Posted on behalf of Eric Sheppard.

 *From: *SUBSCRIBE AAHPN Tom Mills <t.mil...@westminster.ac.uk>
 *Subject: **[PPE] Call for Papers - the Politics of Markets*
 *Date: *March 26, 2013 10:36:20 AM PDT
 *To: *<p...@jiscmail.ac.uk>
 *Reply-To: *Probabilistic Political Economy <p...@jiscmail.ac.uk>

CfP: The Politics of Markets – shaping, steering and evaluation


*Apologies for cross-posting

Conference organised by University of Westminster (Centre of the Study of
Democracy, Dept of Politics & International Relations) in collaboration
with Goldsmiths, University of London

Keynote speaker: Professor Andrew Gamble, University of Cambridge

Date: 13th June

This inter-disciplinary conference addresses questions concerning politics
and markets. Critiques abound of current national and international
political-economic systems, often characterised as ‘neoliberal,’ with the
role of markets in society being the subject of widespread debate and
concern. At the same time, it is often said that ‘governance’ has shifted
from hierarchical to networked-based arrangements, which has implications
for the debate on markets and the state. Yet in political science and
related disciplines there remains a need for engagement with evaluative
questions related to the scope of markets and specific modes of
‘governance’, particularly the following:

•       What should be the relative scope and inter-relationship between
politics and markets?

•       How can coordination be achieved across different tiers of
governance in steering and shaping markets?

•       How can policy processes more effectively address the different
forms of complexity involved in steering markets?

•       What are the methodological challenges for research addressing
these evaluative questions concerning governance and markets and how can
these questions be effectively addressed?

•       How far and adequately does current academic research engage with
these questions?

These questions about markets are clearly of fundamental importance to the
study and practice of politics and inevitably emerge in research analysing
various areas of national and international policy, being undertaken within
various, quite separate, disciplines and sub-disciplines of the social
sciences. This conference aims to bring together and compare research
intersecting with these questions across policy sectors, mapping their
findings and identifying emerging research agendas. Abstracts (of maximum
200 words) are invited that should summarise a proposed presentation for
the conference. We welcome proposed presentations varying in terms of
empirical/ theoretical/ methodological focus. Contributions might relate to
the following areas (though this may not be an exhaustive list):

International development
Health, education and social policy
Fiscal and monetary policy
Labour markets
Public-private partnerships
Environmental sustainability
Planning, housing and infrastructure
Regulations and industrial policy
Quasi-markets in public policy
Tools for analysing and evaluating policy (e.g. cost/benefit analysis)

We are interested in exploring the possibility of organising a journal
special issue to follow the conference.

Please submit abstracts to Tom Mills t.mil...@westminster.ac.uk by 22 April
2013

Organisers: Dan Greenwood, Tom Mills, Ricardo Blaug (Centre for the Study
of Democracy, Dept of Politics & International Relations) University of
Westminster); Simon Griffiths (Goldsmiths College, University of London).

Conference venue: University of Westminster, Regent campus

Reply via email to