The Oxford Handbook of Institutions of International Economic Governance and Market Regulation
This first part explores the micro-foundation of cross-border exchange and transnational contracts through analysis of how private ordering, networks of agents, and governments build and regulate (imperfect) markets.
Place - Based Exchange Platforms
- Chapter 1 - International Trade Finance from the Origins to the Present: Market Structures, Regulation, and Governance
Olivier Accominotti (London School of Economics) and Stefano Ugolini (University of Toulouse)
- Chapter 2 - The Simplest Model of Global Governance Ever Seen? The London Corn Market (1885 - 1914)
Jérôme Sgard (Sciences Po)
- Chapter 3 - The Medieval Expansion of Long- Distance Trade: Adam Smith on the Towns’ Escape from the Violent, Feudal Equilibrium
Barry R. Weingast (Stanford University)
Organizations Shaping Markets
- Chapter 4 - Markets for Knowledge: Intellectual Property, Organizational Arrangements, and International Governance
Brian S. Silverman (University of Toronto)
- Chapter 5 - Transnational Business Governance Through Private Standards
John Humphrey (University of Sussex)
- Chapter 6 - The Governance of Global Agri- Food Value Chains, Standards, and Development
Johan Swinnen (KU Leuven) and Rob Kuijpers (KU Leuven)
Private and Public Ordering Interplaying
- Chapter 7 - International Arbitration as a Tool of Global Governance: The Uses (and Abuse) of Discretion
Sophie Nappert (Three Verulam Buildings Barristers)
- Chapter 8 - Contractual Arbitrage
Mitu Gulati (University of Virginia), Stephen J. Choi (New York University), and Robert E. Scott (Columbia University)
- Chapter 9 - Regulate in Haste, Repent at Leisure: Private and Public Orderings in OTC Derivatives Markets
Craig Pirrong (University of Houston)
Epistemic Networks
- Chapter 10 - Government by Relational Infrastructures: The Case of the Transnational Institutionalization of the European Unified Patent Cour
Emmanuel Lazega (Sciences Po)
- Chapter 11. Policy Hubs and the Formation of Economic Regulatory Norms
William E. Kovacic (George Washington University)
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