Institutions and Accountability
Institutions and accountability have a major bearing on the effectiveness of global economic governance and on the sustainable development of developing countries. Regulation by public and private organizations can be hijacked by special interests or small groups of powerful firms, at the global, regional, and national levels.
GEG’s work in this area focuses on three issues:
- Examining ‘regulatory’ capture; exploring how and why such hijacking or "regulatory capture" happens, and how it can be averted
- Explaining why there is such variation in the outcomes of anti-corruption initiatives in developing countries, and the role of international actors in such initiatives
- Ways to improve the accountability and legitimacy of global and regional actors, including the private sector
Recent publications
Deere Birkbeck, C. 2014. Inside View – Strengthening WIPO’s Governance for the Next 50 Years: A Time for Action, Intellectual Property Watch, 26 September 2014.
Deere Birkbeck, C. 2014. WIPO’s Assistance To Developing Countries: Taking Forward The Unfinished Reform Agenda, Inside View - Intellectual Property Watch, 13 November 2014
Global Leaders Fellow presents analysis of Brazil’s response to financial crisis to senior policymakers
How to Ensure Women’s Access to Justice as the UN Draws Down its Mission in Liberia
Policy briefs
Video: Trump and World Order: Will a New US Foreign Policy Change Global Governance?
Multimedia
Does WTO Accession Help Domestic Reform? The Political Economy of SOE Reform Backsliding in Vietnam
Journal articles
Accounting for diverging paths in most similar cases: corruption in Baltics and Caucasus
Journal articles
GEG WP 2016/123 Crowdsourcing government accountability: Experimental evidence from Pakistan
Working papers