Over the past few years, China’s One Belt-One Road (OBOR) investment and trade initiative has gained a lot of attention from students, particularly those visiting UCL from China. This seems to be the result of political announcements and media coverage: ‘everyone is talking about it’ is a frequent motivation. This, in itself, is not at…
Category: Political Economy
Brexit Trade Deals
I wrote a short piece for The Conversation (picked up today by the International Business Times) on Britain’s post-Brexit bargaining power in trade deals. While yesterday’s vote injects more uncertainty into the Brexit process and potential outcome, the only way the UK can hope to gain some leverage in negotiations with the US would be…
Electoral institutions and trade protection in Public Choice
Electoral systems and trade-policy outcomes: the effects of personal-vote incentives on barriers to international trade, with Patrick Wagner, is now available online in Public Choice. The article is available through open access thanks to an agreement between UCL and Springer Nature. From the abstract: Despite established benefits in free trade, protectionism persists to varying degrees…
Pacific International Politics Conference
The third meeting of the Pacific International Politics Conference (PIPC) was held at Hong Kong University at the beginning of this month. I received the call for papers through the International Political Economy Society (IPES) email list earlier this year, and the combination of attractive location, substantive focus, and friendly (and established) organizers convinced me…
Journal metrics
I keep a list journals that represent possible outlets for my various research projects. Each year, when Scimago updates their SJR rankings, I go through my list and update my metrics.(1) I like the SJR scores because they reflect the weighted importance of references, rather than a simple citation count. Rather than treating references to…
Perspectives in (International) Political Economy
Welcome to the latest (and hopefully permanent) location of my infrequent blog, which has led a stuttering and meandering existence since my grad-school days. The frequency of early posts was limited by the incessent reading and research demands of a rigorous PhD program. More recently, these have been replaced with the infinitely more demanding student-welfare…