Barcelona Workshop on Global Governance “Access and Exclusion in Global Governance”
Free attendance. Confirm your assistance by writing an email to csanchez@ibei.org
January 11-12, 2018
Workshop on Global Governance organised by Institut Barcelona d’Estudis Internacionals & ESADEGeo Center for Global Economy and Geopolitics.
The aim of the Barcelona Workshop on Global Governance is to provide a venue for the study of global institutions from an institutional and organization design perspective. While most research on international organizations has viewed these entities as the platforms where states - the fundamental units - interact, this forum will focus on international governmental organizations (IGOs) themselves as the building blocks of global governance.
This workshop will bring together international scholars and experts involved in the study of these governance structures and their intricacies, in an attempt shed some light on how international governance mechanisms work and thus how they can be at their most effective in addressing global governance challenges.
For further information please visit: www.bcnwgg.net
Programme
Thursday 11 January 2018 (Venue: ESADE- Room 0018)
09.30-10.00 Coffee and registration
10.00-10.30 Introductory Session
- Framing Access and Exclusion in Global Governance (Miriam Bradley, IBEI; Nico Krisch, Graduate Institute, Geneva, and IBEI, & Angel Saz Carranza, ESADE)
10.30-11.45 Panel 1: Global Governance between Closure and Openness— B. Wietzke, IBEI, chair
- Access and Exclusion in Global Governance (Stephen Gill, York University, Toronto)
- Keeping politics out: the technocratic temptation in global governance (Jens Steffek, Technical University of Darmstadt)
11.45-12.15 Coffee break
12.15-13.30 Panel 2: The Place of Developing Countries—K. Yesilkagit, Leiden University, chair
- Benign or Malign Neglect? The Exclusion of Developing Countries from Global Standard-Setting in Banking (Emily Jones, Oxford University)
- Holding skills to influence global governance: access and exclusion from a different perspective (Henrique Choer Moraes, Brazilian Ministry of Foreign Affairs/Brussels)
13.30-15.00 Lunch
- Keynote: Javier Solana (ESADE)
15.00-16.45 Panel 3: The Process of Contestation—I. Bakker, York University, Toronto, chair
- Global MSIs as mechanisms for local inclusion? Lessons from communities in Peru (Deborah Avant, University of Denver)
- “Global Experimental Governance”: Access and Exclusion in Flexible Modes of Governance (René Urueña Hernandez, Universidad de Los Andes, Bogota)
- Access, Inclusion and Participation: The Long Haul of the Women’s Group in the UN Disaster Risk Reduction Program (Leah Kimber, University of Geneva)
16.45-17.15 Coffee break
17.15-18.30 Panel 4: The Politics of Institutional Choice and Design—E. Johansson-Nogués, IBEI, chair
- Gridlock and beyond (Thomas Hale, Oxford)
- The Institutional Design of Financial Market Regulation (Thomas Rixen & Simon Linder, University of Bamberg)
20.30 Dinner. Ca la Nuri (Passeig Marítim de la Barceloneta, 55).
Friday 12 January 2018 (Venue: IBEI - Room 24.S18)
9.30-11.15 Panel 5: Private Actor Influence: Risk or Opportunity?—D. Coen, University College London, chair
- IO Engagement With the Private Sector: Attracting Contribution, Not Capture: Best Practices in Selected IOs (Joost Pauwelyn, Graduate Institute of International and Development Studies, Geneva)
- WHO’s Engagements with NSA and the Risk of Undue Influence (K.M. Gopakumar, Third World Network)
- Celebrities in Global Governance: How Ben Affleck Brings New Actors, Ideas, and Funding to Development (Alexandra Budabin, University of Dayton)
11.15-11.45 Coffee break
11.45-13.30 Panel 6: The Place of Private Actors in Public Governance— M. Kahler, American University, chair
- The Paradoxes of CyberSovereignty: The Place of Activists and Markets in the Public Regulation of Cybersecurity (Anna Leander, Graduate Institute, Geneva & PUC-Rio)
- International Governance of the Defense Industry (Monica Herz, Rio)
- The institutionalization of bias: Tracing interest group influence (Marcel Hanegraaff, University of Amsterdam)
13.30-14.45 Lunch
14.45-16.00 Panel 7: Inclusive Multilateralism—A. Stone Sweet, National University of Singapore, chair
- Inclusive Multilateralism in the Age of Big Data (Eyal Benvenisti, University of Cambridge)
- Who Joins? Explaining Membership in Formal and Informal IGOs (Charles Roger, IBEI and University of Toronto & Sam Rowan, Oxford University)
16.00-16.30 Coffee break
16.30-17.45 Panel 8: Adaptation and Reform in Global Governance—J. Wouters, KU Leuven, chair
- Voice and Influence in Global Governance Reforms (Mercy DeMenno, Duke & Tim Büthe, Technical University, Munich)
- The Politics of Inclusion and Exclusion in Global Governance Practices (Vincent Pouliot, McGill University & Jean-Philippe Thérien, University of Montreal)
17.45-18.15 Concluding Discussion
20.00 Dinner. El 58 (Rambla del Poblenou, 58)
With the support of: