2023 Conference

October 27th-28th, Georgetown University

IPES 2023
1
Saturday, October 28
2
AM Chairs Leo Baccini
3
Ken Scheve
4
Megumi Naoi
5
6
(Presentation Link, If Available) (Paper Link, If Available)
7
Dillon Laaker, University of Wisconsin-Madison/Georgetown Political Cleavages over Supply Chains: Rules of Origin and Preferential Liberalization
8
Joseph Ruggiero, Princeton University What Makes a World War? Economic Networks and Distributions of Power
9
Chloe Ahn, University of Pennsylvania
Julia Gray, University of Pennsylvania
‘Rededicating Ourselves to the Cause of Bleeding Africa’: Sociotropic Portrayals of Economic Cooperation in US Black Newspapers, 1946–1989
10
In Song Kim, MIT
Hao Zhang, MIT
The Political Origins Of Rules Of Origin
11
Layna Mosley, Princeton University
Alexandra Zeitz, Concordia University
Terms And Conditions: The Pricing And Politics Of Bilateral Sovereign Lending
12
Vincent Arel-Bundock, University of Montreal
Krzysztof Pelc, Oxford
Buy-in for Buyouts: Attitudes Toward Compensation for Reforms
13
Erica Owen, University of Pittsburgh
Sojun Park, Princeton University
Offshoring And The Decline Of Labor Unions: How Globalization Fosters Technological Change
14
Quintin Beazer, Florida State University
Daniel Blake (IE Business School)
Raphael Cunha, King's College London
Srividya Jandhyala (ESSEC Business)
Why Oppose Foreign Investment?
15
Evelyne Hubscher, Central European University
Thomas Sattler, University of Geneva
What Do Voters Expect From Populist Parties?
16
Jihye Park, University of Rochester Trade as a Potent Threat: A Firm-Centered Approach to Economic Statecraft
17
Shiyang Wu, UCSB Strategized Exit: Sunset Clauses and Unilateral Terminations of BITs
18
Keyi Tang, Boston University Global Development Policy Center Democracy, Distributive Politics, And Development Finance: Evidence From Africa
19
Jon Pevehouse, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Felicity Vabulas, Pepperdine University
Who Lobbies: Analyzing the Drivers of Foreign Lobbying in the U.S
20
Sung Eun Kim, Korea University,
Rebecca Perlman, UC Berkeley
Grace Zeng, Princeton University
The Politics Of Rejection: Explaining Chinese Import Refusals
21
Ryan Jablonski, LSE Voting for Foreign Aid: How international donors impact voting, accountability and public services in democracies
22
Sojun Park, Princeton University Innovation, Imitation, and Political Cleavages in International Trade and Patent Protection
23
Haillie Na-Kyung Lee, Seoul National University
Erik Voeten, Georgetown University
Transboundary Air Pollution and Hazy Accountability: Evidence from South Korea and China
24
Katja Kleinberg, Binghamton University Support For Economic Nationalism And Industrial Policy In Diverse Societies: The US Case
25
Thomas Pepinsky, Cornell University
Adam Reiff, CEU
Krisztina Szabo, CEU
Programmatic Subsidies and Democratic Backsliding in the EU: Evidence From Hungary
26
Kishore Gawande, University of Texas at Austin
Pablo Pinto, University of Houston
Santiago Pinto, Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond
Exporters and Trade Policy with Heterogeneous Districts
27
Owen Bernstein, Harvard College
Gautam Nair, Harvard Kennedy School
Richard Zeckhauser, Harvard Kennedy School
Incidental Representation
28
PM Chairs Erica Owen
29
Tom Pepinsky
30
Stefanie Walter
31
32
Aina Gallego, University of Barcelona
Alexander Kuo, Oxford University
Support For Policies To Regulate Technological Change
33
Sarah M. Brooks, Ohio State University
Raphael Cunha, King's College London
Layna Mosley, Princeton University
Financial Markets and Mass Political Attitudes: Evidence from the 2022 Brazilian Election
34
Matt Malis, Texas A&M
Calvin Thrall, Columbia University
The Bureaucratic Politics of International Agreements
35
Chloe Ahn, University of Pennsylvania
Nina Obermeier, King's College London
Cryptocurrency And The State: Evidence From South Korea
36
Gabriele Magni, Loyola Marymount University
Zoila Ponce De Leon
Immigration and Deportation Attitudes in the United States and Brazil
37
Siyao Li, University of Pittsburgh
Aditi Sahasrabuddhe, Brown University
The Limits Of Economic Statecraft: RMB Internationalization And The External Security Environment
38
Jason Davis, Florida State University Firms, Dynamics, And Stumbling Blocks In Trade
39
Abhit Bhandari, Vanderbilt University
Sekou Jabateh, New York University Abu Dhabi
Robert Kubinec, New York University Abu Dhabi
The Political Nature of Entrepreneurship in Developing Countries Experimental Evidence from Tunisia and Senegal
40
Sarah Hunter, Clemson University
Adrian Shin, University of Colorado Boulder
Alexandra Siegel, University of Colorado Boulder
Industry Representatives: How Deindustrialization Shapes Elite Messaging On Globalization
41
Soohyun Cho, Princeton University Compliance By Obfuscation: Firm-level Labor Upgrading In Global Value Chains
42
Minju Kim, Syracuse University
Jieun Lee, University at Buffalo
Foreign Lobbying Against Administrative Protectionism: Evidence from ITC Patent Investigations
43
Cleo O'Brien-Udry, University of Pennsylvania
Julia Gray, University of Pennsylvania
Donor Funding to International Organizations: Evidence from the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation
44
Anil Menon, Cornell University
Katie Nissen, University of Michigan
Ian Osgood, University of Michigan
Climate Regulation’s Effects on Businesses and Public Support for Climate Action
45
Emilie Hafner-Burton, UC San Diego
Christina Schneider, University of California San Diego
International Liberal Foundations Of Democratic Backsliding
46
Ze Han, Princeton University
Helen Milner, Princeton University
Kris Mitchener, Santa Clara University
Deep Roots: On The Persistence Of American Populism
47
Sunday, October 29
48
AM Chairs David Bearce
49
Rachel Wellhausen
50
Ken Scheve
51
Patrick Bayer, University of Glasgow
Jonas Bunte, Vienna University of Economics and Business
Carbon Disclosure And Governmental Kickbacks: Evidence From The U.S. EXIM Bank
52
Zuhad Hai, Princeton University What Motivates Industrial Policy in a Globalized World?
53
Didac Queralt, Yale University The Origins of Foreign Aid: Colonial Development and Welfare Funds in the Late British Empire
54
Dahyun Choi, Princeton University Scientification of Politics? Interest Group Influence on Bureaucratic Expertise in Climate Change
55
Jieun Lee, University at Buffalo Foreign MNCs’ Utilization of Domestic Political Endowments Inherited from Cross-border M&A
56
Sichen Li, University of California, San Diego Global Innovation Networks And National Security-Related Investment Restrictions: Firm-Level Evidence Of CFIUS Reviews
57
Jialu Li, Harvard University Sanction Busting or Industry Boosting? China’s Strategic Response to US Sanctions
58
Zenobia Chan, Princeton University
Noel Foster, U.S. Naval War College
Kwok-Kin Lui, Independent Researcher
Hoarding By Beijing: Understanding China’s Rare Earth Industrial Policy And Its Global Impact
59
Lauren Ferry, University of Mississippi
Anne Jamiso, Copenhagen Business School
Anastasia Gracheva, Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania
Political Risk, Sustainability and Sovereign Credit: Pricing High-Frequency Political, Environmental, Social and Governance News
60
Benjamin Helms, Texas A&M University Global Migration, Local Enforcement, And Electoral Outcomes
61
Carlos Felipe Balcazar, Yale University
Amanda Kennard, Stanford University
Climate Change Awareness in Sub-Saharan Africa
62
Andreas Kern
Bernhard Reinsberg
China Lending And The Political Economy Of Leader Survival
63
Anthony Calacino, University of Texas at Austin Linking International Organizations and Domestic Policymaking: The Role of Civil Society Participation
64
Ka Zeng, University of Arkansas Political And Economic Drivers Of Manufacturing Reshoring: Evidence From U.S. Firms
65
James Bisbee, Vanderbilt University
Todd Hertling, Vanderbilt University
Free Trade Attitudes And The Vote
66
Mark Dallas, Union College
Henry Farrell, Johns Hopkins
Yeling Tan, University of Oregon
Driven To Self-Reliance: Technological Interdependence And The Chinese Innovation Ecosystem
67
Theo Serlin, Stanford University
Dustin Swonder, UC Berkeley
Who Were The Isolationists?
68
Leonardo Baccini, McGill University
Costin Ciobanu, McGill University
Krzysztof Pelc, McGill University
Why Different Economic Shocks Have Different Political Effects
69
Kenya Amano, Harvard University
Masaaki Higashijima, University of Tokyo
Domestic and International Origins of Varieties of Central Bank: Global Textual Analysis of Central Bank Mandates and Functions
70
Sahil Deo, CPC Analytics
Mark Hallerberg, Hertie School
Responses To the Rise of (Multilateral) Chinese Finance: Voter Perceptions of the World Bank and Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank in India
71
Lizhi Liu, Georgetown University
Jian Xu, National University of Singapore
Playing Catch-up: How Authoritarian Courts Handle Transnational IP Litigation
72
PM Chairs Erica Owen
73
Megumi Naoi
74
Leo Baccini
75
76
Adam Dean, George Washington University
Ken Shadlen, London School of Economics
Hannah Sworn, George Washington University
Outside Influence: U.S. Pressure And The Race To Free Trade In Developing Countries
77
Ryan Brutger, UC Berkeley
Daniel Lobo, UC Berkeley
Fairness According to Whom?: Divergent Perceptions of Fairness Among White and Black Americans and its Effect on Trade Attitudes
78
Christina Davis, Harvard University
Jialu Li, Harvard University
Sayumi Miyano, Harvard University
Peer Conformity and Competition: How Business Managers Evaluate Firm Withdrawals from Russia
79
Sam Sharman, Texas A&M University Autocratic Succession and Access to Foreign Finance
80
Phuong Pham, Duke University Staying or Leaving? How Businesses Take Action Towards Economic Sanctions and Evidence from the Ukrainian War
81
Rachel Wellhausen, University of Texas at Austin
Boliang Zhu, Penn State
Exiting Russia
82
Lu Sun, Texas A&M University Managing Foreign Influence: Autocratic Strategies in Regulating the Import of Foreign Movies
83
Mirko Heinzel, LSE
Andreas Kern, Georgetown University
Saliha Metinsoy, University of Rotterdam
Bernhard Reinsberg, University of Glasgow
The Cost of a Better World: Are Borrower Countries Citizens Willing to Pay for Progressive IMF Programs
84
William R. Clark, Texas A&M
Pablo Pinto, University of Houston
Keigo Tanabe, Texas A&M
The Perils of Privilege: Racial Prejudice, Manufacturing Wages, Educational Attainment, and the Populist Response to Industrial Decline
85
Frederick R. Chen, Nanyang Technological University
Jacque Gao, Nanyang Technological University
Property Rights, Working Class, and Demand for Foreign Direct Investment
86
Robert Gulotty, University of Chicago
Zikai Li, University of Chicago
Information Exposure and Belief Manipulation in Survey Experiments
87
Christian Baehr, Princeton University
Fiona Bare, Princeton University
Vincent Heddesheimer, Princeton University
Climate Exposure Drives Firm Political Behavior: Evidence from Earnings Calls and Lobbying Data
88
Carlos Felipe Balcazar, Yale University Unions and protectionist populism: The role of unions in the backlash against globalization
89
Tyler Ditmore, University of North Carolina The Unintended Dangers of Tax Cooperation: How Countries Use the Common Reporting Standard
90
Xun Cao, Penn State University
Lingbo Zhao, Penn State University
Do Firm-level Climate Change Risks Drive Firm Lobby In Climate Change Policies?
Next
Next

University of Pittsburgh 2022