groenleer, Michael Kaeding and Esther Versluis1. Analysing the discourse of a “regulatory” agency in contrast to a “monitoring” and a “cooperation” agency: the meaning and effects of the three agency models on the EU systemVicky TrigaCentre for Research on Direct Democracy (c2d) - Centre of Democracy Aarau (ZDA) - University of Zurich2. Beyond regulation: Joint Technical Secretariats as institutionalized actors in regional policy implementationPaul StephensonMaastricht University3. From networks to agencies? Evaluating the proposed creation of a European Electronic Communications Market AuthorityMartijn Groenleer & Mirjam KarsDelft University of Technology4. The role of EU-level agencies in the implementation of transport directivesMartijn Groenleer & Michael Kaeding & Esther VersluisDelft University of Technology

A7: General Issues on Regulation III: The Age of Public – Private Partnerships?Room 7Chair: Carsten Greven and Graeme Hodge1. The Intellectual History of the PPP MovementTony BovairdUniversity of Birmingham2. Regulating PPPsCarsten Greve & Graeme HodgeCopenhagen Business School / Monash University 3. Evaluating the experience and broader implications of PPPs in transportJean ShaoulManchester Business School

11

Page 12: (Re)Regulation in the Wake of Neoliberalism. Consequences of

Friday, 6 June: 14.00-15.30Session B

B1: General Issues on Regulation IV: Sustainable Development, Climate Change and Environmental ProtectionRoom 1Chair: Werner Raza1. The Role of the State: A Contracting PerspectiveAvner OfferUniversity of Oxford2. On neo-liberal policy and the public-regulatory domainKees van Paridon & Shivant JhagroeErasmus University Rotterdam3. Environmental Performance through Information Regulation & Market-Based Instruments: The Influence of Amendments to Israeli Securities Law (2004)Dorit Kerret, Gila Manahem & Rinat SagiTel-Aviv University

B2: Sector Regulation II: Risk and Regulation: Assessing the Impact of Regulatory & Compliance Regimes on Private Sector Participants IIRoom 2Chair: Ian Bartle1. Regulating Private Monopolies under Concession Contracts: A Case Study of Water Privatization in ManilaWu Xun, Nepomuceno A. Malaluan & Jude EsguerraNU Singapore2. The Evolution of Regulatory Institutions in China: A Framework for AnalysisEd AraralNU Singapore

B3: Welfare States I: Towards a Regulatory Welfare State?Room 3Chair: Ute Behning1. Old and new regulatory states in social policy Deborah MabbettBirkbeck, University of London2. Regulating private welfare: The causes and consequences of failures in the provision of private welfareMirjam Plantinga & Alex CorraUniversity of Groningen3. The end of social security as we know it: Welfare markets and consumer competence in GermanyWolfram LampingUniversity of Hannover

12

Page 13: (Re)Regulation in the Wake of Neoliberalism. Consequences of

B4: Regulatory Agencies III: Analysing organisational proliferation and joining up as contradicting reforms in the welfare and other sectors (Coordination Stream II)Room 4Chair: Tom Christensen1. Specialisation and coordination of regulatory and other public bodies: Joining-up in a multi-actor and multi-level setting? Coordination, integration and contestability: competing or complementary organisational restructuring in the delivery of UK welfare under New LabourJay WigganQueen’s University Belfast2. Path breaking, path shifting, and path dependence: The new German regime of ‘Basic Income Support for Jobseekers’ and the struggle between centralisation and devolutionMatthias KnuthInstitut Arbeit und Qualifikation, Universität Duisburg-Essen3. Norwegian reform of Welfare State administrationJostein Askim, Tom Christensen, Anne Lise Fimreite & Per LægreidUniversity of Bergen / University of Oslo

B5: International Regulation I: Regulation and the international political economyRoom 5Chair: Tony Porter1. Jeopardised dynamics of global value chain structures by new forms of governance Yari Borbon-GalvezUniversity of Sussex2. Democratic Deficit Of Transnational Governance: Insights From The Private Regulation Of Labour Market In TurkeyTugce BulutUniversity of Cambridge

B6: Sector Regulation III: Responsive governance of nanotechnologies Room 6 Chair: to be announced1. Reflexive de facto governance of nanotechnologies: An attempt at responsible innovation Arie RipUniversity of Twente2. Can co-regulation bridge the gap between nanotechnological promotion and control? Bärbel Dorbeck-JungUniversity of Twente3. Counting on Codes: An Examination of Transnational Nano-Codes as a Regulatory Governance Mechanism Diana Bowman & Graeme HodgeMonash University4. Convergence and Consensus: National Regulation of NT and Prospects for Harmonization Kenneth Abbott, Gary Marchant & Douglas SylvesterArizona State University

B7: Author Meets Critics I: Discussion of Giandomenico Majone’s book “Dilemmas of European Integration - The Ambiguities and Pitfalls of Integration by Stealth” (2005, Oxford University Press)Room 7Chair: Markus Haverland1. Wim Voermans (Discussant)

13

Page 14: (Re)Regulation in the Wake of Neoliberalism. Consequences of

2. Claudio Radaelli (Discussant)

3. John Braithwaite (Discussant)

Friday, 6 June: 16.00-17.30Session C

C1: General Issues on Regulation V: Privatization and Regulation: Contrasting ExperiencesRoom 1Chair: Jacint Jordana1. Temporal DisjunctionUmit SonmezLondon School of Economics and Political Science2. Empirical Study on the Performance of State-owned-enterprises and the Privatizing PressureJunki Kim & Hongkyou ChungSeoul National University3. The Political Economy of Re-privatization in Latin AmericaLuigi ManzettiSouthern Methodist University

C2: Sector Regulation IV: Comparative Studies of Regulatory ReformRoom 2Chair: Tetty Havinga1. Building new regulatory regimes. Enforcing building regulations in Australia and Canada Jeroen van der HeijdenDelft University of Technology2. Regulatory reform in broadcasting: cultural exception or race to the bottom Rob NichollsUniversity of New South Wales3. Banking Sector Liberalization and Reform in the Post-Communist Region after 1989: The Impact of Domestic Politics, International Conditionality, and Economic Development Aneta SpendzharovaInstitute for Advanced Studies - Vienna

C3: Welfare States II: Regulating Health Care IRoom 3Chair: Pauline Rosenau1. Coordination of the Portuguese Health Service: Property rights and the organization of health activity by the StateMaria Asensio MencheroInstituto Nacional de Administração2. New hospital payment systems in the Netherlands, Germany and the United Kingdom: comparing medical strategy in different institutional settingsAnne Marije van EssenVrije Universiteit Amsterdam3. The reform of the health systems is an ever-present theme in all OECD countries.Ana Paula de Jesus HarfoucheInstituto Portugues Oncologia Lisboa Francisco Gentil E.P.E.4. Regulating social professionalsTrudie KnijnUniversiteit UtrechtC4: Regulatory Agencies IV: Impacts of specialisation and coordination on sector performance and on individual public (regulatory) bodies (Coordination Stream III)Room 4Chair: David Aubin and Jan Rommel1. The dynamics of Networks in Regulatory Space: Liberalisation and regulation of telecommunications in EgyptAhmed BadranUniversity of Exeter

14

Page 15: (Re)Regulation in the Wake of Neoliberalism. Consequences of

2. Linkage strategies in water managementSimone HanegraaffUniversity of Twente3. Strategic Behaviour of Utility SuppliersDavid AubinUniversité Catholique de Louvain4. The agency landscape in HungaryGyörgy Hajnal & Krisztián Kadar

C5: International Regulation II: The international regulation of servicesRoom 5Chair: Brigitte Unger1. Re-regulation following the financial crisis of 2008Shawn DonnellyUniversity of Twente2. Services Liberalization in the WTO: Implications for Public Services in EuropeWerner RazaArbeitskammer Wien (Chamber of Labour of Vienna)

C6: Regulatory Agencies V: Regulation and regulators in a world without borders (Roundtable discussion)Room 6Chair: Willemijn Dicke and Cor van Montfort1. Critical aspect of market supervision.Freek HoekNetherlands Court of Audit2. paper about regime change in the infrastructureWillemijn Dicke & Leigh HancherScientific Council for Government Policy3. Representative democracy and Governance. A critical analysis of public accountability and legitimacy in hybrid policy networksTom WillemsUniversity of Antwerp4. Are infrastructure sectors under public scrutiny better off? Evidence from the Dutch railway infrastructure sector.Rudi BekkersDialogic & Technische Universiteit Eindhoven

C7: General Issues on Regulation VI: Comparing Modes of GovernanceRoom 7Chair: Kutsal Yesilkagit1. Risk-based regulation and better regulation in the UK: towards what model of risk regulation?Ian BartleUniversity of Bath

15

Page 16: (Re)Regulation in the Wake of Neoliberalism. Consequences of

2. Corporate Social Responsibility as the Spontaneous Emergence of Regulatory SpaceMichael W. DowdleSciences Po3. An Institutional Benchmark of Enforcement Mechanisms for Certification InitiativesAxel MarxKatholieke Universiteit Leuven

Saturday, 7 June: 09.00-10.30Session D

D1: General Issues on Regulation VII: Regulation, Enforcement, and LitigationRoom 1Chair: Jen Boutylkova1. State Prosecutors in the United States: Regulatory Reformers?Colin ProvostUniversity College London2. Stitching it Together: How Prosecutors Produce Compliance and Promote Economic Growth in BrazilSalo CoslovskyMassachusetts Institute of Technology3. The Sociological Citizen: Recognizing Relational Interdependence in Law and Organizations Susan Silbey, Ruthanne Huising & Salo Coslovsky Massachusetts Institute of Technology

D2: Sector Regulation V: Regulation of Telecommunications IRoom 2Chair: Youri Hildebrand1. Pervasiveness and Efficacy in Regulatory Governance: Neo-Liberalism as Ideology and Practice in European Telecommunication Reorganisation Seamus SimpsonManchester Metropolitan University2. Between a clumsy intervening state and an unshaped neo-liberalism: The telecommunication sector in Greece Panagiotis Karkatsoulis & Efrossyni Stefopoulou Hellenic Ministry of the Interior3. Regulation by the Party-State: Governing the Business of China’s Telecom Services Yukyung YeoCity University of Hong Kong

D4: Regulatory Agencies VI: EU agencies actually: between autonomy and accountability.Room 4Chair: Elena Madalina Busuioc and Martijn Groenleer1. Bureaucratic Autonomy and the Emergent European Executive Order Jarle TrondalUniversity of Agder and ARENA2. Balancing voice and loyalty: The evolution of the European Environmental Agency Maria MartensARENA, Centre for European Studies3. Watchdogs or pussy cats? How parliaments hold agencies accountable at EU and national levelTobias Bach & Julia FleischerUniversity of Potsdam

16

Page 17: (Re)Regulation in the Wake of Neoliberalism. Consequences of

4. Wielders of Supranational Power? The Administrative Behaviour of the Heads of European Union Agencies Elena Madalina Busuioc & Martijn GroenleerUtrecht School of Governance / Delft University of Technology

D5: International Regulation III: Private and transnational regulatory governanceRoom 5Chair: Colin Scott1. Three Puzzles of Private Governance: Global GAP and the Regulation of Food Safety & QualityDonal CaseyUniversity College Dublin2. Between Idealism and Machiavellianism: Transnational and Constitutional Challenges in the Regulation of Child Labour and Fair TradeMartin DumasLondon School of Economics and Political Science3. The Emergence of Hybridized Global Governance: Explanations and ImplicationsJonathan KoppellYale School of Management

D6: Regulatory Agencies VII: Changing Perceptions of and towards Regulatory AgenciesRoom 6Chair: Per Lagreid1. Can social regulation survive: re-regulation in the broadcast sectorLiora SalterOsgoode Hall Law School York University2. The new regulation curriculum? – skills based regulation?John BradyAnglia Ruskin University

D7: Sector Regulation VI: Regulation and Risk-Regimes in Food and Gambling MarketsRoom 7Chair: Frans van Waarden1. Varieties of Regulatory Capitalism: A Comparative Study of the Global Governance of Telecoms and Food-SafetyDavid Lévi-FaurHebrew University of Jerusalem2. Regulating halal and kosher food: different arrangements between state, industry and religious actors Tetty HavingaRadboud University Nijmegen3. Bringing the State Back In? New Food Safety Regimes in Germany, Great Britain and the Netherlands Frank JanningUniversity of Konstanz4. The liberalization and (re)regulation of Dutch gambling markets: national consequences of the changing European context. Sytze F. KingmaVrije Universiteit Amsterdam

Saturday, 7 June: 11.00-12.30Session E

E1: General Issues on Regulation VIII: Regulatory Reform: Contrasting ExperiencesRoom 1Chair: Esther Versluis1. Regulatory reform in Brazil: an institutional analysis Alketa PeciBrazilian School of Public and Business Administration2. Reviewing public–private partnerships in Australia: the case for uniform national guidelines Richard Grant

17

Page 18: (Re)Regulation in the Wake of Neoliberalism. Consequences of

Senate Economics Committee, Parliament of Australia

3. Patent Reforms in the U.S. and the EUAnnika Phillipps Freie Universität Berlin

E2: Sector Regulation VII: Regulation of Telecommunications IIRoom 2Chair: to be announced1. Global regulatory reform in telecommunications - the importance of IOs Kirsten Rodine-HardyNortheastern University2. Strategic Behaviour of Utility Suppliers in a Multilevel Regulatory Environment: An Analytical Framework David AubinUniversité Catholique de Louvain

E3: Welfare States III: Regulating Health Care IIRoom 3Chair: Trudie Knijn1. The Role of Regulation in New, Private Health Insurance MarketsPauline RosenauUniversity of Texas – Houston School of Public Health2. Introducing performance measurement in the Dutch health care sector: joining up in a multi-actor self-regulatory systemHaiko van der VoortDelft University of Technology3. USF: A Collaborative Approach in Primary Health CareLuis LapãoInstituto Nacional de Administração

E4: Regulatory Agencies VIII: Accountability and Control of Regulatory Agencies 1Room 4Chair: Gül Sosay1. The ‘stange case’ of privatisation: an organizational accountability perspectiveKoen BartelsLeiden University2. The Nationaler Normenkontrollrat in Germany: How to control the regulators?Bastian JantzUniversity of Potsdam

E5: International Regulation IV: Regulating EuropeRoom 5Chair: Markus Haverland1. The politics of product placement in the European Union: Between commercial pressures and social considerationsAvshalom Ginosar & David Lévi-FaurEmek Yezreel Academic College / Hebrew University of Jerusalem2. Side-effects of enhanced impact assessment in the EU: Lobby groups as ‘co-legislators’ and Member States as ‘stakeholders’?Anne MeuweseUniversity of Antwerp3. How bureaucratic elites imagine Europe: evidence from regulation and tax policy Claudio Radaelli & Karl O’ConnorUniversity of Exeter Centre for Regulatory Governance

18

Page 19: (Re)Regulation in the Wake of Neoliberalism. Consequences of

4. Regulatory Inversion: Comparing Chemical Health and Safety Testing in the United States and the European UnionArthur DaemmrichHarvard Business School

E6: International Regulation V: The Marketisation of Economic Policies in Europe and Beyond - A Critical EncounterRoom 6Chair: Angela Wigger1. Corporate Governance Regulation in the EU – Towards A Marketisation of Corporate ControlLaura HornVrije Universiteit Amsterdam2. The Regional Dimension in Regulating Financial Markets: Is The EU Leading the Way?Jasper BlomUniversity of Amsterdam3. Revisiting 50 Years of Market Making: The Neoliberal Transformation of EC/EU Competition PolicyHubert Buch-Hansen & Angela WiggerRadboud University Nijmegen

E7: International Regulation VI: Global GovernanceRoom 7Chair: Andreas Nölke1. Private Standard Setting In International Economic RegulationJan Wouters, Axel Marx & Nicolas HachezKatholieke Universiteit Leuven 2. Domestic Liberalization as Global Regulation: the Cases of Fuel Economy and Online Gambling RegulationsJohn MiklerUniversity of Sydney

19

Page 20: (Re)Regulation in the Wake of Neoliberalism. Consequences of

Saturday, 7 June: 14.00-15.30Session F

F1: General Issues on Regulation IX: Regulation Under Pressure: Comparing Strategies For Improving The Regulatory Environment In EuropeRoom 1Chair: Wim Voermans1. Search and destroy: combating red tape in the NetherlandsWim VoermansLeiden University2. Hard questions, and equally hard solutions? Explaining the choice for proceduralization through Better Regulation in the European Union Claudio Radaelli & Anne MeuweseUniversity of Exeter / University of Antwerp3. How do independent regulatory agencies use evidence in policy-making?Lorna SchreflerUniversity of Exeter

F2: Sector Regulation VIII: Regulating European UtilitiesRoom 2Chair: Jacint Jordana1. Adaptability of competitive electricity reforms: A modular analysis Ute DuboisUniversité Paris-Sud2. Public service law under the EU influence: Legal hybrids between old and new forms of regulation Bojan BugaričUniversity of Ljubljana3. Regulation for competition in European gas markets: the impact of European law and facilitating factors Nadine HaaseUniversity of Twente

F3: Sector Regulation IX: Re-regulationRoom 3Chair: Mirjam Kars & Mark De Bruijne1. Enhancing Vogel’s freer markets, more rules paradox Mirjam Kars & Mark De BruijneDelft University of Technology2. Regulatory reform in the Australian heavy vehicle sector. A triumph for Neoliberalism or re-regulation through accreditation? Christopher WalkerUniversity of New South Wales3. Green Energy Tariffs in the UK's Liberalised Household Electricity Market: Model or Muddle?Ivan Diaz-RaineyUniversity of East Anglia 4. Title to be announcedAad Correljé Delft University of Technology

F4: Regulatory Agencies IX: Accountability and Control of Regulatory Agencies 2Room 4Chair: Anne Poorta

20

Page 21: (Re)Regulation in the Wake of Neoliberalism. Consequences of

1. Informal (De facto) Independence and Accountability of Regulatory Agencies: Economic Sector Agencies in TurkeyGül Sosay & E. Ünal ZenginobuzBoğaziçi University2. In What Kind Of State Do We Live? How Modes Of Decentralization Affect Administrative ResponsibilityDuco Bannink & Ringo OssewaardeUniversity of Twente3. Autonomy and Accountability of Emerging Independent Regulatory Institutions in India: Case of Water and Electricity Regulation in the Indian State of MaharashtraSubodh M. WagleTata Institute of Social Sciences, Mumbai

F5: International Regulation VII: Regulation and Global Value Chains: A Neo-liberal Productive Order? Room 5Chair: Luc Fransen and James Perry 1. Private labour regulation in global value chains: a manifestation of or a challenge to neo-liberal governance? Luc FransenUniversity of Amsterdam2. The Effects of Multi-stakeholder Initiatives: a Case Study Exploring the effectiveness of the ILO Better Factories Cambodia Project Thorsten GöbelTuebingen University3. The Rise of Multinational Firms from the South: Towards less Neoliberal, more Mercantilist Global Governance? Andreas NölkeJohann Wolfgang Goethe University4. Value Chains or Price Chains? James Perry Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam

F7: Author meets critics II: Dicussion of John Braithwaite’s book “Regulatory Capitalism: How It Works, Ideas for Making It Work Better” (2008, Edward Elgar)Room 7Chair: Kutsal Yesilkagit1. Colin Scott (Discussant)

2. David Lévi-Faur (Discussant)

3. Frans van Waarden (Discussant)

Saturday, 7 June: 16.00-17.30Session G

G1: Sector Regulation X: Regulatory Reform of Infrastructure SectorsRoom 1Chair: to be announced1. Electricity Reforms in Korea Kyuhyun Kim & Junki KimGraduate School of Public Administration, Seoul National University2. Should sector regulators deal with standardization issues? Evidence from the railway sectorMarc Laperrouza & Matthias FingerEPFL (Swiss Federal Institute of Technology)

G2: Sector Regulation XI: Consequences of public services liberalizationRoom 2Chair: to be announced

21

Page 22: (Re)Regulation in the Wake of Neoliberalism. Consequences of

1. Productivity: The impact of Privatisation and Liberalisation in Public Services Yilmaz Kilicaslan, Richard Pond & Ali Cevat TasiranAnadolu University & London Metropolitan University2. Regulatory Institutions and Governance Costs in the Postal Sector: The Case of Switzerland Martin Maegli & Christian JaagEcole Polytechnique Fédéral Lausanne & Swiss Post3. Privatisation and New South Wales Prisons: ‘Value for Money’ and Neo-liberal Regulation Damien Cahill & Jane AndrewUniversity of Sydney

G3: Welfare States IV: National Welfare States meet the European UnionRoom 3Chair: Andreas Busch1. Welfare (Re-) Regulation in the European Union; Politics Still Withdrawn? Dorte Sindbjerg MartinsenUniversity of Copenhagen2. The Governance of Supplementary Pensions in Germany: Changing Pension Mix and Coordinated Market Economy Tobias WißMannheim Center for European Social Research (MZES), University of Mannheim3. Unintended De-Regulation of Labour Markets: Explanations of Pitfalls for Political Actors Ute BehningInstitute for European Welfare System Research

G4: Regulatory Agencies X: Accountability and Control of Regulatory Agencies 3Room 4Chair: Kutsal Yesilkagit1. The Reputation of Independent Regulatory Agencies Martino MaggettiUniversity of Lausanne & University of Exeter2. Venues of Influence and Regulatory Agencies Kutsal Yesilkagit & Sandra van ThielUSBO, Utrecht University3. Public Management Reforms And New Forms Of The Institutional Design And Implementation Of New Regulatory Agencies In The Mexican CaseJorge E. Culebro Moreno Metropolitan Autonomous University, Mexico

G5: International Regulation VIII: The Transnational Dimensions of Regulation and NeoliberalismRoom 5Chair: Tony Porter1. Transatlantic Regulatory Cooperation on Accounting Standards: How Private Governance Fosters NeoliberalismAndreas NölkeJohann Wolfgang Goethe University2. Varieties of Transnational (Re)RegulationTony PorterMcMaster University

G7: General Issues on Regulation X: Regulation and AdjudicationRoom 7Chair: David Levi-Faur1. The Rise of the Adjudicatory StateColin ScottUniversity College Dublin2. Labelling complainants in a complaint handling bureaucracy

22

Page 23: (Re)Regulation in the Wake of Neoliberalism. Consequences of

Sharon GiladKing’s College London 3. Do Economists Cause Juridification?Frans van WaardenUtrecht University

23

Page 24: (Re)Regulation in the Wake of Neoliberalism. Consequences of

Keynote Speech by Prof. Giandomenico Majone

LIBERALIZATION, RE-REGULATION, AND MUTUAL RECOGNITION: LESSONS FROM THREE DECADES OF EU EXPERIENCE

Giandomenico MajoneEuropean University Institute

Key topics:

• How Neo-liberal is the EU?• Regional Liberalism and the Perils of Eurocentricity• Re-regulation and Harmonization• Social Dumping, Race to the Bottom, and Social Harmonization• The Theory and Practice of Mutual Recognition• Mutual Recognition After the Recent Enlargements of the EU• Back to Negative Integration?• Regulations as “Club Goods”

Prof. Majone’s speech will be available in printed form after the lecture.

24

Page 25: (Re)Regulation in the Wake of Neoliberalism. Consequences of

25

Page 26: (Re)Regulation in the Wake of Neoliberalism. Consequences of

Keynote Speech by Prof. John Braithwaite

THE HISTORY OF REGULATION AROUND THE GLOBE

John BraithwaiteAustralian National University

Market liberalization has certainly been part of the history of both the last three decades as in the title of our conference, but also of the last three centuries. More vibrant markets in goods come with more vibrant markets in bads. While vibrant markets in goods and services have delivered prosperity and peace to a more interconnected Europe and a more interconnected world, and therefore legitimacy for elites, more vibrant markets in bads engender legitimation crises. These are often responded to by regulation that seeks to control the bads (however bads are politically defined). Regulatory capitalist legitimation crises tend to be cyclical. Each crisis cycle tends to ratchet regulation up a notch. During the lulls between crises, attempts are made to deregulate and to innovate into smarter regulatory technologies that temper the economic costs of the regulatory ratchet. Key themes:

• Liberalization in Holland and England compared to Spain, Portugal and France (Acemoglu, Daron, Simon Johnson and James Robinson 2004 Institutions as the Fundamental Cause of Long-Run Growth (Cambridge: National Bureau of Economic Research, Working Paper No 10481, 2004), 66–70).

• Liberalization and colonialism – liberal white settler colonialism with ethnic cleansing in poor colonies, monopolistic extractive institutions in rich colonies

• Regulation and the corporatization of the world

• The welfare state and regulatory capitalism (Levi-Faur and Jordana)

• Privatizing the public and publicizing the private

• How to flip markets in vice to markets in virtue

• Why the crises of regulatory capitalism are cyclical

• Is a regulatory capitalism, where markets are stronger and regulation stronger, a good thing? Scholarship on improving versus scholarship on understanding regulatory capitalism.

26

Page 27: (Re)Regulation in the Wake of Neoliberalism. Consequences of

27

Page 28: (Re)Regulation in the Wake of Neoliberalism. Consequences of

Practical Information:

We would like to refer you to the Cityguide Utrecht 2008 for all information on the city of Utrecht, a map of the city, entertainment and tourist attractions. Below you will find traveling details to and from the conference location.

Getting to University College Utrecht Campus (Conference Location)

From the Utrecht Centraal-Railwaystation:Take bus (line 4, direction Fockema Andrealaan). Exit at the Prins Hendriklaan bus stop, follow the Prins Hendriklaan (streetname) in the direction of the underpass,* shortly after which you will see the entrance to the University College campus on your right. From the City Centre: You can get on the bus (line 4, direction Fockema Andrealaan) at the bus stops Neude, Janskerkhof or Stadsschouwburg. Follow directions above.

NOTE: Guests staying at NH Utrecht Hotel or Park Plaza Hotel should walk to the railway station and take the bus from there. Guests staying around the city centre can get on the bus at Neude or Janskerkhof.

* TOURISTIC NOTE: Right before the underpass on the left side of the road you will find the Rietveld-Schröder house, a famous architectural work from 1924 placed on the World Heritage List by UNESCO in 2000 as ‘an important and unique icon in Western architectural history and a masterpiece of human creativity.’

Below you will find a map of the Campus and its surroundings. Please note that the only entrance to the Campus is from the Prins Hendriklaan.

Restaurants

28

Page 29: (Re)Regulation in the Wake of Neoliberalism. Consequences of

In the vicinity of the campus we would recommend the following restaurants: Parkcafé Buiten: Prins Hendriklaan 2Walk along the Prins Hendriklaan, crossing a few streets until the Wilhelmina Park; Parkcafé will be on the corner on your right. Café/Restaurant Vroom: Jan van Scorelstraat 33Walk along the Prins Hendriklaan until the traffic lights; Vroom will be on the corner on your left on the other side of the street. Julii: Jan van Scorelstraat 21 Cross the street at the traffic lights and turn to the right, Julii will be a few steps away.

In the city centre a wide range of restaurants are available. We advise you to walk along and around the Oude Gracht (the main canal flowing through the centre, see the map in the city-guide of Utrecht) to find a restaurant of your choice.

Use of Internet at University College

On the first floor of the conference venue building, there is the possibility to access the internet on any of the computers. Please use the following login-in information: Username: ucustu1Password: lostandfound

Phone to Conference Staff:

The conference staff can be reached at the following phone number:

From the Netherlands: 06-57095082From abroad: +31-6-57095082

29

Page 30: (Re)Regulation in the Wake of Neoliberalism. Consequences of

List of Participants

Name Institution Email Session

Abbott, Ken Arizona State University [email protected] B6Alexius, Susanna Stockholm School of

[email protected] A5

Altenstetter, Christa The City University of New York

[email protected]

Andrew, Jane G2Araral, Ed National University of

SingaporeB2

Asensio Menchero, Maria Instituto Nacional de Administração

[email protected] C3

Asher, Mukul National University of Singapore

A2

Askim, Jostein University of Oslo [email protected] B6Aubin, David Université Catholique de

[email protected] C4/E2

Bach, Tobias University of Potsdam [email protected] D4Badran, Ahmed University of Exeter [email protected] C4Bannink, Duco University of Twente [email protected] F4Bartels, Koen Leiden University [email protected] E4Bartle, Ian University of Bath [email protected] B7Behning, Ute Institute for European

Welfare System Research

[email protected] B3/G3

Bekkers, Rudi Technische Universiteit Eindhoven

[email protected] C6

Blom, Jasper University of Amsterdam [email protected] E6Boons, Frank Erasmus University

[email protected] A4

Borbon-Galvez, Yari B5Bovaird, Tony University of Birmingham A7Boutylkova, Jen Utrecht University [email protected] D1Bowman, Diana Monash University [email protected]

du.auB6

Brady, John Anglia Ruskin University [email protected] D6Braithwaite, John Australian National

[email protected] Lecture

B7/F7Bruijne, Mark de Delft University of

[email protected] F3

Buch-Hansen, Hubert Copenhagen Business School

E6

Bugaric, Bojan University of Ljubljana [email protected] F2Bulut, Tugce University of Cambridge [email protected] D3Busch, Andreas University of Oxford [email protected]

kA5/G3

Busuioc, Elena Madalina Utrecht School of Governance

[email protected] D4

Cahill, Damien University of Sydney [email protected] G2Casey, Donal UC Dublin [email protected] D5Choi, Junghoon Jacobs University

[email protected]

Christensen, Tom University of Oslo [email protected] B4Chung, Hongkyou Seoul National University [email protected] C1Corra, Alex Rijksuniversiteit

[email protected] B3

Correlje, Aad Delft University of Technology

[email protected] F3

30

Page 31: (Re)Regulation in the Wake of Neoliberalism. Consequences of

Coslovsky, Salo Massachusetts Institute of Technology

[email protected] D1

Culebro Moreno, Jorge E. Metropolitan Autonomous University

[email protected] G4

Daemmrich, Arthur Harvard Business School [email protected] E5Diaz-Rainey, Ivan University of East Anglia [email protected] F3Dicke, Willemijn Scientific Council for

Government [email protected] C6

Donnelly, Shawn University of Twente [email protected] C5Dorbeck-Jung, Bärbel University of Twente [email protected] A5/B6Dowdle, Michael W. Sciences Po michael.dowdle@sciences-

po.orgC7

Dubois, Ute Université Paris-Sud [email protected] F2Dumas, P. Martin London School of

Economics and Political Science

[email protected] D5

Erp, Judith van Erasmus University Rotterdam

[email protected] A1

Esguerra, Jude B2Essen, Anne Marije van Vrije Universiteit

Amsterdam [email protected] C3

Etling, Andreas Universitaet Bremen [email protected]

Ferwerda, Joras Utrecht University [email protected] A1Fimreite, Anne Lise University of Bergen [email protected] B4Finger, Matthias EPFL (Swiss Federal

Institute of Technology)[email protected] G1

Fitzpatrick, Daniel University of Sheffield [email protected], Julia University of Potsdam [email protected] A4Fransen, Luc University of Amsterdam [email protected] F5Gerrits, Lasse Erasmus University

[email protected] A4

Gilad, Sharon King’s College London [email protected] G7Ginosar, Avshalom Emek Yezreel Academic

[email protected] E5

Göbel, Thorsten Tuebingen University [email protected]

F5

Grant, Richard Senate Economics Committee, Parliament of Australia

[email protected] E1

Greve, Carsten Copenhagen Business School

[email protected] A7

Groenleer, Martijn Delft University of Technology

[email protected] A6/D4

Haase, Nadine University of Twente [email protected] F2Hachez, Nicolas Katholieke Universiteit

LeuvenE7

Hajnal, György ECOSTAT [email protected] C4Hancher, Leigh Scientific council for

government policyC6

Hanegraaff, Simone University of Twente C4Harfouche, Ana Paula de Jesus

Instituto Portugues Oncologia Lisboa Francisco Gentil E.P.E.

[email protected]

C3

Hartenberger, Ute TU Munich [email protected] A4Haverland, Markus Erasmus University

[email protected] B7/E5

Havinga, Tetty Radboud University Nijmegen

[email protected] D7

Heijden, Jeroen van der Delft University of Technology

[email protected] C2

31

Page 32: (Re)Regulation in the Wake of Neoliberalism. Consequences of

Hildebrand, Youri Utrecht University [email protected] D2/G7Hodge, Graeme Monash University [email protected]

u.uaA7/B6

Hoek, Freek National Court of Audit C6Horn, Laura Vrije Universiteit

[email protected] E6

Huising, Ruthanne M.I.T. D1Jaag, Christian University of St. Gallen G2Janning, Frank University of Konstanz Frank.Janning@uni-

konstanz.deD7

Jantz, Bastian Universität Potsdam [email protected] E4Jarvis, Darryl National University of

[email protected] A2

Jhagroe,Shivant Erasmus University Rotterdam

[email protected] B1

Jordana, Jacint Universidad Pompeu Fabra, Barcelona

[email protected] C1/F2

Kádár, Krisztián Prime Minister's Office Hungary

[email protected] C4

Kaeding, Michael European Institute of Public Administration

[email protected] A6

Karkatsoulis, Panagiotis Hellenic Ministry of the Interior

[email protected]

D2

Kars, Mirjam Delft University of Technology

[email protected] A6/F3

Kerret, Dorit Tel-Aviv University [email protected] B1Kilicaslan, Yilmaz Anadolu University and

London Metropolitan University

[email protected] G2

Kim, Junki Seoul National University [email protected] C1/G1Kim, Kyuhyun Seoul National University [email protected] G1Kingma, Sytze F. Vrije Universiteit

[email protected] D7

Knijn, Trudie Utrecht University [email protected] A2/C3/E3

Knuth, Matthias Universität Duisburg-Essen

[email protected] B4

Koppell, Jonathan Yale University [email protected] D5Kumar, Rajesh CUTS [email protected] A1Lægreid, Per University of Bergen [email protected] B4/D6Lamping, Wolfram University of Hannover [email protected] B3Lapao, Luis Instituto Nacional de

Administraçã[email protected] E3

Laperrouza, Marc EPFL (Swiss Federal Institute of Technology)

[email protected] G1

Lévi-Faur, David Hebrew University of Jerusalem

[email protected] D7/E5/F7/G7

Mabbett, Deborah Birkbeck, University of London

[email protected] B3

Maegli, Martin Ecole Polytechnique Fédéral Lausanne

[email protected] G2

Maggetti, Martino University of Lausanne and University of Exeter

[email protected] G4

Majone, Giandomenico European University Institute, Florence

[email protected] Lecture,B7

Malaluan, Nepomuceno A. B2Manzetti, Luigi Southern Methodist

[email protected] C1

Marchant, Gary Arizona State University [email protected] B6Martens, Maria ARENA, Centre for

European [email protected] B4/D4

32

Page 33: (Re)Regulation in the Wake of Neoliberalism. Consequences of

Martinsen, Dorte Sindbjerg University of Copenhagen [email protected] G3Marx, Axel Katholieke Universiteit

[email protected] C7/E7

Mathieu, Emmanuelle Université Catholique de Louvain

[email protected]

Matthys, Joery Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

[email protected]

Meijer, Albert Utrecht School of Governance

[email protected] A1

Menahem, Gina Tel-Aviv University [email protected] B1Meuwese, Anne University of Antwerp [email protected] E5/F1Mikler, John The University of Sydney [email protected] E7Nicholls, Rob University of New South

[email protected] B2

Nölke, Andreas Johann Wolfgang Goethe University

[email protected] E7/F5/G5

O’Callaghan, Terry F. University of South Australia

A2

O’Connor, Karl University of Exeter E5Offer, Avner University of Oxford [email protected] B1Ossewaarde, Ringo University of Twente [email protected] F4Paridon, Kees van Erasmus University

[email protected] B1

Peci, Alketa Brazilian School of Public and Business Administration

[email protected] E1

Perry, James Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam

[email protected] F5

Philipps, Annika Freie Universität Berlin [email protected] E1Plantinga, Mirjam University of Groningen [email protected] B3Pond, Richard London Metropolitan

UniversityG2

Poorta, Anne Utrecht University [email protected] F4Porter, Tony McMaster University [email protected] B5/G5Pradella, Sébastien FUCaM – Sciences Po

[email protected]

A5

Provost, Colin University College London

[email protected] D1

Radaelli, Claudio University of Exeter [email protected] B7/E5/F1Ramesh, M. National University of

[email protected] A2

Rancourt, Marie-Eve Utrecht University [email protected], Werner Chamber of Labour of

[email protected] B1/C5

Rip, Arie University of Twente [email protected] B6Rodine Hardy, Kirsten Northeastern University [email protected] E2Rommel, Jan Katholieke Universiteit

[email protected] A4/C4

Roness, Paul G. University of Bergen [email protected] A4Rosenau, Pauline University of Texas –

[email protected] C3/E3

Rubecksen, Kristin University of Bergen [email protected], Rinat Tel-Aviv University B1Salter, Liora York University [email protected] D6Sarapuu, Külli Tallinn University of

[email protected]

Schrefler, Lorna University of Exeter [email protected] F1Scott, Colin University College Dublin [email protected] D5/F7/

G7Shaoul, Jean Manchester Business

[email protected] A7

33

Page 34: (Re)Regulation in the Wake of Neoliberalism. Consequences of

Silbey, Susan M.I.T. [email protected] D1Simpson, Seamus Manchester Metropolitan

[email protected] D2

Sonmez, Umit London School of Economics and Political Science

[email protected] C1

Sosay, Gül Boğaziçi University [email protected] E4/F4Spendzharova, Aneta Institute for Advanced

Studies - [email protected]

C2

Stefopoulou, Efrossyni Hellenic Ministry of the Interior

[email protected] D2

Stephenson, Paul University of Maastricht [email protected]

A6

Sylvester, Douglas Arizona State University [email protected] B6Tasiran, Ali Cevat London Metropolitan

UniversityG2

Taylor, Heather Johann Wolfgang Goethe University

[email protected]

Triga, Vicky University of Zurich [email protected] A6Trondal, Jarle University of Agder and

[email protected] D4

Unger, Brigitte Utrecht School of Economics

[email protected] A1/C5

Verhoest, Koen Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

[email protected]

A4

Versluis, Esther Maastricht University [email protected] A6Vivoda, Vlado University of South

AustraliaA2

Voermans, Wim Leiden University [email protected]

B7/F1

Voort, Haiko van der Delft University of Technology

[email protected] E3

Waarden, Frans van Utrecht University [email protected] D7/F7/G7

Wagle, Subodh M. University of Mumbai [email protected] F4Walker, Christopher University of New South

[email protected] F3

Weihe, Guðrið Copenhagen Business School

[email protected] A7

Wiggan, Jay Queen’s University Belfast

[email protected] B4

Wigger, Angela Radboud University Nijmegen

[email protected] E6

Willems, Tom University of Antwerp [email protected] C6Wiss, Tobias University of Mannheim [email protected]

mannheim.deG3

Wouters, Jan Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

[email protected] E7

Xun, Wu B2Yeo, Yukyung City University of Hong

[email protected] D2

Yesilkagit, Kutsal Utrecht School of Governance

[email protected] C7/F7/G4

Zenginobuz, E. Ünal Bogazici University [email protected] F4

34

Page 35: (Re)Regulation in the Wake of Neoliberalism. Consequences of

35