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Workshop

Instrumental incoherence in institutional reform

In preparation for a special issue of World Development

Add to calendar 2023-12-01 14:30 2023-12-01 18:30 Europe/Rome Instrumental incoherence in institutional reform Seminar Room Mansarda Villa Schifanoia YYYY-MM-DD
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When

01 December 2023

14:30 - 18:30 CET

Where

Seminar Room Mansarda

Villa Schifanoia

Join this diverse blend of researchers as they work together to understand the prevalence and nature of institutional reform

This workshop will push forward an ambitious research agenda to develop the new concept of instrumental incoherence theoretically, and then apply it to a diverse set of empirical phenomena across four continents over the past 250 years. The immediate goal is to prepare articles for a special issue of World Development, the leading journal of interdisciplinary development studies. The larger goal is to establish instrumental incoherence as an important paradigm for the analysis of successful, stalled and failed development across both emerging markets and advanced societies.

Why is there so much institutional reform in the world? This is a deep conundrum that is little acknowledged and less understood.

Why are senior politicians in all the world’s regions, across developing and developed countries both in democratic and autocratic regimes, so eager to change their institutions?

A few recent examples include transitions from constitutional monarchy to republics in Antigua and Barbuda, Barbados, and Jamaica; reforms to judicial independence in Israel, Poland and the UK; new constitutions in Bolivia and Chile; Sri Lanka’s transition from a presidential to a parliamentary system; the creation of new states in India and new districts in Uganda; and sweeping changes to macroeconomic management and market regulation in Uzbekistan.

This working group seeks to understand the prevalence and nature of institutional reform by analysing the deep incoherence that defines many attempts. Participants are a carefully chosen blend of influential senior figures alongside rising research stars, and are highly diverse in terms of their intellectual and personal backgrounds.

Speakers:

German Bidegain (Universidad de la República, Uruguay)

Felipe Carozzi (London School of Economics)

Alberto Diaz-Cayeros (Stanford University)

Miriam Golden (EUI - Department of Political and Social Sciences)

Jonathan Hopkin (London School of Economics)

Macartan Humphreys (WZB Berlin)

Beatriz Magaloni (Stanford University)

Victoria Paniagua (London School of Economics)

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