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Latest News and Events

If you'd like to keep up to date with our publications and events 

 

Event: Societal resilience in crisis management

Monday 9 December, 3-5.30pm

Vera Anstey Room, Old Building, ÐÓ°ÉÂÛ̳ 

In a world of acute and creeping crises, increasing emphasis has been placed on societal resilience. National and sectoral crisis frameworks have emerged that emphasise the importance of community engagement in crisis management. This workshop focuses on the alignment of different frameworks, the underlying assumptions that feed into understandings of societal resilience and whether frameworks address a world of acute and protracted crises that are frequently of a transboundary nature. 

This workshop explores both international academic and practitioner approaches towards building and maintaining societal resilience. Speakers include Arjen Boin (Leiden) and Rebecca Elliott (ÐÓ°ÉÂÛ̳). It celebrates the work of our former CARR Director Bridget Hutter whose final work on societal resilience in flood management was published as CARR discussion paper (/accounting/assets/CARR/documents/D-P/DP89.pdf)

Please indicate your interest in attending by signing up here:

 

News: Dr Andrea Mennicken Awarded Competitive ESRC Grant

Andrea Mennicken, Co-Director of CARR and Associate Professor of the Department of Accounting, has been awarded a highly competitive grant by the Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC) the 8th Open Research Area (ORA).

Find out more here

 

News: Ha muito otimismo sobre influencia de governos no comportamento do cidadao diz pesquisador (There is a lot of optimism about the influence of governments on citizen behaviour, says researcher) – Martin Lodge, Co-Director CARR 

Read the full article

 

Event: Rethinking the Separation of Powers

Frank Vibert

Discussants: Paul Kelly and Martin Loughlin

Thursday, 14 November, 4pm-5.30pm

MAR 2.06

How can democracies develop to address the challenges of adverse shocks and ongoing change?  This workshop explores the evolution and resilience of different systems for the separation of powers, especially in view of balancing the reasoning of experts with the demands of electoral politics. Based on his recent book publication Rethinking the Separation of Powers (Edward Elgar), Frank Vibert will explore ways of building democratic resilience into contemporary political systems. 

A reception will follow the workshop.

If you wish to attend please sign up here - 

 

News:

For the first time in the history of the University of the Sacred Heart in Milan, a women has been appointed Rector. Elena Beccalli will take over  on 1 July, after the painful death on 23 May of her predecessor Franco Anelli. Beccalli was a student at the university that she is now preparing to lead for four years, from 2024 to 2028. She was appointed by the Board of Directors who met on 20 June. The decision of the Board of Directors follows the appointment of Professor Elena Beccalli, already serving as Dean of the School of Banking, Finance, and Insurance Sciences, by the University's 12 Faculty Councils on 22 May, with 636 preferences out of a total of 685, corresponding to around 93% of those voting. 

Read the full article

 

Publication: Social Resilience: Flood risk governance and local participation in the UK

DP 89 - Bridget Hutter - May 2024 - ISSN 2049 2718 - Full Paper

Abstract

This research examines the emergence of notions of resilience in UK flooding policy, and the definition and practice of resilience strategies at a local level. This specific case exemplifies broader concerns – the issues raised are relevant to global efforts to define and implement resilience strategies, and to efforts that relate not just to climate-related events but also to other events such as pandemics and terrorism. The research examines the definition of resilience, its incorporation into policy and governance regimes, and its implementation at the most local level. It considers how we try to govern in a post risk society environment, which recognises the need to embrace uncertainty.

 

Event: CARR workshop - Regulating Transitions in Government

MAR.2.04, ÐÓ°ÉÂÛ̳, 4-5.45pm, 23 May 2024

Speakers:

Catherine Haddon (Institute for Government)

Valerie Boyd (Partnership for Public Service)

Chris Liddell (former White House Deputy Chief of Staff)

Steve Bunnell (former General Counsel, US Department of Homeland Security)

Dan Corry (New Philanthropy Capital)

Transitions in government represent a critical point in the life of politics and administration. The transfer of power from one administration to another is a time of profound change - involving considerable opportunities for changes in policy direction.  The transition process therefore requires a system which protects ongoing policy and programme commitments, avoids or minimizes national security risks, but still allows sufficient scope for the new administration to implement its agenda.  Developing a regulatory regime that strikes an appropriate balance between such competing objectives, while also ensuring the necessary levels of participation and cooperation from both the incoming and outgoing administrations, raises a host of challenges. 

Please kindly confirm your interest in attending by signing up here: 

 

Event: CARR/CCRP Energy Regulation for Technology and System Changes in the Net Zero Transition Round Table

11am - 2pm, 18th April 2024

ELG02 Drysdale Building, City, University of London

The CARR/CCRP Roundtable of 18th April 2024 will cover a range of themes including:

  • How network regulation is changing to reflect different priorities for the networks so that incentive regulation can work alongside growth in electricity networks and reduced demand for gas.
  • Wholesale market reforms to get to net zero. How would a shift to locational pricing make net zero cheaper and quicker?
  • Potential changes required to support low-carbon power generation as the market evolves to a fully decarbonized energy system and design of support schemes that keep such costs to a manageable level.
  • Electricity rates design; increasingly these rates are becoming price signals impacting actual consumer decisions, both in terms of adoption technologies as well as in using those. An improved cost-reflective rate design is vital to avoid unnecessary investments in the power system and spur electrification while avoiding unwanted distributional consequences.
  • How to achieve affordability and distributional fairness in the net zero energy transition and avoid a regressive distribution of cost. Can a competitive market help consumers through the net zero transition by providing new services to end users, while also protecting those consumers that cannot yet afford to participate in the energy transition?

 

News:

Perri 6, Eva Heims

How does regulatory statehood develop from the regulatory work which governments have always done? This article challenges conventional views that regulatory statehood is achieved by transition to arm's length agencies and that it replaces court-based enforcement or displaces legislatures in favor of less accountable executive power. To do so, we examine the major 19th-century surge in development of micro-economic regulatory statehood in Britain, which had followed more gradual development in early modern times. We show that when the transformation of the Board of Trade is understood properly, a richer appreciation emerges of how regulatory statehood is institutionalized generally and of British state-making in particular. To demonstrate this, we introduce a novel conceptual framework for analyzing and assessing change on multiple dimensions of regulatory statehood, distinguishing depth of regulatory capacity and regulatory capability along six dimensions.

April 2024

 Read the full article .

 

News: 

Much has been said about how crises in the EU create disintegration or differentiation pressures. Considerable attention has been paid to EU crisis governance mechanisms. Yet, less attention has been paid to the anticipation of effects of differentiated implementation on transboundary crisis management regimes. This article asks how differential policy integration accommodates the anticipation of differential implementation through institutional choices in transboundary crisis management regimes. Concerns about the consequences of national customisation influence the way in which transboundary crisis management regimes develop in terms of allocation of authority and constraints on member state discretion. The paper compares EU transboundary crisis regimes in four sectors: banking, electricity, youth unemployment, and invasive alien species. Concerns with ongoing differential implementation of transboundary crisis management generate further inevitable tensions in governance systems, leading to continued contestation over institutional arrangements.

November 2023

Read the full article .

 

Event: Crisis Management from a Relational Perspective: an Analysis of Interorganizational Transboundary Crisis Networks.

Carlos Bravo-Laguna, Hebrew University of Jerusalem | HUJI · Federmann School of Public Policy and Government

7th December 2023, 12-2pm, MAR 3.20

Abstract: Although transboundary crises are becoming more frequent in an increasingly interdependent world, our understanding of the relational dynamics governing these under-researched phenomena remains limited. This paper addresses this knowledge gap by exploring whether interorganizational transboundary crisis networks have common characteristics and identifying drivers of tie formation in successful structures of this kind. For this purpose, it applies descriptive Social Network Analysis and Exponential Random Graph Models to an original dataset of three interorganizational transboundary crisis networks. Results show that these structures combine elements of issue networks and policy communities. Common features include moderate centralization, a core-periphery structure, and the popularity of international organizations. Additionally, successful networks display smooth communication between NGOs and international organizations, whereas unsuccessful networks have fewer heterophilous interactions. In contrast, preferential attachment could not be linked with successful crisis networks. These findings show how evidence from relational studies could guide future research on transboundary crises.

 

Event: CARR Seminar 17 October 2023, 12:30-14:00

“Chemophobic or just chemo-ambivalent?  Linking the public’s risk perception and regulatory policy change”

MAR 3.20

 

Event: CARR – Sociology Research Seminar 18 October, 14:00-15:30

Vera Anstey Room

 

Event: CARR Event – Sir David Omand Book Launch 25 October 2023 17:00-18:30

Vera Anstey Room

 

Event: CARR Regulation Roundtable 26 October 2023 12:00-15:00

Alumni Theatre

 

Event: CARR Future of Valuation Studies Workshop 30-31 October 2023

30 October 12:00-18:00

31 October 09:00-16:00

Vera Anstey Room

 

Event: CARR Vulnerability in Regulation Workshop

Thursday 21st September 2023, 14:30-18:00

ÐÓ°ÉÂÛ̳, MAR 1.09

More information here

 

Event: ORG workshop “Organizing risk and managing supply chains”

The Organizing Risk Group (ORG) invites you to hear from a multidisciplinary expert panel who will discuss a range of contemporary risks to effective supply chain management, the ways in which different risks can be organized, and the consequences for organizations, supply chains and wider inter-organizational networks.

Date: 19 April 2023 

Time: 9:00-10:00am (CEST)

Venue: Webinar, 

 

Event: Spectrum Auctions: designing markets to benefit the public, industry and the economy

March 2023

More details here

 

Event: AOI and CARR Seminar

Speaker: David Pinzur (ÐÓ°ÉÂÛ̳ Department of Sociology)

March 2023

 

News:

The way to a new intelligent administration does not lie in fundamental and comprehensive reforms of administration, but in gradually “muddling through”, write Kai Wegrich from the Hertie School Berlin and Martin Lodge from the London School of Economics. This includes the continuous adjustment of measures and trial-and-error processes.

January 2023

 

Event: The politics of experimental policymaking

Speaker: Kai Wegrich, Professor of Public Administration and Public Policy, Dean of Research and Faculty, Hertie School, Berlin

October 2022

We are living during a second boom of policy experiments. Similar to the first wave of the 1970s, the expectation is that testing policies and regulations in a limited setting will provide the evidence base for choosing policy designs and scaling-up policies that have demonstrated their efficacy in an experimental setting.

 

Publication: "Introductory study to the political-administrative foundations of regulation"

Mauricio Dussauge (CIDE) and Martin Lodge (2022) "Introductory study to the political-administrative foundations of regulation", CIDE, February 2022 - 

 

Publication: How can the concept of public value influence UK network utility regulation?

DP 88 - Martin Cave, Janet Wright - January 2021 - ISSN 2049 2718 - Full Paper

Abstract

There is much recent debate about extending the purposes of investor-owned firms to embrace the wider interests of a variety of stakeholders. Network regulatory decisions already involve extensive use of centralized social cost-benefit analysis to capture some aspects of public value. A gap remains which might be filled by a decentralized process, in which firms are supported by their regulator to expand their purposes to include the pursuit of public value, identified by regulated firms in collaboration with consumers and citizens, and delivered in innovative and entrepreneurial ways.

 

Event: Comity: Multilaterism in the New Cold War

Speaker: Frank Vibert (ÐÓ°ÉÂÛ̳)

Discussant: Nick Sitter (Central European University)

November 2021

To mark the launch of his new book, Frank Vibert explores the implications of the critical new juncture where globalisation is in retreat and global norms of behaviour are not converging.

 

News:

November 2020

Many congratulations to Andrei Guter-Sandu from CARR who co-authored the above article. He, together with his co-author Steffen Murau, were recently awarded a prize for this research as part of the Hertie Foundation’s essay competition on capitalism and democracy. A German version of this article has been published in the business weekly WirtschaftsWoche (see link at end of the blog article).

 

Event: Transboundary Crisis Management in Europe in Wake of COVID 19

May 2020

What are the emerging lessons for political crisis leadership? What can we say about the resilience of liberal democratic political systems? And what lessons can be drawn for multi-level crisis management? 

 

Publication: The role of administrative capacity in complementing performance measurement systems.

DP 87 - Jacob Reilley, Nathalie Iloga Balep, Christian Huber - March 2020 - ISSN 2049 2718 - Full Paper

Abstract

With the rise of New Public Management, regulators have increasingly turned to quantitative systems of performance measurement for assessing and monitoring public organizations. At the same time, there has been a swelling focus on service users as judges of organizational performance. As many have observed, regulatory initiatives which emphasize performance measurement and user-orientation are enacted quite differently across different countries, public sector contexts, and individual organizations. One reason for this variation is public organizations’ varying and sometimes inadequate capacities for compiling performance information and implementing new management practices.