Dave Strickler | Mark Blyth After the Crisis -pub2012- @DaveStricklers | Uploaded February 2017 | Updated October 2024, 7 hours ago.
The Van Leer Jerusalem Institute - מכון ון ליר בירושלים
How to Tell the Forest from the Trees When You Are not Yet out of the Woods
(Originally Published Wednesday, February 22, 2012)
Lecture by: Prof. Mark Blyth, Brown University
Chair: Prof. Gabriel Motzkin, Director, The Van Leer Jerusalem Institute
Discussants:
Prof. Reuben Gronau, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem
Dr. Tal Sadeh, Tel Aviv University
Mark Blyth: I was born in Dundee, Scotland, in 1967. I grew up in relative poverty, in a very real sense a “welfare kid”. Today I’m a professor at an Ivy League university in the USA. Probabilistically speaking, I am as an extreme example of intra-generational social mobility as you can find anywhere.
I received my PhD in political science from Columbia University in 1999 and taught at the Johns Hopkins University from 1997 until 2009. Since then, I have been Professor of International Political Economy in the Department of Political Science at Brown University and a Faculty Fellow at Brown’s Watson Institute for International Studies.
My research interests lie in the field of international political economy. More specifically, my research trespasses several fields and aims to be as interdisciplinary as possible, drawing from political science, economics, sociology, complexity theory, and evolutionary theory. My work falls into several related areas: the politics of ideas, how institutions change, political parties, and the politics of finance.
The politics of ideas focuses upon how agents deal with complexity and uncertainty in the design of institutions and the expression of their interests. Institutional change focuses upon evolutionary dynamics in complex systems, especially financial systems. I am interested in how, again, agents act within such systems given the non-linear dynamics that they generate.
My work on political parties has focused upon how political parties self-insure against uncertainty via cartel structures. My work on finance focuses upon the politics of regulatory change, the role of macro-prudential regulation, the distributional costs of financial crises, and the power of financial ideas in politics.
His Twitter handle is @MkBlyth
The Van Leer Jerusalem Institute - מכון ון ליר בירושלים
How to Tell the Forest from the Trees When You Are not Yet out of the Woods
(Originally Published Wednesday, February 22, 2012)
Lecture by: Prof. Mark Blyth, Brown University
Chair: Prof. Gabriel Motzkin, Director, The Van Leer Jerusalem Institute
Discussants:
Prof. Reuben Gronau, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem
Dr. Tal Sadeh, Tel Aviv University
Mark Blyth: I was born in Dundee, Scotland, in 1967. I grew up in relative poverty, in a very real sense a “welfare kid”. Today I’m a professor at an Ivy League university in the USA. Probabilistically speaking, I am as an extreme example of intra-generational social mobility as you can find anywhere.
I received my PhD in political science from Columbia University in 1999 and taught at the Johns Hopkins University from 1997 until 2009. Since then, I have been Professor of International Political Economy in the Department of Political Science at Brown University and a Faculty Fellow at Brown’s Watson Institute for International Studies.
My research interests lie in the field of international political economy. More specifically, my research trespasses several fields and aims to be as interdisciplinary as possible, drawing from political science, economics, sociology, complexity theory, and evolutionary theory. My work falls into several related areas: the politics of ideas, how institutions change, political parties, and the politics of finance.
The politics of ideas focuses upon how agents deal with complexity and uncertainty in the design of institutions and the expression of their interests. Institutional change focuses upon evolutionary dynamics in complex systems, especially financial systems. I am interested in how, again, agents act within such systems given the non-linear dynamics that they generate.
My work on political parties has focused upon how political parties self-insure against uncertainty via cartel structures. My work on finance focuses upon the politics of regulatory change, the role of macro-prudential regulation, the distributional costs of financial crises, and the power of financial ideas in politics.
His Twitter handle is @MkBlyth