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Conference: The International Politics of Economic Globalization and Emerging Market Economies

por Cláudia Regina - publicado 12/02/2015 16:25 - última modificação 10/05/2018 15:06

Detalhes do evento

Quando

de 19/03/2015 - 09:00
a 20/03/2015 - 18:00

Onde

Sala da Congregação FEA 1 - Av. Prof. Luciano Gualberto, 908 - Cidade Universitária

Nome do Contato

Telefone do Contato

11 3091-1686

Participantes

Vide programação.

Adicionar evento ao calendário

Na condição de uma das principais iniciativas do programa de cooperação acadêmico-científica entre o Niehaus Center for Globalization and Government, da Princeton University, o Instituto de Relações Internacionais - IRI, o Núcleo de Pesquisas de Políticas Públicas - NUPPs, e o Instituto de Estudos Avançados - IEA, todos da Universidade de São Paulo – no âmbito do acordo entre as Universidade de Princeton e a USP, será realizado o Seminário Internacional A Política Internacional da Economia Globalizada e as Economias Emergentes de Mercado, entre os dias 19 e 20 de março de 2015, no prédio da FEA/USP, Campus Butantã, São Paulo, SP, Brasil. O Seminário será integrado por especialistas brasileiros, norte-americanos e europeus com reconhecida competência nas áreas de economia política internacional, de ciência política e de economia, cujo foco analítico têm incidido sobre os processos transformativos engendrados pela globalização nos países emergentes. O evento tem como objetivos a discussão de textos que darão subsídios à atualização de um marco teórico para análise empírica comparada dos países emergentes, no cenário pós-crise global de 2008, e, ainda, para ancorar em um terreno teórico e empírico mais sólido as análises sobre o status atual e prospectivo do Brasil no sistema internacional.

Inscrições

Evento gratuito, sem inscrição e sem tradução simultânea.

Programação

DAY 1 – Thursday, 19th March, 2015

9:00am: Opening Session – USP and Princeton authorities

9:45am-10:30am – Key Note: Andrew Hurrell (Oxford University)

Global Governance: Can the Centre Hold?

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

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

Presenters

Etel Solingen (University of California Irvine): Of Dominoes and Firewalls: The Domestic, Regional, and Global Politics of International Diffusion.

Marcelo de Paiva Abreu (PUC-Rio): Autarkic obsession: a long-term view of Brazil in the world economy.

Marcos Lisboa (INSPER), João M. P. de Mello (INSPER): Was Brazil different? The synthetic versus the real.

Nita Rudra (Georgetown University), Daniela Donno (University of Pittsburg): Are Rising Powers Changing the Shape of the World Economy?

Discussants

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

Lunch: 12:45pm-2:00pm

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

Presenters

Pedro Motta Veiga (CINDES), Sandra Rios (CINDES): The political economy of trade policy in Brazil: will it ever change?

Amâncio Jorge de Oliveira (Caeni/IRI/USP), Francisco Urdinez (Caeni/IRI/USP), Janina Onuki Caeni/IRI/USP): Domestic coalitions and international trade.

Layna Mosley (University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill): Labour rights and Multinational Production

Megumi Naoi (University of California San Diego): Framing Business Interests: How Campaigns Affect Firms’ Positions on Preferential Trade Agreements.

Discussants

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

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

4:15pm-5:00pm – Keynote: H. Milner (Princeton University)

IPE: Where do we Stand?

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

 

Day 2 – Friday, 20th March, 2015

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

Presenters

Clodoaldo Hugueney (FGV-SP): Rebalancing and the Political Economy of Trade: a Diplomatic Perspective.

Vera Thorthensen (FGV-SP): OMC governance, and the impact of mega-trade agreements on emerging countries.

Maria Herminia T. de Almeida (IRI/USP), Feliciano Sá Guimarães (IRI/USP): Brazil’s entrepreneurial power in global and regional arenas: successes and failures in three scenarios.

Faisal Z. Ahmed (Princeton University): The Perils of International Capital.

Discussants

Robert Kaufman (Rutgers University) and Grigore Pop-Eleches (Princeton University)

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

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

Presenters

Matthew Taylor (American University/ USP): Ideas as Non-Tariff Barriers: Trade Policy Change in Latin America, 1960-2010.

Judith Goldstein (Stanford University), Robert Gulotty (Stanford University): Back To School: The role of economic ideas in American trade policymaking.

Lourdes Sola (NUPPs/USP) and Sérgio Vale (MBA/USP): Shifting narratives of emergence: looking for the global inside the regional and the national.

Cristina Davis (Princeton University): More than Just a Rich Country Club: Membership Conditionality and Institutional Reform in the OECD.

Discussants

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

Lunch: 1:30pm-2:30pm

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

Presenters

Marcus Melo (UFPE): The politics of redistribution: the interplay of domestic and international factors in Latin America and beyond.

Nora Lustig (Tulane University): Taxes, Transfers, Inequality and the Poor in the Developing World.

Helen Milner (Princeton University), Dan Nielson (Brigham Young University), Adam Harris (New York University), Mike Findley (University of Texas, Austin): Elite and Mass Support for Foreign Aid versus Government Programs: Experimental Evidence from Uganda.

Daniella Campello (FGV-Rio): Globalization and Democracy: The Politics of Market Discipline in Latin America.

Elizabeth Balbachevsky (DCP/NUPPs/USP), Nina Ranieri (FD/NUPPs/USP): Brazil: education system, skills regime and the new democracy-driven educational regime.

Discussants

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

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

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

Presenters

Eduardo Viola (IRel/UNB) and Larissa Basso (IRel/UNB): Decarbonization in large emerging economies: comparing China, India, Russia, Brazil and Mexico.

Jacques Marcovitch (USP): Financing the struggle against deforestation: Brazil and Indonesia.

José Goldemberg (USP) and Patrícia Maria Guardabassi (USP): Burden sharing in the implementation of the Climate Convention.

David Victor (University of California San Diego): Making America Relevant to International Climate Diplomacy Again.

Discussants

Xander Slasky (Princeton University) and Dustin Tingley (Harvard University).

 

 

 

Evento com transmissão em: http://www.iea.usp.br/aovivo