Louis Pauly

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Louis W. Pauly is Professor of Political Science and Director of the Centre for International Studies, at the Munk Centre for International Studies, at the University of Toronto. In October 2002, he was awarded a Canada Research Chair. A graduate of Cornell University, the London School of Economics, New York University, and Fordham University, he has held management positions in the Royal Bank of Canada and served on the staff of the International Monetary Fund.

From January 2007, he and Emanuel Adler will edit International Organization.

Among his current research projects, one focuses on adaptation and learning within international economic organizations and another examines the politics of technological innovation in East Asia. He is a team leader in the Major Collaborative Research Initiative of the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada on "Globalization and Autonomy," which is directed by William Coleman. He teaches courses in the fields of international political economy and international relations.

[edit] Publications

His publications include various books and co-edited volumes, including:

  • Global Liberalism and Political Order: Toward a New Grand Compromise? (SUNY, forthcoming)
  • Complex Sovereignty: Reconstituting Political Authority in the Twenty-First Century (University of Toronto, 2005)
  • Governing the World's Money (Cornell, 2002)
  • Democracy beyond the State? The European Dilemma and the Emerging Global Order (University of Toronto and Rowman & Littlefield, 2000)
  • The Myth of the Global Corporation (Princeton, 1998)
  • Who Elected the Bankers? Surveillance and Control in the World Economy (Cornell, 1997)
  • Choosing to Cooperate: How States Avoid Loss (Johns Hopkins, 1993)
  • Opening Financial Markets: Banking Politics on the Pacific Rim (Cornell, 1988)

and many shorter monographs, journal articles, and book chapters. He serves on the editorial boards of International Organization, International Studies Quarterly, the Journal of Public Policy, the Review of International Political Economy, and Cambridge Studies in International Relations.