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DESCRIPTION:Tom PepinskyProfessor of GovernmentCornell UniversityThe Exclus
 ionary Foundations of Embedded Liberalism Under embedded&nbsp\;liberalism\
 , free trade\, multinational\ninvestment\, and liberal immigration&nbsp\;p
 olicies enabled&nbsp\;factors of\nproduction to flow across national borde
 rs. Analyses&nbsp\;since Ruggie (1982)\nhave focused on trade&nbsp\;in goo
 ds and capital\, implicitly assuming&nbsp\;that\nlabor represented just an
 other factor of production. We argue&nbsp\;that much\nas&nbsp\;capital con
 trols were essential components of the embedded liberal\ncompromise\,&nbsp
 \;so too were&nbsp\;restrictions on the democratic rights of\nlabor migran
 ts. Generous&nbsp\;welfare programs in labor\nreceiving&nbsp\;countries th
 rived alongside accommodative&nbsp\;immigration\npolicies\, but this arran
 gement was only tenable if&nbsp\;migrants\nwere&nbsp\;politically or socia
 lly excluded in their destination countries.\nEmbedded&nbsp\;liberalism ab
 road&nbsp\;rested on exclusionary political\nfoundations at home. In&nbsp\
 ;bringing together the IPE literature on\nthe&nbsp\;“Globalization trilemm
 a” (Rodrik)&nbsp\;with the comparative politics\nof citizenship and member
 ship exclusion\, we provide a novel account of how\nembedded liberalism ac
 tually worked\,&nbsp\;with&nbsp\;implications for current\ndebates about t
 he fate of the liberal order in a&nbsp\;time of populist resurgence.\nThe 
 talk is based on a working paper of the same name\, coauthored with Sara\n
 Wallace Goodman of UC Irvine.For more information\, please contact Daniel 
 McDowell\, dmcdowel@syr.edu.Sponsored by: The Comparitive Policy / Interna
 tional Relations Speaker Series at the Moynihan Institute of Global Affair
 s.
DTEND:20191010T173000Z
DTSTAMP:20260514T130823Z
DTSTART:20191010T163000Z
LOCATION:
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:The Exclusionary Foundations of Embedded Liberalism
UID:RFCALITEM639143465030468400
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:<p><b>Tom Pepinsky<br></b>Professor of Governm
 ent</p><p>Cornell University</p><p><br></p><p><b>The Exclusionary Foundati
 ons of Embedded Liberalism</b><br> </p><p>Under embedded&nbsp\;liberalism\
 , free trade\, multinational\ninvestment\, and liberal immigration&nbsp\;p
 olicies enabled&nbsp\;factors of\nproduction to flow across national borde
 rs. Analyses&nbsp\;since Ruggie (1982)\nhave focused on trade&nbsp\;in goo
 ds and capital\, implicitly assuming&nbsp\;that\nlabor represented just an
 other factor of production. We argue&nbsp\;that much\nas&nbsp\;capital con
 trols were essential components of the embedded liberal\ncompromise\,&nbsp
 \;so too were&nbsp\;restrictions on the democratic rights of\nlabor migran
 ts. Generous&nbsp\;welfare programs in labor\nreceiving&nbsp\;countries th
 rived alongside accommodative&nbsp\;immigration\npolicies\, but this arran
 gement was only tenable if&nbsp\;migrants\nwere&nbsp\;politically or socia
 lly excluded in their destination countries.\nEmbedded&nbsp\;liberalism ab
 road&nbsp\;rested on exclusionary political\nfoundations at home. In&nbsp\
 ;bringing together the IPE literature on\nthe&nbsp\;“Globalization trilemm
 a” (Rodrik)&nbsp\;with the comparative politics\nof citizenship and member
 ship exclusion\, we provide a novel account of how\nembedded liberalism ac
 tually worked\,&nbsp\;with&nbsp\;implications for current\ndebates about t
 he fate of the liberal order in a&nbsp\;time of populist resurgence.\nThe 
 talk is based on a working paper of the same name\, coauthored with Sara\n
 Wallace Goodman of UC Irvine.</p><p>For more information\, please contact 
 Daniel McDowell\, dmcdowel@syr.edu.</p><p><br></p><p>Sponsored by: The Com
 paritive Policy / International Relations Speaker Series at the Moynihan I
 nstitute of Global Affairs.<br></p>
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