Poster for book talk at Boston University on April 13 at 2pm
I'm so excited to return to my old stomping grounds next Monday to give a talk about The Fate of the Americas. If you're in the Boston area, it would be great to see you there! #History 🗃️
Poster for book talk at Boston University on April 13 at 2pm
I'm so excited to return to my old stomping grounds next Monday to give a talk about The Fate of the Americas. If you're in the Boston area, it would be great to see you there! #History 🗃️
Happy to share that this article is forthcoming in the Berkeley Journal of International Law! Please send along any comments or critiques. Draft available here: papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers....
Makes me fee better about academia
"When Mr. Redzepi wanted to discipline them but there were customers in the dining room, several employees said, he would crouch under the counters in the open kitchen and jab them in the legs with his fingers or a nearby utensil, like a barbecue fork."
What motivated foreign policy in Nigeria in the 1960s? And what can this tell us about post-colonial African history? Very interesting new piece by @chloemayoux.bsky.social !
Also, reminds of this great, recent book by Lisandro Claudio about the history of austerity in the Philippines. We can't heap all the blame on the IMF!
Terrific piece. Must add the latest book from @seanvanatta.bsky.social and @petercontibrown.bsky.social to my reading list.
(And, as scare quotes suggest, we should be careful about saying what "worked." There are a lot of rickety stories out there. We must listen to historians and their revisionist takes! 😤)
I especially agree on the need to reject two premises that prop up a lot of research and programming: (i) that societies behave like machines, and (ii) that approaches that "worked" in the US or Europe should be applied elsewhere.
Fascinating piece by Yuen Yuen Ang -- that our current moment is not a "polycrisis," but a "polytunity."
Child’s homemade do not disturb sign
Tempted to steal my daughter’s sign for my office door…
Read more here! (My author page; the paper page is not working 😎) papers.ssrn.com/sol3/cf_dev/...
This is obviously one piece of a very large puzzle. But it's an interesting piece. It improves our understanding of how the global economy worked during the era of "neoliberalism," and it suggests new reasons for the current global turn to state capitalism.
I describe how the World Bank in the 1980s and 1990s helped Chinese leaders reform and strengthen state-owned enterprises. This is interesting because across much of the rest of the Global South, the World Bank (together with the IMF) pushed strongly for privatization.
How did Chinese state-owned enterprises become some of the world's largest corporations? My latest paper (finally posted on SSRN!) tackles the question.