We use our own and third-party cookies to perform an analysis of use and measurement of our website, to improve our services, as well as to facilitate personalized advertising by analysing your browsing habits and preferences. You can change the settings of cookies or get more information, see cookies policy. I understand and accept the use of cookies.

Does Globalization Drive Policy Convergence? The Impact of International Economic and Institutional

Thursday January 25, 2007, at 14:00
Aula 4 - IBEI
Research seminar
Christoph Knill (Universität Konstanz)
RESUMEN
In recent years, there is a growing interest in the study of cross-national policy convergence, which is closely related to research on globalization. Yet we still have a limited understanding of the phenomenon: Does the strong growth of economic and institutional interlinkages between nation states lead to increasingly similar policies across countries? Under which conditions can we expect that domestic policies converge or rather develop further apart? In this article, we address this research deficit. From a theoretical perspective, we concentrate on the explanatory power of two factors, namely economic interlinkage and international institutional interlinkage. In empirical terms, we analyze, if and to what extent we can observe convergence of environmental policies across 24 countries between 1970 and 2000. We observe in fact strong convergence of environmental policies over the last thirty years, as well as a clear rise in regulatory strictness. This development is mainly caused by institutional interlinkage and much less by economic integration, i.e.; it is rather an effect of global governance than of economic globalization.

Seminari_IBEI_Knill.pdf
Knill_paper.pdf

Register for our open Master’s Programmes webinars. Read more