Institut für Wirtschafts- und Kulturgeographie Institut Termine und Infos
26. ISEG: Financial Geographies | Dr. Dariusz Wójcik

26. ISEG: Financial Geographies | Dr. Dariusz Wójcik

Dr. Dariusz Wójcik ,  University of Oxford, UK.

Programm und Ablauf des Seminars

24. - 28.06.2013 jeweils von 16:00-19:00 Uhr

  1. Session (24. Juni): Where are the capitalists? The geography of corporate governance
    • Clark, G.L., Wójcik, D. (2007): The Geography of Finance: Corporate Governance in a Global Marketplace. Oxford: Oxford University Press. Chapters 2, 4, 6
    • Wójcik, D. (2002): Cross-border corporate ownership and capital market integration in Europe: evidence from portfolio and industrial holdings, Journal of Economic Geography, 2:4, 455-491.
    • Wójcik, D. (2002): The Länder are the building blocks of the German capital market. Regional Studies, 36:8, 877-895.

  2. Session (25. Juni): The global stock market: issuers, investors and intermediaries in an uneven world
    • Wójcik, D. (2011): The Global Stock Market: Issuers, Investors, and Intermediaries in an Uneven World. Oxford: Oxford University Press. Chapters 1, 2, 4, 5, 7

  3. Session (26. Juni): Securities industry and investment bank capitalism: the geography of financial jobs and power
    • Haberly D. (2011): Strategic sovereign wealth fund investment and the new alliance capitalism: a network mapping investigation. Environment and Planning A, 43:8, 1833 – 1852
    • Ho, K. (2009): Liquidated: An Ethnography of Wall Street. Durham and London: Duke University Press. Introduction.
    • Wójcik, D. (2012): The end of investment bank capitalism: An economic geography of financial jobs and power. Economic Geography, 88:4, 345-368.
    • Wójcik, D. (2011): The Global Stock Market: Issuers, Investors, and Intermediaries in an Uneven World. Oxford: Oxford University Press. Chapter 8
    • Wójcik, D. (2011): Securitization and its footprint: the rise of the US securities industry centres 1998-2007. Journal of Economic Geography, 11:6, 925-947.

  4. Session (27. Juni): Finance at the crossroads: financial crisis and its aftermath
    • French, S., Leyshon, A., Thrift, N. (2009): A very geographical crisis: the making and breaking of the 2007-8 financial crisis. Cambridge Journal of Regions, Economy and Society 2, 287-302.
    • Harvey, D. (2011): Roepke lecture in economic geography - Crises, geographic disruptions and the uneven development of political responses. Economic Geography 87:1, 1-22.
    • Martin, R. (2011): The local geographies of the financial crisis: from the housing bubble to economic recession and beyond, Journal of Economic Geography, 11;4, 587-618.
    • Wójcik, D. (2013): The dark side of NY-LON: financial centres and the global financial crisis. Urban Studies (early access).
    • Wójcik, D., Kreston, N., McGill, S. (2012): Freshwater, Saltwater, and Deepwater: Efficient Market Hypothesis versus Behavioral Finance. Journal of Economic Geography.

  5. Session (28. Juni): The Global Financial Networks: advanced business services, world cities, and offshore jurisdictions in the global economy
    • Coe, N., Lai, K., Wójcik, D. (2013): Integrating finance into Global Production Networks. School of Geography and the Environment Working Paper No. (tbc), Oxford University
    • Haberly, D. and Wójcik, D. (2013): Tax havens and the production of offshore foreign direct investment: an empirical analysis. School of Geography and the Environment Working Paper No. (tbc), Oxford University.
    • Wójcik, D. (2012): Where governance fails: Advanced business services and the offshore world. Progress in Human Geography. phg.sagepub.com/content/early/2012/10/09/0309132512460904.full
    • Wójcik, D., Camilleri, J. (2013): 'Capitalist tools in socialist hands'? China Mobile in the Global Financial Network. School of Geography and the Environment Working Paper No. (tbc), Oxford University
    • Wójcik, D. (2012): Accounting for Globalization: Evaluating the Effectiveness of Country-by-Country Reporting (October 18, 2012). School of Geography and the Environment Working Paper No. 12-08, Oxford University. Available at papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm