event
Centre for Finance and Development
Friday
20
March
United Nations Geneva

Book Launch - Making Global Norms: Politics versus Science in International Organizations

With Leonard Seabrooke, Copenhagen Business School and Alexandros Kentikelenis, Bocconi
, -

Maison de la paix, Chemin Eugène Rigot 2a, 1202 Genève

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Book Launch

 

Title: Making Global Norms: Politics versus Science in International Organizations

Publisher: Oxford University Press

Publication date: Oct/Nov 2025

Abstract:

Global norms form the core infrastructure of economic and political globalization. To be influential, these norms need to be codified into policy scripts that spell out how they are to be applied in practice. This process of developing scripts is a key job of international organizations, which act as venues where states can collectively make major decisions. When forging policy prescriptions, these organizations draw on scientific knowledge but are also highly attune to political pressures. 

This book provides a theoretical account and advanced methodological toolkit to study how variation in the intensity of scientific consensus and political contestation produces policy scripts that modify global norms. We show that the policymakers involved in scriptwriting processes within international organizations wear two hats: they are both political representatives of the states that appoint them and experts in their own right with worldviews that correspond to their expertise. They have to negotiate with each other, as well as with their organization’s technocratic staff, to shape the ultimate content of global policy scripts. The implication of our findings is that diversity within IOs matters: changes in the kinds of expertise that are present in deliberations can yield significant differences in how norms are modified. Our empirical focus is on the International Monetary Fund’s scripts for capital controls, sovereign debt management, and taxation. Drawing on a novel mixed-method methodological approach, Making Global Norms opens the black box on how some of the most important norms underpinning globalization were made. 

 

Authors

  

Leonard Seabrooke,  Professor of International Political Economy and Economic Sociology in the Department of Organization at the Copenhagen Business School, and Research Professor at the Norwegian Institute of International Affairs

 

  

Alexandros Kentikelenis, Associate Professor of Political Economy and Sociology, Bocconi University

 

Discussant

 

  

Fernanda Conforto De Oliveira, Senior SNSF Researcher, Centre of International History and Political Studies of Globalization (CRHIM), University of Lausanne

 

Registration

 

Registrations open in November 2025

 

Organisers

 

            

                

 

 

 

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