Sunday, August 8, 2010

Professor of Global Political Economy in the Department of Political Science and the Center for Global Change and Governance

Abridged résumé, December 2007

Philip G. Cerny was born in New York City. He is Professor of Global Political Economy in the Division of Global Affairs and Department of Political Science, Rutgers University-Newark (New Jersey, U.S.A). He studied at Kenyon College (Ohio) and the Institut d’Études Politiques (Paris), and received his Ph.D. from the University of Manchester (United Kingdom). He has previously taught in the U.K. at the Universities of York, Leeds and Manchester, and has also been a visiting professor or visiting scholar at Harvard University (Center for European Studies), the Fondation Nationale des Sciences Politiques (Paris), Dartmouth College, New York University, the Brookings Institution, and the Max Planck Institute for the Study of Societies (Cologne, Germany).

He is the author of The Politics of Grandeur: Ideological Aspects of de Gaulle’s Foreign Policy (Cambridge U.P, 1980; French edition, Flammarion, 1986) and The Changing Architecture of Politics: Structure, Agency and the Future of the State (Sage, 1990). He edited or co-edited four books in the 1980s on various aspects of French politics. More recently he is editor of Finance and World Politics: Markets, Regimes and States in the Post-Hegemonic Era (Edward Elgar, 1993), and co-editor of Power in Contemporary Politics: Theories, Practices, Globalizations (with Henri Goverde, Mark Haugaard and Howard H. Lentner) (Sage, 2000) and Internalizing Globalization: The Rise of Neoliberalism and the Erosion of National Models of Capitalism (with Susanne Soederberg and Georg Menz) (Palgrave, 2005).

His article “Globalization and the Changing Logic of Collective Action”, which originally appeared in International Organization (Autumn 1995), has been reprinted in Charles Lipson and Benjamin J. Cohen, eds., Theory and Structure in International Political Economy (MIT Press, 1999) and Jeffry A. Frieden and David A. Lake, eds., International Political Economy: Perspectives on Global Power and Wealth (Routledge, 4th Edition, 2000).

More recently he has published a wide range of journal articles and book chapters, including:

    “Neoliberalism and Place: Deconstructing and Reconstructing Borders”, forthcoming in Bas Arts, Henk van Houtum and Arnoud Lagendijk, eds., State, Place, Governance: Shifts in Territoriality, Governmentality and Policy Practices (Berlin: Springer, 2008)
    “Embedding Neoliberalism: The Evolution of a Hegemonic Paradigm”, forthcoming in the Journal of International Trade and Diplomacy (Spring 2008)
    “The Governmentalization of World Politics”, forthcoming in Elinore Kofman and Gillian Youngs, eds., Globalization: Theory and Practice (London: Continuum, 3rd edition 2008), pp 221-236
    “Restructuring the State in a Globalizing World: Capital Accumulation, Tangled Hierarchies and the Search for a New Spatio-Temporal Fix”, review article, Review of International Political Economy, vol. 13, no. 4 (October 2006), pp. 679-695
    “Dilemmas of Operationalizing Hegemony”, in Mark Haugaard and Howard H. Lentner, eds., Hegemony and Power: Consensus and Coercion in Contemporary Politics (Lanham, MD: Lexington Books on behalf of the International Political Science Association, Research Committee No. 36 [Political Power], 2006), pp. 67-87

    “Plurality, Pluralism, and Power: Elements of Pluralist Analysis in an Age of Globalization”, in Rainer Eisfeld, ed., Pluralism: Developments in the Theory and Practice of Democracy (Opladen: Barbara Budrich on behalf of the International Political Science Association, Research Committee No. 16 [Socio-Political Pluralism], 2006), pp. 81-111
    “Different Roads to Globalization: Neoliberalism, the Competition State, and Politics in a More Open World” (jointly authored with Georg Menz and Susanne Soederberg), in Susanne Soederberg, Georg Menz and P.G. Cerny, eds., Internalizing Globalization: The Rise of Neoliberalism and the Erosion of National Models of Capitalism (Palgrave, 2005), pp. 1-30, and “Capturing  Benefits,  Avoiding  Losses: The United States, Japan and the Politics of Constraint”, in ibid., pp. 123-148
    “Political Globalization and the Competition State”, in Richard  Stubbs  and Geoffrey R. D. Underhill, eds., The Political Economy of the Changing Global Order (Oxford University Press, 3rd edn. 2005), pp. 376-386
    “Power, Markets and Authority: The Development of Multi-Level Governance in International Finance”, in Andrew Baker, Alan Hudson and Richard Woodward, eds., Governing Financial Globalization (Routledge, 2005)
    “Governance, Globalization and the Japanese Financial System: Resistance or Restructuring?”, in Glenn Hook, ed., Contested Governance in Japan (Routledge, 2005)
    “Terrorism and the New Security Dilemma”, U.S. Naval War College Review (Winter 2005)
    “Political Economy and the Japanese Model in Flux: Phoenix or Quagmire?”, New Political Economy, review article, vol. 9, no. 1 (March 2004), pp. 101-111
    “Globalisation and Public Policy Under New Labour” (with Mark Evans), Policy Studies (January 2004)
    “Globalisation and Social Policy” (with Mark Evans), in Nick Ellison and Chris Pierson, eds., New Developments in British Social Policy (Palgrave Macmillan, 2003)
    “Globalization and Other Stories: Paradigmatic Selection in International Politics”, in Axel Hülsemeyer, ed., Globalization in the 21st Century: Convergence and Divergence (London: Palgrave), pp. 51-66, and “The Uneven Pluralization of World Politics”, in ibid., pp. 173-175
    “Webs of Governance and the Privatization of Transnational Regulation”, in David M. Andrews, C. Randall Henning and Louis W. Pauly, eds., Governing the World’s Money (Cornell University Press, 2002)
    “From ‘Iron Triangles’ to ‘Golden Pentangles’? Globalizing the Policy Process”, Global Governance (October 2001)
    “Structuring the Political Arena: Public Goods, States and Governance in a Globalizing World”, in Ronen Palan, ed., Contemporary Theories in the Global Political Economy:  Emerging Debates, Methodologies and Approaches (Routledge, 2000)
    “Globalisation and the Restructuring of the Political Arena: Paradoxes of the Competition State”, in Randall Germain, ed., Globalization and Its Critics (Palgrave Macmillan, 2000)
    “Political Agency in a Globalizing World: Toward a Structurational Approach”, European Journal of International Relations (December 2000)
    “The New Security Dilemma: Divisibility, Defection and Disorder in the Global Era”, Review of International Studies (October 2000)
    “Globalisation and the Erosion of Democracy”, European Journal of Political Research, vol. 36, no. 1 (August 1999), pp. 1-26
    “Globalization, Governance, and Complexity”, in Aseem Prakash and Jeffrey A. Hart, eds., Globalization and Governance (Routledge, 1999), pp. 184-208
    “Globalizing the Political and Politicizing the Global: International Political Economy as a Vocation”, New Political Economy, vol. 4, no. 1 (January1999), pp. 147-62
    “Neomedievalism, Civil War and the New Security Dilemma: Globalisation as Durable Disorder”, Civil Wars, vol. 1, no. 1 (Spring), pp. 36-64



He is currently working on chapters for the Handbook of Power (Sage Publications for the IPSA Research Committee on Political Power) and the RIPE Handbook on International Political Economy, as well on a book project provisionally entitled Multi-Nodal Politics: Political Dynamics of a Globalizing World which is intended to develop the application of pluralist and neopluralist approaches – especially the concept of “political process” and the role of agency – to the study of globalization.

He is a past Chair of the International Political Economy Section of the International Studies Association and past member of the I.S.A.’s Long-Range Planning Committee, and has been a member of the Executive Committees of the British International Studies Association and the Political Studies Association of the U.K. He is on the editorial boards of the European Journal of International Relations, the Review of International Studies, the International Studies Quarterly, Civil Wars, the Journal of International Trade and Diplomacy and the Political Research Quarterly. He is a member of the Executive Boards of two Research Committees of the International Political Science Association—R.C. 16 (Socio-Political Pluralism) and R.C. 36 (Political Power).

Phil Cerny is also an interpreter of the traditional folk music of North America and the British Isles. His CD “Atlantic Passages” was released in 2004 by Hudson Records (U.S.A.) and Circuit Music (U.K.).

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