From: "Frank Conlon" <conlon@U.WASHINGTON.EDU>
To: <H-ASIA@H-NET.MSU.EDU>
Sent: Wednesday, February 09, 2011 1:21 AM
Subject: H-ASIA: CFP Private Sector Orgs & New Approaches to Building
Markets in Asia, Workshop, Singapore, Oct. 5-7, 2011
> H-ASIA
> February 8, 2011
>
> Call for papers: Private Sector Organisations and New Approaches to
> Building Markets in Asia (Phase 2), Singapore, October 5-7, 2011
>
> ***********************************************************************
> From: H-Net Announcements <announce@MAIL.H-NET.MSU.EDU>
>
>  CALL FOR PAPERS  PRIVATE SECTOR ORGANISATIONS AND NEW APPROACHES TO 
> BUILDING MARKETS IN ASIA (Phase 2)
>
> Location: Singapore
> Call for Papers Date: 2011-10-05
> Date Submitted: 2011-02-07
> Announcement ID: 182812
>
> CALL FOR PAPERS  PRIVATE SECTOR ORGANISATIONS AND NEW APPROACHES TO 
> BUILDING MARKETS IN ASIA (Phase 2)
> A research project of the Centre on Asia and Globalisations Poverty and 
> Development Programme and the Programme on Risk on Regulation at the Lee 
> Kuan Yew School of Public Policy
>
> The Centre on Asia and Globalisation recently launched a new research 
> project entitled New Approaches to Building Markets in Asia. The project 
> is located within the Centres Poverty and Development research programme 
> and is headed by Toby Carroll, with the support of Rita Padawangi, Darryl 
> Jarvis, and Mika Purra at the National University of Singapore. New 
> Approaches to Building Markets in Asia incorporates an empirically and 
> theoretically-oriented research agenda, a signature seminar series and 
> various outreach initiatives  including a working paper series and website 
> for hosting project output. Crucially, the project seeks to establish an 
> international network of scholars working on mutually complementary 
> research from within multiple social science disciplines.
>
> We are now soliciting paper proposals for phase 2 of the project, Private 
> Sector Organisations and New Approaches to Building Markets in Asia. This 
> phase is centered upon the production of a special issue of a Journal and 
> an edited volume, both to be produced from papers presented at a workshop 
> scheduled for October 5-7, 2011, at the Lee Kuan Yew School of Public 
> Policy, National University of Singapore. Funding has been secured to 
> support the attendance of workshop participants (airfare, accommodation, 
> per diem) upon successful paper submission.
>
> Phase 2 Research Focus  Private Sector Organisations and New Approaches to 
> Building Markets in Asia
>
> Constructing markets has been a central concern of Asias governments, seen 
> variously as a means to economic growth, development, and social well 
> being. The modality of market construction, however, has been a rapidly 
> evolving one. While historically Asian markets were anchored in overtly 
> national contexts and represented specific political accommodations 
> between domestic capital, economic elites, political actors and state 
> interests - most commonly expressed in the developmental state - 
> increasingly such configurations no longer stand. Market building is now 
> more overtly diffuse and situated among multilevel national and 
> international actors, transnational mechanisms, and various new governance 
> modalities that involve a complex interplay between the diffusion of 
> transactional norms, property rights, and systems of proceduralization and 
> regulation.
>
> Central to these emergent processes has been the agential authority of 
> private sector organizations. Private and quasi-private organizations like 
> export credit agencies, banks and financial institutions, domestic private 
> sector firms, ratings agencies, capital markets, standards and 
> certification regimes (ISOs, for example), and multinational enterprise, 
> along with organizations like the World Bank and OECD, play an 
> increasingly important role as agential mechanisms of policy diffusion but 
> also as agents constructing modalities of governance that regulate, 
> define, and discipline market behavior. These modalities increasingly 
> appear in the form of public-private partnerships, emergent transparency 
> and accountability regimes, investment guarantees, reciprocity and 
> non-discrimination in cross border investments, customs and trade 
> practices, regulatory shifts in modes of corporate governance, risk 
> management and mitigation, and regimes of financialization in relation to 
> performance, reporting and accounting standards. The manner by which these 
> governance modalities articulate in national and sectoral contexts, 
> however, is far from uniform. Domestic sites of resistance, sectional 
> interests, institutional and political legacies combined with differing 
> national and institutional capacities make for wide variation in market 
> composition, institutional forms, market governance, and thus the nature 
> and efficiency of market operation.
>
> This variation comprises the principal focus of Phase II of the project. 
> Specifically, we ask workshop participants to reflect on a series of 
> questions as a means of understanding the role of private sector 
> organizations in building markets in Asia:
>
>  How should we characterize the role of private organizations in 
> constructing markets in Asia?
>  What are the implications of private-led market building in terms of 
> democratic participation and public accountability? Is there a democratic 
> deficit?
>  What are the implications of private-led market building for enhancing 
> social capital, sustainable and inclusive growth?
>  Are the large privately-owned corporations of Asia and systems of 
> patrimonial politics challenged or countenanced by these new approaches to 
> building markets?  Do all private organisations/sectors relate equally to 
> the new opportunities and risks raised by the market building project?
>  How does the market building project relate to different political 
> economies/different sectors found in Asia?
>  What are the repercussions of the market building project for different 
> conceptions of development and/or for different actors in the region?
>  What implementation issues arise in the context of market building 
> dominated by private organizations?
>  What are the implications for the evolution and practice of public policy 
> in Asia?
>  How do non-governmental organizations relate to, engage with, and impact 
> private sector organizations and financialized development agendas?
>
> Original contributions from a variety of social science 
> disciplines/frameworks are sought for inclusion in a special issue of a 
> journal and edited collection (to be published with Routledge or Palgrave 
> Macmillan). The contributions will be presented at a workshop to be held 
> at the National University of Singapore on 5-7 October 2011. Workshop 
> participants will have airfares (return economy class to Singapore), 
> accommodation and per diem expenses covered.
>
> Submission Process
>
>  Paper title and abstract: 250-500 words
>  Short biography with indicative list of publications
>  Submission deadline: March 15, 2011
>  Submit materials to Mika.Purra@nus.edu.sg or Darryl.Jarvis@nus.edu.sg
>  Enquires: Toby Carroll spptjc@nus.edu.sg
>
> Paper Submissions
>
>  Paper submissions due not later than September 15, 2011
>  Paper length: 7-9000 words
>  Citation style: in-text Harvard system
>
>
>  Darryl S.L. Jarvis
> Associate Professor
>
> Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy
> National University of Singapore
> 469C Bukit Timah Road | Oei Tiong Ham Building | Level 2M | Singapore 
> 259772
> DID +65 6516 4205 | HP + 65 9071 9699 | Fax +65 6778 1020
> Email Darryl.Jarvis@nus.edu.sg | Web www.lkyspp.nus.edu.sg
>
> Email: darryl.jarvis@nus.edu.sg
>
>
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