WINIR 2014 - Programme
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Thursday 11 September
12:00-17:00 Registration
14:15-14:30 Welcome
14:30-15:45 Keynote lecture: Kathleen Thelen
15:45-16:15 Coffee/tea break
16:15-18:15 Parallel sessions 1
18:30-20:00 Reception
Friday 12 September
09:00-13:00 Registration
09:00-09:30 Coffee/tea
09:30-10:45 Keynote lecture: Geoffrey Ingham
10:45-11:15 Coffee/tea break
11:15-13:15 Parallel sessions 2
13:15-14:30 Lunch
14:30-16:30 Parallel sessions 3
16:30-17:00 Coffee/tea break
17:00-18:15 Keynote lecture: Barry Smith
Saturday 13 September
09:00-09:30 Coffee/tea
09:30-10:45 Keynote lecture: Timur Kuran
10:45-11:15 Coffee/tea break
11:15-13:15 Parallel sessions 4
13:15-14:30 Lunch
14:30-15:45 Keynote lecture: Katharina Pistor
15:45-16:15 Coffee/tea break
16:15-16:45 Why WINIR?
16:45-18:00 First WINIR membership meeting
19:30-22:30 Conference dinner
Sunday 14 September
09:45-12:00 Guided tour of Greenwich
Thursday 11 September
14:30–15:45 Keynote lecture 1
Kathleen Thelen (MIT, USA), “The politics of institutional change”
Chair: Katharina Pistor
16:15–18:15 Parallel sessions 1
P1.1 – The Evolution of Organizations
Convenor: Denise Dollimore
Chair: Richard Webb
Dermot Breslin (University of Sheffield, UK), “What evolves in organizational co-evolution?”
Denise Dollimore (University of Hertfordshire, UK) & Elmo Gomes (University of Hertfordshire, UK), “The meaning of evolutionary language in the study of organisations: lost in translation?”
Manuel Wäckerle (Vienna University of Economics and Business, Austria), “Generic institutionalism: an evolutionary political economy approach to socioeconomic transformation processes”
Ulrich Witt (Max Planck Institute of Economics & Friedrich-Schiller University Jena, Germany) & Hagen Worch (Fernfachhochschule Schweiz, Switzerland), “Growing into troubles: self-organizing criticality and forced change in the governance of growing firm organizations”
P1.2 – Institutional Complementarities
Convenor: Francesca Gagliardi
Chair: Alice Sindzingre
Bruno Amable (University of Paris I Panthéon-Sorbonne, France), “Institutional complementarities in the dynamic comparative analysis of capitalism”
Francesca Gagliardi (University of Hertfordshire, UK), “Institutional complementarities: disciplines, methods and future research”
Gregory Jackson (Freie Universität Berlin, Germany), “Understanding complementarities as configurations”
Ugo Pagano (University of Siena, Italy & Central European University, Hungary) & Simone Sepe (University of Arizona, USA), “Legal and economic disequilibrium”
P1.3 – The Meaning and Relevance of Property Rights
Convenor: Geoffrey Hodgson
Chair: Bruno Gandlgruber
Frank Decker (independent, Australia), “On the economic importance and impact of ownership and security: claims to property as the institutional foundation of monetary systems”
Geoffrey Hodgson (University of Hertfordshire, UK), “The ‘economics of property rights’ is about neither property nor rights”
Frank Stephen (University of Manchester, UK), “Property rights and economic development”
Erik Stubkjaer (Aalborg University, Denmark), “The emergence of real property rights in Denmark: a case of path dependent institutional change”
P1.4 – Market Institutions
Chair: Claude Ménard
Bas Bavel (Utrecht University, Netherlands), “The invisible hand? The emergence and decline of market economies throughout history”
Rutger Claassen (Utrecht University, Netherlands), “Capabilities and market regulation”
Kurt Dopfer (University of St. Gallen, Switzerland & Vienna University of Economics and Business, Austria), “The rule-based theory of the market”
Amadeus Gabriel (La Rochelle Business School, France), “On the origins and evolution of credit rating agencies”
P1.5 – Rationality, Trust & Cooperation: Banks, Contracts & Property
Chair: Daniel Cole
Niclas Berggren (Research Institute of Industrial Economics, Sweden), Sven-Olov Daunfeldt (Dalarna University, Sweden) & Jörgen Hellström (Umeå University, Sweden), “Does social trust speed up economic reforms? The case of central-bank independence”
Arie Krampf (Academic College Tel Aviv Yaffo, Israel), “Orthodox theory of central banking reconsidered: explaining varieties of central banking norms”
Arturo Lara Rivero (Metropolitan Autonomous University, Mexico) & Helder Osorio (Metropolitan Autonomous University, Mexico), “The tragedy of the anticommons in the construction of knowledge of the human genome”
Alexander Lascaux (Russian Presidential Academy of National Economy, Russia), “E-lusive trust: calculativeness, trusting attitudes and economic organization of electronic contracts”
P1.6 – Institutions & Development: Families, Caste & Disasters
Chair: Ana Castro
Bruno Coric (University of Split, Croatia), “Economic disasters, output growth and volatility over the last two centuries”
Selin Dilli (Utrecht University, Netherlands), “The long term determinants of development: family systems and (female) agency in the world system, 1900-2000”
Dan Johansson (Örebro University, Sweden), Anders Bornhäll (HUI Research, Sweden & Örebro University, Sweden) & Johanna Palmberg (Royal Institute of Technology, Sweden), “Independence, the price of control and the ‘capital constraint paradox’ in small family firms”
Elisabetta Basile (University of Rome La Sapienza, Italy), “An institutionalist analysis of the role of caste in contemporary India”
P1.7 – Firms & Corporations
Chair: Pertti Aaltonen
Michael Joffe (Imperial College London, UK), “The world created by capitalist firms”
Philipp Kern (King’s College London, UK), “Institutional change in times of crisis: corporate practice as a driver of incrementalism”
Richard Langlois (University of Connecticut, USA), “The corporation and the twentieth century”
Massimiliano Vatiero (Università della Svizzera italiana, Switzerland), “On the origin of corporate governance species”
P1.8 – Legal Institutions
Chair: Katharina Pistor
Federica Gerbaldo (University of Turin, Italy), “Do international courts promote legal changes with compensatory awards? The case study of European Court of Human Rights and Italy”
Leonor Rossi (Nova School of Business and Economics, Portugal), “When institutions are late: the system of legal costs in Regulation EC 1049/2001”
Jerg Gutmann (University of Hamburg, Germany), Stefan Voigt (University of Hamburg, Germany) & Lars P. Feld (University of Freiburg, Germany), “The effects of judicial independence 10 years on: cross-country evidence using an updated set of indicators”
Mathias Siems (Durham University, UK), “A network-based taxonomy of the world’s legal systems”
Friday 12 September
09:30–10:45 Keynote lecture 2
Geoffrey Ingham (University of Cambridge, UK), “China: the ‘great divergence’ and the ‘missing link’”
Chair: Geoff Hodgson
11:15–13:15 Parallel sessions 2
P2.1 – Institutional Methodology & Theory I
Chair: Francesca Gagliardi
Clemens Buchen (EBS University of Business and Law, Germany) & Alberto Palermo (EBS University of Business and Law, Germany), “Evolutionary stability in a principal-agent population game”
Kai Kaufmann (University of Liverpool, UK), “Institutionalizability as recursion”
Ioana Negru (SOAS University of London, UK), “On markets and institutions: a methodological perspective”
Makoto Nishibe (Hokkaido University, Japan) & Takashi Hashimoto (Japan Advanced Institute of Science and Technology, Japan), “Theoretical model of institutional ecosystems and its economic applications”
Nadia von Jacobi (University of Pavia, Italy), “Institutional interconnections: understanding symbiotic relationships”
P2.2 – Firms & Industries I
Chair: Michael Joffe
Jokin Cearra (University of the Basque Country, Spain), “Effect of the environment on corporate entrepreneurship”
Véronique Dutraive (University of Lyon 2, France) & Richard Arena (University of Nice Sophia Antipolis, France), “Industrial economics and policies: recent issues and theoretical foundations”
Mathias Erlei (Clausthal University of Technology, Germany) & Wiebke Roß (Clausthal University of Technology, Germany) , “Bounded rationality as an essential ingredient of the holdup problem”
Gerhard Schnyder (King’s College London, UK), “The rise of shareholder-orientated corporate governance in Europe: longitudinal firm-level evidence”
Eric Scorsone (Michigan State University, USA), Anne Lawton (Michigan State University, USA), David Schweikhardt (Michigan State University, USA) & Kristi Bowman (Michigan State University, USA), “An institutional approach to corporate bankruptcy law”
P2.3 – Institutions, Competition & Innovation
Chair: Claude Ménard
Piret Kukk (Utrecht University, Netherlands), Marko P. Hekkert (Utrecht University, Netherlands) & Ellen H.M. Moors (Utrecht University, Netherlands), “The impact of institutional changes on the innovation system: the case of personalized cancer medicines in England”
Fabio Landini (Bocconi University, Italy) & Franco Malerba (Bocconi University, Italy), “Technological change, public policy and catch-up in global industries: a simulation model”
Giovanna Massarotto (Bocconi University, Italy), “The changed role of antitrust agencies: from watchdogs to regulators”
Mark McKenna (University of Notre Dame, USA) & Brett Frischmann (Cardozo Law School, USA), “Comparative analysis of innovation institutions in context”
Dina Tsytsulina (Higher School of Economics, Russia), “The effects of competition policy tools on the behavior of companies”
P2.4 – Institutional Change
Chair: Ioana Negru
Terrence McDonough (National University of Ireland Galway, Ireland), “Social structures of accumulation: a Marxian institutionalism?”
Felix-Fernando Muñoz (Autonomous University of Madrid, Spain), María-Isabel Encinar (Autonomous University of Madrid, Spain) & Nadia Fernández-de-Pinedo (Autonomous University of Madrid, Spain), “Intentionality and technological and institutional change: implications for economic development”
Jens Rommel (Humboldt University of Berlin, Germany) & Christian Kimmich (Swiss Federal Institute WSL, Switzerland), “Constitutional rules in the study of evolutionary institutional change: a research heuristic for agent-based modelers and experimentalists”
Ferdinand Wenzlaff (Leuphana University Lüneburg, Germany), “Dynamic stagnation: institutional change as a reflex of declining economic growth”
Jan van Zanden (Utrecht University, Netherlands), “On Amartya Sen and Douglass North, and the link between agency and economic development”
P2.5 – Political Institutions
Chair: Ugo Pagano
Christian Bjornskov (Aarhus University, Denmark) & Martin Rode (University of Navarra, Spain), “Stolper-Samuelson democratizes”
Maurizio Lisciandra (University of Messina, Italy) & Emanuele Millemaci (University of Messina, Italy), “The economic effect of corruption in Italy: a regional panel analysis”
Hilton Root (George Mason University, USA & King’s College London, UK), “Sources of institutional variation in global development and order building: a complex systems approach”
Anna Soci (University of Bologna, Italy), Anna Maccagnan (University of Bologna, Italy) & Daniela Mantovani (University of Modena and Reggio Emilia, Italy), “Does inequality harm democracy? An empirical investigation on the UK”
Roberto Veneziani (Queen Mary University of London, UK), Carlo Fiorio (University of Milan, Italy) & Simon Mohun (Queen Mary University of London, UK), “Social democracy and distributive conflict in the UK, 1950-2010”
P2.6 – Institutions & Development
Chair: Geoff Hodgson
Anne Booth (SOAS, University of London, UK), “Institutions and governance in colonial and post-colonial southeast Asia: the case of export-oriented agriculture”
Judit Kapas (University of Debrecen, Hungary), “Unbundling culture: The impact of individual values on development”
Lyndal Keeton (University of the Witwatersrand, South Africa) & Giampaolo Garzarelli (University of Rome La Sapienza, Italy & University of the Witwatersrand, South Africa), “Internal exit in pre-colonial Southern Africa (ca.1500-1910)”
Atiyab Sultan (University of Cambridge, UK), “Institutional explanations of long-run underdevelopment: an insidious discourse?”
Gerhard Wegner (University of Erfurt, Germany), “Capitalist transformation without political participation: German capitalism in the first half of the 19th century”
P2.7 – Institutions & the Natural Environment
Chair: Daniel Cole
Nathalie Berta (University of Reims, France), “The European carbon market”
Grazia Cecere (Telecom Business School, France) & Nicoletta Corrocher (Bocconi University, Italy), “Waste patents and regulation in EU countries”
Thomas Herzfeld (Leibniz nstitute of Agricultural Development in Transition Economies, Germany) & Max Spoor (Erasmus University Rotterdam, Netherlands), “Determinants of institutional change: a survey and an application to natural resource use in China”
Muriela Padua (Instituto Superior Técnico, Portugal), Diana Prata (King’s College London, UK) & Ana Costa (University Institute of Lisbon, Portugal), “Regulation of markets to promote empathy and pro-social behavior among energy consumers”
Annika Scharbert (Vienna University of Economics and Business, Austria), Sigrid Stagl (Vienna University of Economics and Business, Austria) & Manuel Wäckerle (Vienna University of Economics and Business, Austria), “An institutional approach to socio-ecological transformation: agency, structure and evolutionary political economy”
P2.8 – Money & Finance
Chair: Geoffrey Ingham
Paolo Dini (London School of Economics, UK) & Alexandros Kioupkiolis (Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, Greece), “Community currencies as laboratories of institutional learning: emergence of governance through the mediation of social value”
Ioannis Glinavos (University of Reading, UK), “The eye of the storm: ICSID and transnational law in the era of financial crisis”
Georgina M. Gómez (Erasmus University Rotterdam, Netherlands), “Why do people want their own currency? Money for a day: a social experiment in Argentina”
Giuseppe Littera (Sardex.net, Italy), Laura Sartori (University of Bologna, Italy), Paolo Dini (London School of Economics, UK) & Panayotis Antoniadis (ETH Zürich, Switzerland) , “From an idea to a scalable working model: merging economic benefits with social values in Sardex”
Mohsen Yazdanpanah (Erasmus University of Rotterdam, Netherlands), “Capitalist-credit money and development ethics”
14:30–16:30 Parallel sessions 3
P3.1 – Institutional Methodology & Theory II
Chair: Ugo Pagano
Oleg Ananyin (Higher School of Economics, Russia), “Institutions at the crossing of culture and economy”
Javier Aranzadi (Autonomous University of Madrid, Spain), “New institutional neoclassical economics or institutional economics?”
Ashok Chakravarti (University of Zimbabwe, Zimbabwe), “Imperfect information and opportunism”
Melissa Dennison (University of Bradford, UK) & Ian Fouweather (University of Bradford, UK), “Darwin’s Legacy: towards a creative conversation”
Svetlana Kirdina (Russian Academy of Sciences, Russia), “Methodological individualism and methodological institutionalism for interdisciplinary research”
Anna Zachorowska-Mazurkiewicz (Jagiellonian University, Poland), “Shared concepts of institutional and feminist economics”
P3.2 – Firms & Industries II
Chair: David Gindis
Pertti Aaltonen (Aalto University, Finland), “The co-evolution of institutions with the build-up of research in pharmaceutical firms and their role in current socio-technical industry transition”
Paivi Aaltonen (University of Lapland, Finland), “Institutional forces in the creation of new sustainable technologies: a case study of reusing old infrastructure – paper mills to datacenters”
Graham Brownlow (Queen’s University Management School, UK), “Back to the failure: an analytic narrative of the De Lorean debacle”
Lukas Wiafe (Viadrina European University, Germany) & Albrecht Söllner (Viadrina European University, Germany), “Institutions matter: a discursive perspective on inclusion”
Petar Stankov (University of National and World Economy, Bulgaria), “Firm size, market liberalization and growth”
Jan Peter van den Toren (University of Amsterdam, Netherlands), Marc van der Meer (Tilburg University, Netherlands) & Tammy Lie (Birch Consultants, Netherlands), “Competent national institutional regimes and sectoral variety”
P3.3 – Institutions & Development: Asia
Chair: Geoff Hodgson
Sung-Bae Kim (Soongsil University, South Korea), “Replicating Hong Kong: Is it a viable economic development strategy for developing countries?”
Michelle Liu (Dongbei University of Finance and Economics, China), “Understanding China’s miracle”
Adam M. Saunders (University of Oxford, UK) & Ke Meng (University of Oxford, UK) , “The institutional development of the Chinese political economy: comparisons with the West”
Miao Zhang (University of Malaya, Malaysia) & Rajah Rasiah (University of Malaya, Malaysia), “The provincialization of state policy: the four ‘ls’ of urban housing institutions in China”
Zehra Aftab (American University, USA), “Political economic consequences of Pakistan’s linguistically/religiously and economically fractured educational system”
Anna Kochanova (Max Plank Institute for Research on Collective Goods, Germany), Mary Hallward-Driemeier (World Bank, USA) & Bob Rijkers (World Bank, USA), “Economic costs of political connections: firm dynamics and completion pre and post-Suharto”
Bharat Punjabi (University of Western Ontario, Canada), “Canal bureaucracy and the corruption nexus around water in the Mumbai hinterland: questions for development and water governance in Maharashtra, India”
P3.4 – Institutions & Development: Transitional Economies
Chair: Klaus Nielsen
Svetlana Avdasheva (Higher School of Economics, Russia) & Polina Kryuchkova (Higher School of Economics, Russia), “Procedures, incentives and the enforcement models: the Russian case”
Ulan Kasymov (Humboldt University of Berlin, Germany), “Designing institutions regulating pasture use in Kyrgyzstan”
Peter Mihalyi (University of Pannonia, Hungary), “The importance of the design of privatization institutions: the experience of post-communist economies”
Gul Ozcan (Royal Holloway, University of London, UK), “Conceptualising post-Soviet institutions and new capitalists: politics of the Mikado game”
Katarzyna Szarzec (Poznan University of Economics, Poland) & Dawid Piatek (Poznan University of Economics, Poland), “What determines institutional change in transition economies?”
Joachim Zweynert (Witten/Herdecke University, Germany) & Ewa Dabrowska (Witten/Herdecke University, Germany), “Economic ideas and institutional change. the case of the Russian Stabilization Fund”
P3.5 – Institutions & Development: Latin America & Palestine
Chair: Ana Castro
Juan Lopez Aymes (Autonomous University of Nuevo León, Mexico) & Bruno Gandlgruber (Metropolitan Autonomous University, Mexico), “Institutional change and the political economy of development: an analytical proposal on property regimes, foreign investment, and integration of global networks”
Liandra Caldasso (Federal University of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil), Valeria Da Vinha (Federal University of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil) & Peter May (Federal University of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil), “Interface between economics and law in the debate on property rights for common resources: the case of Resex-Mar for fisheries co-management in Brazil”
Estela Maria Neves (Federal University of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil), “Deforestation in the Brazilian Amazon region and state organizations at local level”
Jairo Parada (Universidad del Norte, Colombia), “Veblen’s Imperial Germany and the industrialization of Latin America”
Jairo Salas-Paramo (Pontifical Xavierian University, Colombia), Viviana Gutiérrez-Rincón (Pontifical Xavierian University, Colombia) & Santiago Londoño-Jaramillo (Pontifical Xavierian University, Colombia), “Symbolic capital and discourse in the maintenance and disruption of institutions: the case of Venezuela”
Emanuele Lobina (Pontifical Xavierian University, Colombia) & Léo Heller (Federal University of Minas Gerais, Brazil), “Institutional bricolage, co-production of capacity, and sustainable water development”
Luca Andriani (Federal University of Minas Gerais, Brazil), “Fighting corruption in the Palestinian Territories: with or without social capital?”
P3.6 – Institutions in Europe
Chair: Francesca Gagliardi
Peter Claeys (Vrije Universiteit Brussel, Belgium) & Federico Martire (University of Torino, Italy), “If you want me to stay, pay: a model of asymmetric federalism in centralised countries”
Marina Grusevaja (Wiesbaden Business School, Germany) & Romy Broedner (Chemnitz University of Technology, Germany), “Varieties of capitalism and corporate governance in CEEC”
Paulo Marques (University Institute of Lisbon, Portugal), “Outsiderness among young generations in Europe: a fuzzy set analysis”
Gerhard Fuchs (University of Stuttgart, Germany), “Institutions under pressure and institutions enabling: the transformation of the Germany electricity system”
Anita Pelle (University of Szeged, Hungary) & Marcell Zoltán Végh (University of Szeged, Hungary), “A comparative analysis of competition across the EU internal market: evidence from 11 EU member states”
Argentino Pessoa (University of Porto, Portugal), “Explaining the Eurozone crisis: a fable or merely organizations without the adequate institutions?”
P3.7 – Institutions for the Future
Chair: Nicole Biggart
Panayotis Antoniadis (ETH Zürich, Switzerland) & Ileana Apostol (ETH Zürich, Switzerland), “Designing for local institutions in the hybrid city”
Slawomir Czech (University of Economics in Katowice, Poland) & Anna Zabkowicz (Polish Academy of Sciences, Poland), “The state and the triangle of interests: towards subordination or coordination?”
Jakob Kapeller (University of Linz, Austria), Bernhard Schütz (University of Linz, Austria) & Dennis Tamesberger (Austrian Chamber of Labour, Austria), “From free to civilized markets: first steps towards eutopia”
Sergey Kulpin (Russian Academy of Sciences, Russia) & Evgeny Popov (Russian Academy of Sciences, Russia), “Economic institutions for internet transactions”
Lorenzo Sacconi (University of Trento, Italy) & Virginia Cecchini Manara (Sant’Anna School of Advanced Studies, Italy), “Ex post stability of constitutions: an endogenous explanation”
Andre Sorensen (University of Toronto, Canada), “Institutions and urban space: path dependence, land and property capital”
P3.8 – An Institutional Panorama
Chair: Matthias Klaes
Stephan Panther (University of Flensburg, Germany) & Svenja Flechtner (University of Flensburg, Germany), “Towards a political economy of the middle-income trap: case study evidence on institutional change”
John Powles (University of Cambridge, UK), “Success and failure in reducing adult mortality risks since 1970: institutionalist approaches make better sense of the diverse experience of developed countries”
Sung Sup Rhee (Soongsil University, South Korea), “Imperfect property rights, bounded rationality and relation exchange”
Alice Sindzingre (CNRS, University of Paris West Nanterre, France & SOAS, University of London, UK), “Institutions as a composite and hierarchical concept: explaining the diverging paths of development”
Andre van Hoorn (University of Groningen, Netherlands) & Dimitrios Soudis (University of Groningen, Netherlands), “Local embeddedness, distance constraints, and credit assessments as organizational outcomes: how global are credit rating agencies?”
Jason Windawi (Princeton University, USA), “Beyond normal accidents: governance and the production of systemic risk”
17:00–18:15 Keynote lecture 3
Barry Smith (State University of New York at Buffalo, USA), “From speech acts to document acts: an ontology of institutions”
Chair: David Gindis
Saturday 13 September
09:30–10:45 Keynote lecture 4
Timur Kuran (Duke University, USA), “Institutional roots of authoritarian rule in the Middle East: effects of the Islamic waqf”
Chair: Francesca Gagliardi
11:15–13:15 Parallel sessions 4
P4.1 – Coase Memorial Session
Convenor: Elodie Bertrand
Chair: Richard Langlois
Elodie Bertrand (CNRS, France) & Alain Marciano (University of Montpellier 1, France), “Coase, costs and market failures: from ‘the marginal cost controversy’ to ‘the problem of social cost’”
David Campbell (University of Lancaster, UK) & Matthias Klaes (University of Dundee, UK), “What did Ronald Coase know about the law of tort?”
Ranjan Ghosh (Humboldt University of Berlin, Germany) & Ning Wang (Ronald Coase Institute, USA), “The methodological pragmatism of Coase”
Ugo Pagano (University of Siena, Italy & Central European University, Hungary) & Massimiliano Vatiero (Universita della Svizzera italiana, Switzerland), “Costly institutions as substitutes: novelty and limits of the Coasian approach”
P4.2 – The Legal Personality of the Firm
Convenor: David Gindis
Chair: Frank Stephen
Simon Deakin (University of Cambridge, UK), “Legal capacity and the theory of the firm”
David Gindis (University of Hertfordshire, UK), “Legal personhood and the firm: avoiding anthropomorphism and equivocation”
Paddy Ireland (University of Bristol, UK), “Changing conceptions of the corporation in nineteenth and early twentieth century Britain and America”
Eric W. Orts (University of Pennsylvania, USA), “The legal and social ontology of organizational persons”
P4.3 – The Social Institutions of Social Science
Convenor: Uskali Mäki
Chair: Denise Dollimore
Christian Fleck (University of Graz, Austria), “Institutionalization and de-institutionalization of social science disciplines in Europe”
Uskali Mäki (University of Helsinki, Finland), “On the institutional dynamics of disciplinarity and interdisciplinarity”
Carlo Martini (University of Helsinki, Finland), “Interdisciplinarity in the planning office: the case of the monetary policy committee”
Jesús Zamora-Bonilla (Universidad Nacional de Educación a Distancia, Spain), “The nature of co-authorship: recognition sharing and scientific argumentation”
P4.4 – The Work of János Kornai
Convenor: Geoff Hodgson
Chair: Geoff Hodgson
János Kornai (Corvinus University of Budapest, Hungary), “Shortage economy – surplus economy”
Klaus Nielsen (Birkbeck, University of London, UK) & Rasmus Storm (Danish Institute for Sport Studies, Denmark), “Football clubs running persistent deficits and other ‘anomalies’: the ubiquity of soft budget constraints in market economies”
D. Mario Nuti (University of Rome La Sapienza, Italy), “János Kornai on socialism and capitalism: shortage versus surplus economies”
P4.5 – Institutions, Rules & Methodology
Chair: Ioana Negru
Morris Altman (Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand), “Mental models, bargaining power and institutional change”
Virginia Cecchini Manara (Sant’Anna School of Advanced Studies, Italy) & Lorenzo Sacconi (University of Trento, Italy), “Institutions, frames and social contract reasoning”
Thorvald Gran (University of Bergen, Norway), “Organisational analysis: the generative speech act model”
Aidan Walsh (independent, Ireland), “Occams’s razor and organizations”
P4.6 – Institutional Evolution: Politics, Ideology, Ethics & Design
Chair: Manuel Wäckerle
Roger Koppl (Syracuse University, USA), Stuart Kauffman (Institute for Systems Biology, USA), Teppo Felin (Oxford University, UK) & Caryn Devins (Duke University, USA), “Against design”
Pavel Pelikan (Prague University of Economics, Czech Republic), “The evolution of the institutional frameworks of economies: ideological wishes vs. politico-economic sustainability”
Ingrid Robeyns (Utrecht University, Netherlands), “The ethics of institutions”
Richard Webb (London School of Economics, UK), “Is innovation evolution?”
P4.7 – Institutions, Welfare & Ecology
Chair: Bas van Bavel
Nicole Biggart (UC Davis, USA) & Kelsey D. Meagher (UC Davis, USA), “Using social institutions to promote social welfare: a multi-sectoral approach to social problems and solutions”
Daniel Cole (Indiana University, USA), Graham Epstein (Indiana University, USA) & Michael D. McGinnis (Indiana University, USA), “Toward a new institutional analysis of social-ecological systems”
Bernhard Ebbinghaus (University of Mannheim, Germany), “Reforming welfare states and changing capitalism: institutional change and reversing early retirement regimes in Europe”
Ian Gough (London School of Economics, UK), “Welfare states and environmental states: commonalities and contrasts”
P4.8 – States, Networks, Innovation & Entrepreneurship
Chair: Rutger Claassen
Moritz Botts (Viadrina European University, Germany) & Albrecht Söllner (Viadrina European University, Germany), “Rethinking Europe: the role of institutional distance in understanding European integration”
Ana Castro (Federal University of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil), “Comparative innovation and state capacities in Brazil, China and Argentina”
Claude Ménard (University of Paris I Panthéon Sorbonne, France) , Rolf Kunneke (Delft University of Technology, Netherlands) & John Groenewegen (Delft University of Technology, Netherlands), “Critical network infrastructures: alignment, coherence, performance”
Erik Stam (Utrecht University, Netherlands), Niels Bosma (Utrecht University, Netherlands) & Sander Wennekers (Erasmus University Rotterdam, Netherlands), “In intrapreneurship we trust: institutions and the allocation of entrepreneurship”
14:30–15:45 Keynote lecture 5
Katharina Pistor, “The legal construction of global capitalism”
Chair: Klaus Nielsen