February ISA-IPE Section Newsletter

Sat, 18 Feb 1995 13:03:29 -0700 (MST)
Lev Gonick (gonick@csf.Colorado.EDU)

From:=09C. Roe Goddard, IPE Section Secretary and Newsletter
=09Editor

February 1995 =09IPE-Section International Studies Association

ANNUAL REPORT FROM THE IPE PRESIDENT AND SECTION CHAIR

DEAR IPE MEMBERS:

Welcome to the 1995 Chicago International Studies Association
Annual Convention. A good deal of planning has gone into these
meetings and I hope you find the results stimulating and
worthwhile.=20

DATES AND TIMES OF MEETINGS

The annual meeting for the IPE Section will take place on
Wednesday, February 21, from 12:20-1:20 p.m. in Conference Room 4C
of the Chicago Hilton. A brief agenda follows this report.=20

The IPE annual Reception honouring Professor Keohane, the
Distinguished IPE Scholar, will be in the Williford Room on
Thursday from 5:30-6:30 p.m.

The World Historical System subsection is holding its business
meeting on Saturday from 12:20-1:20 p.m. in Conference Room 4G.

The SWIPE and Feminist Theory and Gender Studies section are
jointly sponsoring a reception honouring Jean Bethke Elshtain on
Friday, 5:30-6:30 p.m. in the Waldorf Room.

The RIPE business meeting (for RIPE Board members only) is
Wednesday 5:30-6:30 p.m. in Private Dining Room 7.

NOTES ON THE IPE PANELS

Thanks to everyone who submitted paper and panel proposals. While
we were not able to accommodate everyone on the program, we are
running 44 panels, many of which have four paper presentations. I
would like to thank in particular all of the individuals who put
together panels for the section. Given the very large number of
panels the IPE program chair must organize, having panels
submitted that were already constructed in a cohesive, organized
format was most helpful.=20

The IPE section is co-sponsoring 20 panels on the program. We are
co-sponsoring nine panels with the International Organization
section (Wed-D-14, Th-A-13, Th-B-1, Th-C-13, Fri-D-19,
Sat-A-14,Sat-B-16, Sat-B-17, Sat-D-12); five panels with the
Environmental Studies section (Fri-A-14, Fri-B-5, Fri-C-10,
Fri-D-6, Sat-D-2),three panels with the International Security
Studies section (Wed-A-12, Wed-B-15, Thu-A-19), two panels with
the International Law section (Wed-C-9 and Fri-B-13), one panel
with the American-Soviet Successor States section (Fri-C-13) and
one with the Feminist Theory and Gender Studies section
(Sat-D-2).

I would like to draw your attention to a few of the IPE-sponsored
panels in particular:

(1) The IPE Distinguished Scholar Award panel, honouring
Robert Keohane (Harvard) is being held in the Thu-D-3 slot.

The roundtable is chaired by Duncan Snidal (Chicago) and has
Helga Haftendorn (Free University of Berlin), Richard Higgott
(Manchester), Peter Katzenstein (Cornell), Stephen
Krasner(Stanford) and Charles Lipson (Chicago) as participants
with Robert Keohane as the respondent. An award will be presented
to the Distinguished Scholar at the close of the session. I hope
you will all join us at the IPE Reception honouring Professor
Keohane after the event. The reception will be in the Williford
Room on Thursday from 5:30-6:30 p.m.

(2) A special session commemorating the 50th anniversary of
Karl Polanyi's Great Transformation is being held in the Wed-C-16
slot. Chaired by Robert Latham (SSRC), the participants include
Susan Strange (Warwick), Eric Helleiner (Trent), Sam Nolutshungu
(Rochester), Mustapha Pasha (American), Miranda Scheurs (Maryland)
and Robert Cox (York).

(3) A special session commemorating the 50th anniversary of
the Chicago Air Transport Convention is being held in the Sat-B-17
slot. The chair is Martin Staniland (Pittsburgh). and the
panellists are Gerald Berstein (Stanford), Vicki Golich (CSU-San
Marcos), DeAnne Julius (British Airways), Paul Mifsud(KLM),
Michael Pustay (Texas A&M), Joseph Schwieterman(DePaul), Jeffrey
Shane (Wilmer, Cuttler and Pickering) and David Thornton (South
Carolina).

(4) The World Historical Systems group is discussing the
forthcoming book, Rise and Demise: Comparing World Systems by
Christopher Chase-Dunn and Thomas Hall in the Wed-D-2 slot.
The chair is Barry Gills (Newcastle). The participants are
William McNeill (Chicago), Matthew Melko (Wright State),
Jonathan Friedman (Lund) and George Modelski (Washington). The
authors are respondents.

There are several linked panels on the program and I particularly
thank the panel organizers for putting these together.

(1) There are two linked sessions on "Knowledge Dynamics of
Global Governance", the first in the Thu-B-1 slot chaired by Rames
Rosenau (George Washington) and the second in the Thu-C-13 slot
chaired by Richard Mansbach (Iowa State). These panels were
organized by Martin Hewson (York) and Timothy Sinclair (York).

(2) There are three sessions, organized by Phil Cerny
(Univ.of York) on "Globalization and State Policy Effectiveness".
The first, "Core State Politics" is in the Fri-A-3 slot
(chaired by Phil Cerny), the second, "The State and
Multinational Corporations" in the Fri-C-14 slot (chaired by
Stephen Kobrin (Pennsylvania)) and the third, "Labour Market
Policies", in the Sat-A-19 slot (chaired by Martin Schain(NYU)).

(3) There are three linked sessions on IPE and the
environment. The first, "Beyond Sovereignty: Multinationals,
Natural Resources and the Environment" is in the Fri-B-5 slot
chaired by Mattias Finger (Columbia), the second,
"Environmental Regimes and Ecological Crisis" in the Fri-C-10 slot
chaired by Howard Warshawsky (Roanoke), and the third
"Environmental Degradation in World Historical Systems
Perspective" is in the Fri-D-6 slot chaired by Bob Denemark
(Delaware).

(4) There are two panels on "Civil Societies in the Global
Political Economy", the first on Sub-Saharan Africa in the
Sat-A-14 slot chaired by Gerald Schmitz (Library of
Parliament, Canada), and the second on Asia and the Americas
in the Sat-B-16 slot chaired by Marianne Marchand (Amsterdam).

THANKS

I have functioned with a large email support group this year and
would like to thank all of the individuals for their help. I would
particularly like to thank Vicki Golich, Roe Goddard, Lev Gonick
and Bob Denemark. The email network (IPEexecALL) consists of the
IPE Governing Council, the members of the Senior/Junior Scholar
committee, the chair of the WHS subsection, the managers of IPEnet
and WSnet, the SWIPE co-chairs, one of the RIPE editors, Lynne
Rienner, together with a few previous Governing Council members.
The ISA co-chairs, Misty Gerner and Phil Schrodt, together with
their assistant Phil Huxtable, were great to work with, and the
other section chairs were most helpful.

Looking forward to seeing you in Chicago!

Best wishes,=20
Lorraine Eden
IPE President and Section/Program Chair

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IPE SECTION ANNUAL MEETING

The annual meeting for the IPE Section will take place on
Wednesday, February 21, from 12:20-1:20 p.m. in Conference Room 4C
of the Chicago Hilton. A brief agenda follows:

TENTATIVE AGENDA FOR THE ANNUAL MEETING

1. Report from the IPE Section President and Program Chair
Report on the Meeting
Financial Report

2. Election of Officers

3. Reports from:=20
IPE Senior/Junior Scholar Committee
IPE Newsletter Editor
WHS Subsection
SWIPE
IPEnet
WSnet
IPE Yearbook=20
RIPE

4. Proposed Constitutional Changes

5. Other Business

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REPORT OF THE SENIOR/JUNIOR SCHOLAR COMMITTEE

This year the Senior Scholar/Junior Scholar Selection Committee
decided it was important to work with specific criteria in its
efforts to identify the recipients of
these two prestigious awards. It appeared that no written
criteria was available to guide the committee in this decision.=20
After several rounds of email conversations, we
decided on the following:

SENIOR SCHOLAR CRITERIA
The Senior Scholar award will be determined on the basis of the
overall value to the field of his/her work. The primary criterion
used to evaluate the value of a Scholar's contribution will be the
seminal (importance, Insightfulness,uniqueness) nature of his/her
contribution to the scholarly literature. Other criteria which
may be considered by the committee include the inspiration of and
contribution to the careers and research programs of colleagues
and students--both graduate and undergraduate, or the degree to
which his/her work has influenced or shaped=20
policy decisions--either directly or indirectly. The Selection
Committee will review nominations which include a detailed
statement supporting the seminal nature of the Scholar's
contribution, AND a proposed panel of participants. =20

The person who nominates the successful candidate for Senior
Scholar will be expected to organize and chair the panel honoring
the Senior Scholar.=20

The Senior Scholar will be expected to participate as a member of
that paneland to say a FEW words upon introduction at the IPE
Reception. Ideally, the Senior Scholar will also serve as a
discussant on another relevant panel in an effort
to expose his/her insights and intellect to the broadest array of
ISA/IPE members. At the reception, the Senior Scholar will
receive a certificate and a small
gift. Some funds are available to support minimal travel
expenses.

JUNIOR SCHOLAR CRITERIA
The Junior Scholar award will be determined on the basis of three
criteria:=20

(1) The most critical criterion is demonstrated potential to make
a major contribution to International Political Economy over the
course of a career; (2) the recipient must be non-tenured, and
normally, within 5 years of receiving the doctorate (or
equivalent); and (3) the candidate must demonstrate financial
need. Preference will be given to junior scholars from developing
countries, and who are not from the country where the meeting is
held. =20

It is incumbent upon the nominator to indicate how the Scholar
meets these three criteria, recognizing that the Selection
Committee will be most persuaded by arguments related to the first
criterion; self-nominations are welcomed. =20

The person selected as Junior Scholar will be expected to present
a paper on a scheduled panel and make a short presentation upon
introduction at the IPE Reception at the ISA Annual Meeting.=20
Whenever possible, the Junior Scholar should also have the
opportunity to serve as a discussant on another relevant panel in
an effort to introduce the Scholar's ideas an intellect to the
broadest array of ISA/IPE members. The Junior Scholar will be
presented with a certificate at the IPE Reception and UP TO
$1000.00 to cover travel expenses related to attending the
conference.

The Committee recommends that some standardized policy be adopted
to help future Selection Committees make choices. We present this
currently as draft recommendations for consideration by the IPE
section. By way of discussion, let me note that some people felt
quite strongly that any reference to policy in the Senior Scholar
criteria was inappropriate, others felt just as strongly that it
absolutely needed to be there. Some members thought that the
Senior Scholar should be "required" to serve on a
junior scholar/graduate student panel as a discussant. Several
ideas were discussed related to ensuring that the Senior Scholar
would be very actively involved in the ISA
Meetings.

With respect to the Junior Scholar selection a similar range of
opinions was expressed. Some thought that the lack of systematic
review in the past and the paucity of past applications indicated
that IPE money might be better spent on some other activity that
would serve a larger group of younger scholars. Others felt we
needed to be more active in soliciting nominations and spending
even more money on a junior scholar. These are all issues which
need to be discussed and decided by the IPE business meeting
attendees.

One more note on process and outcome. This year the Committee had
strong competition for the Senior Scholar selection. The
proposals we received were thorough and well Documented. This was
not the case for the Junior Scholar selection. Here,the committee
received only one nomination which was accompanied by only a brief
description of the individual and a CV. The individual did not
apply to present a paper, and there was no indication from the
individual or from the nominator what might be presented.=20
Hence, we decided not to identify a Junior Scholar this year.

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UPCOMING ELECTIONS TO THE IPE EXECUTIVE

The 1994-95 IPE Executive Committee consists of the individuals
listed below. Several changes to the executive will occur at the
Chicago meetings so we will need to have elections of officers.
The changes are the following:

(1) Two members of the Governing Council are retiring, Kurt Burch
and Dimitris Stevis, so that two more must be elected.

(2) Vicki Golich is stepping down as IPE Section Vice President to
take up the position of ISA Vice President. We therefore need to
elect a Vice President for 1995-96.

(3) We need a new Program Chair for the 1996 San Diego meetings. I
am proposing that the Vice President take on the responsibility of
the Program Chair for this year (and will recommend that the
constitution be changed to have the Vice President the Program
Chair on an annual basis).

(4) The Senior/Junior Scholar Committee members serve only for one
term. Normally there are three members to this committee. The IPE
Governing Council is proposing to change the functions of this
committee (see elsewhere in this NEWSLETTER) and elections will be
needed for these positions.

IPE PRESIDENT AND SECTION CHAIR (1994-96)
Lorraine Eden, School of International Affairs, =09
=09Carleton University, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada.
Phone 613-788-2600x6661 (office) 613-788-6655 (dept)
Fax 613-788-2889 Email leden@superior.ccs.carleton.ca

VICE PRESIDENT (1994-96)
Vicki Golich, Political Science, California State =09University
=09-San Marcos, San Marcos, California, USA =0992096-0001.
Phone 619-750-4144 Fax 619-750-4111/4030
Email: vicki_golich@csusm.edu

SECRETARY AND IPE NEWSLETTER EDITOR (1994-96)
Roe Goddard, International Studies, THUNDERBIRD, The
=09American Graduate School of International Management,
=09Phoenix, Arizona,USA 85306. Phone 602-978-7181 Fax
=09602-439-9622
Email: goddardr@mhs.t-bird.edu

IPE PAST PRESIDENT (1994-96)
Ken Stiles, Political Science, Loyola University, 6525 =09North
=09Sheridan, Chicago, Illinois 60626. Phone 312-508-=098647. Fax
=09312-508-3646. Email: kstiles@..........

IPE GOVERNING COUNCIL MEMBERS
The IPE Governing Council consists of the President, =09Vice
=09President, Past President and Secretary, together =09with the
=09six additional members listed below:

(1993-95)=20
Kurt Burch, Political Science, University of Delaware,
=09Newark,Delaware USA 19716.
Email: kurt@bach.udel.edu

(1993-95)
Dimitris Stevis, Political Science, Colorado State
=09University,Fort Collins, Colorado USA 80523.
Phone 303-491-5156 Fax 303-491-5156=20
Email: dstevis@vines.colostate.edu
=20
(1994-96)=20
Lev Gonick, 6849 E. Paradise Lane, Phoenix, Arizona
=0985254.
Phone 602-998-6956; fax 602-998-7065.=20
Email: gonick@csf.colorado.edu

(1994-96)=20
Marianne Marchand, University of Amsterdam, =09Netherlands.
Email: mmarchand@sara.nl

(1994-96)=20
Kenny Thomas, Political Science, University of Missouri =09at
=09St.Louis, St. Louis, Missouri, USA 63121-4499.
Phone 314-553-5839 Fax 314-553-6757
Email: skpthom@umslvma.umsl.edu (Ken Thomas),

SENIOR/JUNIOR SCHOLAR SELECTION COMMITTEE (1994-95)
Vicki Golich, University of California at San Marcos
=09(Chair)
(see above)

Philip Cerny, Political Science, University of York, =09York
=09Y01 5DD, UK.
PHone 44-904-433947 Fax 44-904-433563
Email: pgc3@tower.york.ac.uk
=20
Renee Marlin-Bennett, School of International Service, =09The
=09American University, 4400 Massachusetts Ave NW, =09Washington=09
=09DC 20016.
Phone 202-885-1636 Fax 202-885-2494
Email: rmarlin@american.edu

Roger Tooze, International Studies, Nottingham Trent
University, Clifton Lane, Nottingham NG11 8NS, UK.
Phone 44-602-486685 Fax 44-602-486632
Email: ins3toozeri@nottingham-trent.ac.uk

WORLD HISTORICAL SYSTEMS SUB-SECTION CHAIR
Bob Denemark, Political Science, University of
=09Delaware,Newark, Delaware 19716, USA.
Phone 302-451-2009 Fax
Email: denemark@strauss.udel.edu

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PROPOSED CONSTITUTIONAL CHANGES

The IPE Executive is proposing the following changes to the
constitution of the IPE section. These will be discussed and voted
on at the general meeting on Wednesday, February 22, 1995.=20

Any questions should be directed to Lorraine Eden, section
president [email: leden@superior.ccs.carleton.ca].

These changes -- if passed at the annual meeting -- would take
effect the following year [i.e. at the 1996 annual meeting].

[unchanged] Election of officers of the IPE section shall take
place at the annual business meeting of the IPE section in
conjunction with the ISA Convention.

Proposed Changes:

1. The President and Section Chair of the IPE section shall serve
for a ONE YEAR term. In addition to the general responsiblities of
presidency, the IPE President serves as the Treasurer for the IPE
section and also chairs the committee selecting the IPE
Distinguished Scholar.

[Now the president is elected for a two year term and is also
program chair. The president is Treasurer but does not have
responsibility for the senior scholar committee.]

2. The Vice President serves for a ONE YEAR TERM and is PRESIDENT
ELECT. During that one year term the Vice President is also
PROGRAM CHAIR for the IPE section.=20

[Now the vice president is a two year term and does not
immediately become president of the section. The vice president
heads up the senior and junior scholar committee.]

3. The SECRETARY of the IPE section serves for a two year term.
The secretary is the IPE NEWSLETTER EDITOR and has the
responsibility for editing and publishing the IPE NEWSLETTER. He
or she may be re-elected for a further one year term.

[This is basically unchanged from current practice.]

4. [unchanged] In addition, there shall be five rotating members
of the Governing Council; two elected one year and three elected
the subsequent year. Each individual serves a two year term.

5. The OFFICERS of the IPE section consist of the President,
Past President, Vice President [President Elect/Program Chair],
and Secretary [IPE Newsletter Editor] and the president/chair of
the World Historical Systems subsection.=20

[The change here is to add the president of the WHS subsection as
an officer of the section.]

6. These officers together with the five elected individual
members constitute the Governing Council of the Section. The
president of SWIPE [the Society of Women in IPE] and the IPEnet
systems operator shall also be members of the Governing Council.=20

[The change here is the addition of SWIPE and IPEnet executives to
the governing council.]

7. For proposals re the Junior Scholar [and the committee] see the
report of the Senior/Junior Scholar committee by Vicki Golich
elsewhere in this Newsletter.

____________________________________________________________

JOURNAL OF WORLD SYSTEMS RESEARCH

The first batch of papers published in the Journal of
World-Systems Research is now available from
csf.colorado.edu/wsystems/journals/

Please send feedback to Chris Chase-Dunn =20
chriscd@jhunix.hcf.jhu.edu

Here is the table of contents:

JOURNAL OF WORLD-SYSTEMS RESEARCH
gopher:\\csf.colorado.edu\wsystems\journals\
ISSN 1076-156X

CONTENTS OF FIRST BATCH

Volume 1, 1995

Number 1: David Wilkinson, "From Mesopotamia
through Carroll Quigley to Bill Clinton: world
historical systems, the civilizationist and
the president"

Number 2: Myron J. Frankman, "Catching the bus for
global development: Gerschenkron revisited"

Number 3: Stephen B. Bunker and Paul S. Ciccantell,
"Restructuring markets, reorganizing nature: an
examination of Japanese strategies for access to =20
raw materials"

Number 4: Christoph Scherrer, "The commitment to a
liberal world market order as a hegemonic practice:
the case of the USA"

THEMATIC SECTION: Hegemonic Rivalry: Past and =20
Future

Number 5: Volker Bornschier, "Hegemonic decline,
West European unification and the future structure
of the core"

Number 6 : Christopher Chase-Dunn and Bruce
Podobnik, "The next world war: world-system cycles
and trends"

Number 7: George Modelski, "From leadership to
organization: the evolution of global politics"

Number 8: Walter L. Goldfrank, "Beyond cycles of
hegemony: economic, social and military factors"

Number 9 : Gerd Junne, "Global cooperation or
rival trade blocs?"

Number 10: Tieting Su, "Clashes of 'life spaces'
and other logics of hegemonic rivalry"=20

Number 11: John Borrego, "Models of integration
and development in the Pacific "

Number 12: Albert Bergesen and Roberto Fernandez,
" Who has the most fortune 500 firms?: A network
analysis of global economic competition, 1956- =20
1989"

Number 13: Brigitte Schulz, "Germany, the United
States and future inter-core conflict"

Number 14: Erich Weede, " Future hegemonic rivalry
between China and the West?"=20

Number 15: Terry Boswell, "Hegemony and
bifurcation points in world history"

Number 16: Book Reviews: 16:1 Boswell on Wagar;
16.2 Dassbach on Perrucci; 16.3 Hall on Frank and
Gills; 16.4 Joffe on Algaze; 16.5 Dunaway and =20
Clelland on Gereffi and Korzeniewicz.
Prof. Chris Chase-Dunn
Department of Sociology
Johns Hopkins University
Baltimore, MD. 21218 USA
tel 410 516 7633 fax 410 516 7590 email
chriscd@jhunix.hcf.jhu.edu

____________________________________________________________

FIRST THREE ISSUES OF RIPE NOW AVAILABLE

The first three issues of our associated journal Review of
International Political Economy is now available. As members you
can subscribe at a special low rate of $35. There will be 3 issues
this year and four issues from 1995. The first issue contains an
essay by the editors on why they have launched the journal =93Forum
for heteredox international political economy=94 which begins a
series of short papers on the Nature of IPE, following with papers
from Stephen Krasner and Geoff Hodgson. There are articles by
Makoto Itoh on the Japanese economy, John Agnew on territory in
IR, Jeffry Frieden on exchange rate politics, Andre Drainville on
Open Marxism and IPE, Timothy Sinclair on the credit rating
process and Razeen Sally on domesticity of multinational
enterprises.

In the second issue (due out July 1994) we continue with the
Nature of IPE discussion with paers from Susan Strange and Peter
Burnham. There are articles by Vincent Mahler on the Lome
Convention, by Jill Hills on GATT, Ankie Hoogvelt and Masae Yuasa
on =93Lean Production=94 and David Wightman on Europe and the dollar.
The issue also contains a debate on =93What went wrong in Eastern
Europe=94 instigated by Gunder Frank with comments by Alec Nove,
Robert Denemark and Jerzy Hausner.

____________________________________________________________

REPORT ON SWIPE

=09The Society for Women in IPE welcomes new members to attend
the ISA session, Women in the Profession on February 24,
8:30am-10:15am. Our membership has grown in leaps and bounds!=20
Activities include the recent publication of IPE syllabi which are
available at a modest fee of $2 from Audie Klotz or Christine
Ingebritsen. We also co-sponsored the ISA/West meetings at the
University of Washington, and continue to benefit from our
institutional connections to the Jackson School of International
Studies. Our newsletter informs members of recent publications
in the=20
field of IPE, job opportunities, conference and workshop
possibilities and SWIPE member activities. =20
=20
For more information about SWIPE, contact:

=09=09=09=09Christine Ingebritsen
=09=09=09=09DL-20
=09=09=09=09University of Washington
=09=09=09=09Seattle, WA 98195
=20
=09=09=09=09FAX: 206-685-9173

__________________________________________________________

ISA-WEST 1995 ANNUAL MEETING

=09Plans for the ISA/WEST meeting are moving forward. James
Scarritt of the University of Colorado at Boulder is the Program
Chair. This year's meeting will be held on the university campus,
October 20-21. Please mark your calendar and pass the word to
interested colleagues.
=20
=20
___________________________________________________________ =09=09=09=09

RESTAURANTS AROUND THE CHICAGO HILTON

A - Berghoff - 17 West Adams
B - Italian Village - 71 West Monroe=20
C - Wall Street Deli - 55 West Monroe
D - The Exchange - 172 West Adams
E - Exchequer Pub - 226 South Wabash
F - Kenny's Ribs - 12 E. Jackson
G - Miller's Pub - 134 S. Wabash
H - J. Randolph's - 151 N. Michigan
I - Boudin Bakery - 20 N. Michigan

Clark Dearborne State Wabash Michigan
| | | | |H
--------|-------|------|------|------|--------- Washington
| | | | |I
--------|-------|------|------|------|--------- Madison
| | |HOTEL | |
--------|-------|-B-C--|------|------|--------- Monroe
| | | |G |
--------|-D-----|----A-|------|------|--------- Adams
| | | |E |
--------|-------|------|-F----|------|--------- Jackson

Thanks to Ken Stiles for this =93insider information.
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INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY SECTION 1996 PANEL PROPOSALS

Please give some thought to forming a panel, presenting a paper
and/or acting as a chair or discussant, in an IPE-sponsored panel
at the 1996 International Studies association conference to be
held in San Diego, California, April 16-20, 1996. Please complete
and return this conference proposal to the IPE Program Chair as
soon as
possible. NOTE THAT THE IPE PROGRAM CHAIR HAS NOT BEEN SELECTED
YET; THE POSITION IS TO BE FILLED AT THE IPE ANNUAL MEETING.

PERSONAL INFORMATION

Name . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . =20

Institution. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . =20

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Mailing Address. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . =20

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Office Phone ......................Office Fax. . . . . . . . =20

Email. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . =20

I would like to ORGANIZE A PANEL OR ROUNDTABLE on the following
theme (to be formally considered as a panel proposal, the chair
must enclose or forward details of all panellists together with
full mailing addresses and paper abstracts, plus a paragraph
description of the panel theme by the submission deadline):

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I would like to PRESENT A PAPER on the following topic (to be
formally considered, the author must enclose or forward a one-two
page abstract of the paper by the submission deadline):

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I am willing to chair a session on the following topics:

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I am willing to be a discussant on the following topics:

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Note that (1) participants can appear on the program in a maximum
of two capacities (e.g. as a chair in one session and paper giver
in another); (2) proposals should be submitted to one section or
to the ISA Conference Chair, but not to more than one section
simultaneously.

Preliminary Program for the IPE-Section of the International
Studies Association, Annual Meetings, Chicago, 21-25 February. For
more information about the International Studies Association and
details about the Annual Meeting contact isa@byu.edu

IPEnet invites all panelists to send us your conference papers
electronically. We have created an ISA95 directory and look
forward to a healthy selection of conference papers. If you
maintain your own gopher or W3 site (with the ISA paper), please
send us relevant http or node information so we may link your
paper to our ISA95 Directory. Copies on disk (in any format) can
be sent to Lev Gonick, Internet Projet, SBS-3051 ASU-West, 4701 W.
Thunderbird Rd. Phoenix, AZ. 85069-7100. We will upload your
conference paper.

For your information, a permanent copy of this program is
available in the announcements directory of the IPEnet.

csf.colorado.edu
-> Thematic_Archive
-> announcements
-> conference.ISA95.program

IPENet=D5s WWW site is at http://csf.colorado.edu/ipe

Panel Wed-A-12

Economic Policy and National Security

Chair: James Wirtz, Naval Postgraduate School

Post-Cold War Military Outlays: Political Economic Factors
Christer Crantz, Wayne State University

Artificial Intelligence: Comparative Policies and Pursuits
Ingeborg Mehser, Free University of Berlin

Military Industry in Iraq and Israel
Timothy D. Hoyt, Johns Hopkins University

Discussant: James Wirtz, Naval Postgraduate School

Panel Wed-A-13

Trade and Conflict

Chair: Audie Klotz, University of Illinois-Chicago

A Reexamination of the Relationship between Trade and Conflict
Richard M. Tucker, Indiana University

Bound to the Mast: Foreign Economic Policy as a Commitment Device
Lara S. Skalnes, University of Oregon

Economic Sanctions: Less than Ineffective?
Zachary Selden, University of California-Los Angeles

Trade and Security in International Politics
David M. Rowe, Ohio State University

Panel Wed-A-14

Taxes, Subsidies, and Multinational Corporations

Chair: Kenneth Thomas, University of Missouri-St. Louis

European Union Regulation of Competition for Investment: Lessons
for North America
Kenneth Thomas, University of Missouri=3DD1St. Louis

Investment Subsidies and Adverse Selection
Jean-Francois Wen, Wilfred Laurier University

Sovereignty and Integration: Taxation Policy of the European Union
Mirjam van Bergen, European Institute of Public Adminstration

The OECD and the Taxation of Multinational Enterprises
Michael Webb, University of Victoria

Discussants: Timothy J. Sinclair, York University (Canada) and
Lorraine Eden, Carleton University

Panel Wed-B-14

Labour, Capital, and the Internationalization of the State

Chair, Jeffrey Harrod,Institute of Social Studies

The Internationalization of the State and the marginalization of
Labour: The Turkish Case
Nilgun Onder, York University

Internationalization of the Corporatist State and the Crisis of
Labour Representation: The Case of Sweden
Magnus Ryner, York University

From=20Movement to Mobility to Mobilization: On the Limits and
Promises of Labour Organization in the Context of Restructuring
and Migration
Helene Pellerin, York University

Associations and Economic Governance in Poland
Lorene Allio, Emory University

Discussant: Jeffrey Harrod, Institute of Social Studies

Panel Wed-B-15

Redesigning the Future: Technology, Policy, Context

Chair:Jose V. Ciprut, University of Pennsylvania

Civilian-Military R&D: Exploitation and Control
Gerald Epstein, US Office of Technology Assessment

Post-Cold War Armaments Budgeting in Developed Countries
William R. Thomas, US Congressional Budget Office=D4
Daniel Gallik, US Arms Control and Disarmament Agency

Nuclear Arsenals: Denuclearization and Proliferation
Jack Nunn, US Office of Technology Assessment

Discussants: Alan H. Shaw -US Office of Technology Assessment and
Jo Husbands, National Research Council

Paenl Wed-C-9

International Trade and International Law

Chair: Imtiaz Hussain, Center for the Research and Teaching of
Economics=3DD1Mexico

National Laws, NAFTA Panels, and Multinational Provisions: Two-Way
Traffic in North American Dispute Settlement
Imtiaz Hussain, Center for the Research and Teaching of
Economics=3DD1Mexico

The Role of Negative Sanctions in International Trade Law
Compliance, 1948-94
Kathleen Horohoe, University of Michigan

International Trade Agreements and Environmental Protection: No
Place for Production-related Measures?
Andreas Ziegler, University of St. Gallen

Regional Integration: A Case Study of the Caribbean Comunity
[CARICOM]
P. K. Menon, University of the West Indies

Discussant: Nancy S. Mandel, California Bar, Pennsylvania Bar, and
District of Columbia Bar

Panel Wed-C-16

Roundtable: Global Transformations:Rethinking Karl Polanyi after
Fifty Years

Chair: Robert Latham, Social Science Research Council

Participants:

Susan Strange
Warwick University

Eric Helleiner
Trent University

Sam Nolutshungu
University of Rochester

Mustapha K. Pasha
American University

Miranda Scheurs
University of Maryland
York University

Panel Wed-C-17

Sustainable Development: IPE and Conflict Issues
Chair: Jose Bolivar Rocha Federal University of Paraiba/
University of Wisconsin

Application of a Policy Approach to Development Studies:
Institutional Rational Choice in Marginalized Urban-Housing
Communities
Judith Weddle, University of Kansas

Mixed Economic Strategy and Democratization in Sub-Saharan
Africa's Development Kidane Mengisteab Old Dominion University

Assessing Sustainable Development in Peru and Thailand
Ann Kelleher, Pacific Lutheran University

Political Conflict, Economic Development, and Basic Human
Needs:Problems of Specification and Estimation
Loren King, Massachusetts Institute of Technology

Discussants: Jose Bolivar Rocha Federal University of
Paraiba/University of Wisconsin Dale Murphy MIT

Panel Wed-D-2

Theme Roundtable

Roundtable: Rise and Demise: Comparing World Systems

Chair: Barry K. Gills, University of Newcastle

Participants:

William H. McNeill
University of Chicago

Matthew Melko
Wright State University

Jonathan Friedman
University of Lund

George Modelski
University of Washington

Respondents:
Christopher Chase-Dunn, Johns Hopkins University
Thomas Hall, DePauw University

Panel Wed-D-14

What's in a Name? Defining International Public Problems

Chair: Renee Marlin-Bennett, American University

Public Problem
Renee Marlin-Bennett, American University

Defining International Problems in the Middle East and North
Africa
Joseph W. Roberts, University of Utah
Jeffrey K. Ratcliffe,University of Utah

Neither Food nor Farming: "Issue Areas," the Uruguay Round, and IR
Theory
Robert Wolfe, Queen's University

Technology, Globalization, and the Culture ; Debate
Gillian Youngs, Nottingham Trent University

Republican Public Sphere and Global Political Economy
Heikki Patomaki, University of Turku (Finland)

Discussant: Claire T. Sjolander, University of Ottawa

Panel Thu-A-12

The Political Economy of Trade Policy

Chair: Roe Goddard, American Graduate School of International
Management

Can Protectionism Be Overcome? The Political Economy of LDC
Success in Textiles, Apparel, and Steel Trade
Steven G. Livingston, State University of New York=3DD1Albany

An Investigation of the Links between Tariff Revenue and Trade
Policy Liberalization in Developing Countries
Christopher Lenhardt, University of Michigan
Sunder Ramaswamy, Middlebury College

Is Industrial Policy Nationalist or Internationalist? Lessons from
the US and EU Semiconductor Industries
Christine Margerum,Northwestern University

Independence, Dependence, Interdependence and Cooperation
Lui Hebron, lowa State University

Discussants: Roe Goddard,American Graduate School of International
Management and Cheng-Tian Kuo,University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee

Panel Thu-A-13

The Institutions of International Cooperation

Chair: Duncan Snidal,University of Chicago

Compliance Mechanisms in International Agreements
George Downs,Princeton University

US Policy and International Compliance
Robert Keohane, Harvard University

International Agreements
Charles Lipson, University of Chicago=D4
Ken Abbott, Northwestern Law and Duncan Snidal,University of
Chicago

Discussants: Judith L. Goldstein, Stanford University and
James Morrow, Stanford University

Panel Thu A-19

Export Policy and Security: Thein Challenges of Contemporary
Technology

Chair: David M. Rowe, Ohio State University

Rethinking East Asia s Security Equations
Jose V. Ciprut, University of Pennsylvania

Dual-Use Technology Controls and Security
William J. Long, Georgia Institute of Technology

Cooperation and Conflict: Export Controls in East Asia
Richard T. Cupitt, University of Georgia

Discussant: David M. Rowe,Ohio State University

Panel Thu-B-1

Theme Panel

Knowledge Dynamics of Global Governance I

Chair: James Rosenau, George Washington University

Borrowing Authority, Mark Amen,University of South Florida

Economic and Financial Analysis Considered as Knowledge Dynamics
of Global Governance
Timothy J. Sinclair, York University

Who Knows ? The Place of Local Knowledge in Global Environmental
Governance
Ronnie D. Lipschutz, University of California=3DD1Santa Cruz

Renegade States in International Affairs: A Conceptual Exploration=20
Lorraine Eden, Carleton University and Charles F. Hermann, Ohio
State University

Discussant: Raymond Duvall, University of Minnesota

Panel Thu-B-9

Structural Adjustment: IPE and Conflict Issues

Chair: Carlos E. Juarez, University of California=3DD1San Diego

Economic Adjustment and Ethnic Conflict in Mexico, Peru, and
Bolivia
Alison Brysk, Pomona College and Carol Wise, Johns Hopkins
University

Countries: Venezuela and Mexico
Alberto Martinez C., Simon Bolivar University

Consolidating Apartheid: The Role of the IMF in
Negotiations with Apartheid South Africa
Horace Bartilow, University of Dayton

Economic Liberalization in Latin America: A Critique of Neo-
orthodoxy and the =3DD2Washington Consensus=3DD3 on Policy Reform
Carlos E. Juarez, University of California=3DD1San Diego

Economic Performance, Adjustment. and Political Conflict in the
Third World
Juha Auvinen, University of Helsinki

Discussant: Mark E. Denham, University of Toledo

Panel Thu-B-10

Regional Power Struggles, Buffer States, and the Rise of System
Challengers

Chair: Matthew Krain, Indiana University

The Venetian-Genoese Regional Rivalry and the Rise of Portugal as
a Global Power David Kelly, Indiana University

A Buffer-Zone in the Ancient Hawaiian World System: The Pololu
Valley, Hawaii
Elena Ermolaeva and Christopher Chase-Dunn, Johns Hopkins
University

The Japanese Phoenix and the Transformation of East Asia: World
Economy, Geopolitics, and Asian Regionalism in the Long I
Twentieth Century
Thomas Reifer, SUNY=3DD1Binghamton

Impacts of Increasing Integration in the World Economy on Regional
Inequality and t Well-Being in China in the Early 1990s
Fengxiang Song, Kansas State University

Hegemonic Transition and the Creation of the 'Greater China"
Ian Robert Douglas,University of Newcastle

Discussant: Kurt Burch, University of Delaware

Panel Thu-C-13

Knowledge Dynamics of Global Governance II

Chair: Richard W. Mansbach,lowa State University

The United States and the Globalization of Information: The
Hegemonic Implications of Foreign Policy
Edward A. Comor, American University

Surveiilance and Multilateralism
Martin Hewson, York University

Logic of Ungovernability
Robert Latham, Social Science Research Council

Metaphors of Social Closure and Global Governance
Ronen Palan, University of Newcastle

Discussant:
Michael G. Schechter, Michigan State University

Panel Thu-C-1 4

The Political Economy of Aid Flows

Chair: Timothy J. McKeown, University of North Carolina

Two Aid Hegemons: Japanese-American Interactions and Aid
Allocations to Latin America
Saori N. Katada, The World Bank

Interest Groups and US Commodity Flows under PL 480
Polly Diven, Grand Valley State University

Free Rider Supporter. or Competitor? Japanese and American Aid to
East Asia
Margaret Tolbert, University of North Carolina

North-South or East-West-South? The Naming and (Re)conceptualizing
of Western European Aid Policies since 1989
Marianne Marchand, University of Amsterdam and Karin Fierke
University of Amsterdam

Discussant: Jonathan R. Strand, University of Nebraska

Panel Thu-D-3

Roundtable: IPE Distinguished Scholar Award Honoring Robert
O.Keohane

Chairs: Duncan Snidal, University of Chicago

Participants:

Helga Haftendorn, Free University of Berlin

Richard Higgott, University of Manchester

Peter Katzenstein, Cornell University

Stephen Krasner, Stanford University

Charles Lipson, University ot Chicago

IPE program continued (Friday and Saturday panels)

Panel Fri-A-3

Globalization and State Policy Effectiveness I: Core State
Politics

Beyond National Security? The International Integration of Defense
Industries
Andrew Latham, University of Manitoba

Financial Globalization and the Residual State: The
Despatialization of the Territorial State
Philip G.Cerny, University of York

On the Road to Capitalism? East Europe and the Global Economy
Peter Rutland, Wesleyan University

US Foreign Economic Policy in an Era of Globalization: Economic
Identity and a New Economic Nationalism
Mary B. Geske, Williams College

Discussants: Richard Higgott,University of Manchester
Randall Germain, University of Shetfield

Panel Fri-A-14

Transnational Capital and the Environment: Positive or Negative
Impact?

Chair:John McCormick, Indiana University=3DD1Indianapolis

Foreign Direct Investment and Sustainable Development: A Research
Agenda
Jennifer Metzger, Rutgers University

Hazards on the Move: The Global Political Economy and the Toxic
Waste Trade
Jennifer Clapp, York University

Capital Mobility or Ecological Sustainability? Transnationals
versus Local Resource Use Regimes
Dulcey Lorraine Simpkins, University of Michigan

Discussant: Virginia Ann Haufler, University of Maryland

Panel Fri-A-16

The Political Economy of US Trade Policy

Chair:

Michael J. Frantantuono, Dickinson College

Trade Politics in the US Senate from Tokyo round to NAFTA
Pierre Martin, University of Montreal

The Politics of US Export Flows
William Dixon, University of Arizona and Bruce Moon, Lehigh
University

The Politics of Free Trade in the US House of Representatives:
Explaining the NAFTA Vote
William P. Avery, University of Nebraska
Howard G. Romanko, University of Arizona

Discussant: Michael J. Frantantuono, Dickinson College

Panel Fri-B-5

Beyond Sovereignty l: Multinationals, Natural Resources, and the
Environment

Chair:Matthias Finger, Columbia University

Multinationals' Changing Perception of Global Environmental Issues
and Problems
Matthias Finger, Columbia University

Organizational Dynamics of Ecological Crisis
Tom Princen,University of Michigan

Natural Resource Policy and State-building: The Case of Oil in
Algeria, Iran, and Kuwait
Miriam Lowi, Trenton State College

Checkmate: Environmental Politics and Multinational Mining in the
Venezuelan Andes
Roland Ely, Universidad de los Andes

Discussant: Karrin Scapple, Southwest Missouri State University

Panel Fri-B-13

Foreign Investment and Trade in the Americas

Chair: Nancy S. Mandel California Bar, Pennsylvania Bar, and
District of Columbia Bar

NAFTA, Multinational Corporations, and Foreign Investment, Alan
M.Rugman, University of Toronto

US Outward Direct Investment and US Exports in the Manufacturing
Sector: An Empirical Analysis
Edward M. Graham, Institute for International Economics

Recent Mexican Trade Cases Key Legal and Economic Issues
Nancy S. Mandel, California Bar, Pennsylvania Bar, and
District of Columbia Bar

Mexico: Foreign Investment and Trade
Kurt Unger, CIDE (Mexico)

Discussant Robert T. Kudrle, University of Minnesota

Panel Fri-B-14

GATT: The Road from ITO to WTO

Chair:Dale L. Smith, Florida State University

The Failure of the International Trade Organization=D4

Florida State University

The Political Economy of the Most-FavoredNation Rule
Richard Sherman, University of Washington

Whither International Trade'? Taking Stock of the Uruguay Round
Razeen Sally, London School of Economics

National Labor Organizations and the Emerging World Trade
Organization
Christopher Candland ,Columbia University

Discussants, Robert Wolfe Queen's University and John Kroll
Dartmouth College

Panel Fri-C-10

Beyond Sovereignty Il: Environmental Regimes and Ecological Crisis

Chair: Howard Warshawsky, Roanoke College

The Loss of Global Fisheries, Sovereignty and the National
Interest
Herman Prager, Northeast Louisiana University

Discussant: Juliann Allison, Binghamton University

Panel Fri-C-13

The New Regionalisms after Socialism

Sponsors:

Chair: Karin Fierke, University of Amsterdam

Reconstructing East and Central European Political Economies
Malcolm Grieve, Acadia University

The Spectre of Organized Crime in the Post Soviet Era Arms,
Drugs,and Other Goodies
Kiaras Gharabaghi, Dalhousie University

Overlapping Identities and the State: Can Hungarian Minorities Be
Tied to Democratic States in Eastern Europe?
Ann Grimths, Dalhousie University

Economic Interdependence and Ukrainian Security Policy
Paul D'Anieri, University of Kansas

Discussants, Earl F. Gibbons, Thunderbird School of Int'l
Management

Panel Fri-C-14

Globalization and State Policy Effectiveness II: The State and
Multinational Corporations

Chair: Stephen J. Kobrin, Lauder Institute of Management and
International Studies

Mulitnationals, Two-Level Games, and the European Community
Maria Green Cowles, American University

The Metamorphosis of Global Corporations from Servants of the
State to Servants of the Market: The Case of Commercial-Class
Aircraft Manufacturing
Vicki Golich, California State University=3DD1San Marcos

Strategic Alliances and State Control of Economic Actors
Stephen J. Kobrin, The Lauder Institute of Management and
Intemational Studies

Convergence and Fissure? MNC Behavior in the Triad
Simon Reich, University of Pittsburgh and Louis Pauly
University of Toronto

Discussants: Tony Porter, McMaster University and Alan M. Rugman
University of Toronto

Panel Fri-D-6

Environmental Degradation in World Historical Systems Perspective

Chair: Bob Denemark, University of Delaware

Species-Being to Eco-Being: The Rise of Post-World System Morality
Albert Bergesen, University of Arizona

Accumulation. Environmental Degradation, and Core-Periphery
Relations in the World System, 2500 B.C.E. to 1993 C.E.
Sing Chew, Humbolt State University and Daniel Blain, Humbolt
State University

Emissions from Industrial Production in the Post-War Era: The
Political Economy of Energy Efficiency in the World System,1950-90
Peter Grimes, Johns Hopkins University and Timmons Roberts, Tulane
University

Global Restructuring and the Environment: Notes towards a World
System Analysis
David Smith, University of California=3DD1Irvine

Discussants: Andre Gunder Frank, University of Amsterdam and Aseem
Prakash,Indiana University

Panel Fri-D-12

Negotiating the Terrain of Culture: Rethinking Agency in IPE

Chair: Matt Davies, University of Denver

How the Underdogs Survive Neoliberalism Culture, Global
Accumulation Strategies, and Informal Economies
Matt Davies, University of Denver

The Reinvention of Africa: African Writers, Political
Consciousness, and Aesthetic Form
Elizabeth M. Davies, University of Toronto=D4

Native Hawaiian Sovereignty Struggles
Oneida Mascarenas, Metropolitan State College of Denver

Situational Objectives, or Notes on Reading the Cultural World
System in the 90s
Henry Schwarz, Georgetown University

Discussant: Mark Laffey, Kent State University

Panel Fri-D-13

Developmental Lessons from Asia

Chair: Timothy Shaw, Dalhousie University

Learning from the Japanese: The Implications of the Japanese
Development, 1868-1939, for Africa and Asia
E. Wayne Nafziger, Kansas State University

How Others Learn: Meiji Japan's Integration and Reformulation of
Neoclassical Economics
L.H.M.Ling, Syracuse University

Asian Development and Economic Reform in Africa
Howard Stein, Roosevelt University

Malaysia and Thailand: Models for Economic Development at the
Margins'?
Richard Stubbs, McMaster University

Discussants

M. Ramesh, University of New England=3DD1Australia and Chyungly Lee
University of Maryland

Panel Fri D-19

The EU as a Polity: How and for Whom?

Chair: Madeleine Hosli, European Institute of Public
Administration

EU Social Policy in the 1990s: Did Maastricht Square the Circle?
Robert Geyer, University of Wisconsin=3DD1Madison

EU Political Integration and Capital Exit
Mark Aspinwall, London School of Economics

Citizen Discourse and Practice in a Nonstate The EC/EU Citizenship
Policy Packages
Antje Weiner, Carleton University

Regional Interests and Economic Integration: Multilevel Politics
in the European Union
John Constantelos, Duke University

Discussant: Maria Green Cowles, American University

The Political Economy of EU Trade Policy

Chair: John T. S. Keeler, University of Washington

United They Stand? The European Community and Agricultural Trade
Liberalization in the GATT
Sophie Meunier, University of Chicago

Nordic Agricultural Reform: From National to Transnational
Protectionism
Christine Ingebritsen, University of Washington

European Standards Networks and the Forrnation and Integration of
Global Markets
Anthony R. Zito, University of Pittsburgh and Michelle Egan
University of Pittsburgh

Taking Stock of the Lome Convention: A Panacea for
Underdevelopment or a Grandiose Benevolence?
Olufemi Babarinde, Thunderbird School of Int'l Management

Discussants: Robert Paarlberg, Wellesley College and John T.
S.Keeler, University of Washington

Panel Sat-A-13

Foreign Investment and the Nation State

Chair: DeAnne Julius, Chief Economist, British Airways

Evaluating the Perils: Regulating Inward Foreign Investment
Leslie Elliott Armijo, Northeastern University

Foreign Direct Investment and Government Preference
Formation:Recent News from the Czech Republic
John Gould, Columbia University

Economic Nationalism and National Economic Identity in China
George T. Crane, Williams College

The Politics of Privatizing Regulated Industries in Argentina
Laura Hastings, University of Pittsburgh

Discussant: Fei-Ling Wang, J Georgia Institute of Technology

Panel Sat-A-14

Civil Societies in the Global Political Economy l: Sub-Saharan
Africa

Chair: Gerald Schmitz, Library of Parliament, Canada

The Development of Civil Societies: The Compatibilities and
Contradictions of Transnational and National Processes
Sandra MacLean, Dalhousie University

Civil Society's Responses to Structural Adjustment in Africa
Julius Nyang'oro, University of North Carolina=D4
Larry Swatuk, York University

Popular Participation and the Limits of "Apolitical Development":
The World Bank and Nongovernmental Organizations=20
Paul Nelson, Church World Service and Lutheran World Relief

Discussant: Gerald Schmitz, Library of Parliament, Canada

Panel Sat-A-19

Globalization and State Policy Effectiveness III: Labor
Market Policies

Chair: Martin Schain, NYU

Globalization and International Labor Markets
Jeanette Money, UC-Davis
Policy Effectiveness and the Regulation of Immiigration in Europe
Martin A. Schain

Globalization and Regionalization in High-Technology Labor Markets
Sally Hayward, Nottingham Trent University

Neoliberalism and US Immigration Policy Migration Control in an
Era of Economic and Political Interdependence
Debra DeLaet, University of Notre Dame

Discussant: William Haller, University of Pittsburgh

Panel Sat B-15

Dimensions of the US-Japan Relationship

Chair: Neil Richardson, University of Wisconsin - Madison

US Economic Policy toward Japan during the Clinton Administration:
A Midterm Report Card
Michael J. Frantantuono, Dickinson College

Institutional Adjustment to Changed Power Distributions: Japan and
the United States in the IMF
David P. Rapkin, University of Nebraska and Joseph U. Elston
University of Nebraska

Southeast Asian Agendas and Realities:
Simon Reich, University of Pittsburgh, Davis B. Bobrow, Uniersity
of Pittsburgh and Steve Chan, University of Colorado

The US-Japan Relationship: Implications for Trade Blocs
Neil Richardson, University of Wisconsin=3DD1Madison

Discussant:, Hideo Sato, University of Tsukuba

Paenl Sat-B-16

Civil Societies in the Global Political Economy II: Asia and the
Americas

Civil Societies, States, and the International System:
Meaning,Practice, and Identity in Malaysia and Singapore
Sheila Nair, University of Minnesota

Redefining Civil Society in the Global Political Economy:
NGOs,Transnational Networks, International Donor Agencies, the
Prospect for Democratic Governance in Indonesia
James V. Riker, University of Wisconsin=3DD1Madison

Regionalization and Human Rights: Civil Society Responses to NAFTA
Laura MacDonald, Carleton University

Social Movements and the Struggle for Democracy in Guatemala: From
Despair to Hope
Tammy Hall, Dalhousie University

Discussant: Marianne Marchand, University of Amsterdam

Panel Sat-B-17

Roundtable: A New International Aviation Regime? A Roundtable on
the Fiftieth Anniversary of the Chicago Air Transport Convention

Chair: Martin Staniland, University of Pittsburgh

Participants:

Gerald Bernstein, Stanford Research Institute

Vicki Golich, California State University=3DD1San Marcos

DeAnne Julius, Chief Economist. British Airways

Paul Mifsud, KLM Royal Dutch Shell Airlines

Michael Pustay, Texas A & M University

Joseph T. Schwieterman, DePaul University

Jeffrey Shane, Wilmer, Cuttler, and Pickering

David W. Thornton, University of South Carolina

Panel Sat-C-13

Strategic Approach in East European Marketization

Chair: Gabor Bakos, Institute of Economics=3DD1Budapest

Hungarian Responses to the Challenges of the Nineties
Karoly Foldes, Hungarian Academy of Sciences

On Investment in Environment in Poland and Eastern Europe during
the Transformation Period
Wojciech Bienkowski, International Fund for Environmental
Protection and Water Management (Poland)
Gabor Bakos, Institute of Economics=3DD1Budapest

Can Japanese Experience of Industrial Policy Be Helpful for East
European Economic Reform?
Ken Morita, Hiroshima University

Russian Local Authorities in the Transitional Period
Alexander Barskii, Central Economics and Mathematics
Institute-Moscow

Discussant: Iliana Zloch, Harvard University

Panel Sat-C-15

The United States: Between Europe and Asia, within North America

Chair: Guy Poitras, Trinity University

Globalization, Regionalization, and Hegemonic Strategy: The United
States between Europe and Asia
Morten Ougaard, Copenhagen Business School

Regional Trade Strategies: US Policy in North America toward East
Asia
Guy Poitras, Trinity University

Discussant:

Richard Sherman, University of Washington

Panel Sat-D-2

Beyond Traditional IPE: Feminist and Green Perspectives

Chair: Deborah Stienstra, University of Winnipeg

A Further Step beyond the Three Orthodoxies: IPE from a Green
Perspective
Eric Helleiner, Trent University

Some Feminist Musings on World Orders and World Ordering
Deborah Stienstra, University of Winnipeg

Women, Statecraft, and Political Equality
Craig N. Murphy, Wellesley College

Discussant: Annica Young-Kronsell, Lund University

Paenl Sat-D-6

Globalization and Regionalism

Chair: Jeffrey Hart, Indiana University

Jeffrey Hart, Indiana University

On Spaces, Borders, and States: Critical Inquiries into IR Theory=20
Michael Niemann, Trinity College

Just How "Worldly" Is the "New World Order?": An Analysis of
Post-World War II Trade Flows
Robert G. Blanton III, University of South Carolina

Discussant: Steve Rosow, SUNY=3DD1Oswego

Panel Sat-D-12

Private Regimes and International Governance

Chair Stephen Krasner, Stanford University

Conflict Resolution and Dispute Settlement in Private
International Trade Relations: A Return to "Medieval
Internationalism"?
A. Clair Cutler, University of Victoria

Learning to Cope The Development of Risk Management Regimes
Virginia Ann Haufler, University of Maryland

Industry Cycles and the Relationship between Interstate and
Private Regimes

Tony Porter, McMaster University

The Failure of Contemporary International Monetary Cooperation How
the Success of International Trade and Investment Has Doomed a
Global Monetary Regime
Michaela Dabringhausen, University of Chicago

Discussants: Michael Webb, University of Victoria and Deborah
L.Spar, Harvard Business School
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