Business and Politics
1999 - 2024
From Cambridge University Press Cambridge University Press, UPH, Shaftesbury Road, Cambridge CB2 8BS UK. Bibliographic data for series maintained by Kirk Stebbing (). Access Statistics for this journal.
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Volume 23, issue 4, 2021
- Bigger than Bitcoin: A Theoretical Typology and Research Agenda for Digital Currencies pp. 439-455

- Tim Marple
- Interacting Corporate Political Activities with Evidence from the Tobacco Industry pp. 456-473

- Kartik Rao and Brandon Schaufele
- Who's Afraid of Sunlight? Explaining Opposition to Transparency in Economic Development pp. 474-491

- Nathan M. Jensen and Calvin Thrall
- Cosponsoring and Cashing In: US House Members’ Support for Punitive Immigration Policy and Financial Payoffs from the Private Prison Industry pp. 492-509

- Jason L. Morín, Rachel Torres and Loren Collingwood
- Resistance Is Not Futile: Co-operatives, Demutualization, Agriculture, and Neoliberalism in Australia pp. 510-528

- Greg Patmore, Nikola Balnave and Olivera Marjanovic
Volume 23, issue 3, 2021
- State-business Relations and Industrial Upgrading in the Digital Era: The Cases of Software and Aerospace Sectors in Mexico (2000–2012) pp. 309-329

- Mariana Rangel-Padilla
- Do Targeted Trade Sanctions Against Chinese Technology Companies Affect US Firms? Evidence from an Event Study pp. 330-343

- Jeffrey S. Allen
- Challenged in Geneva: WTO Litigation Experience and the Design of Preferential Trade Agreements pp. 344-363

- Simon Wüthrich and Manfred Elsig
- Does Corruption Lead to Lower Subnational Credit Ratings? Fiscal Dependence, Market Reputation, and the Cost of Debt pp. 364-382

- Maciej Sychowiec, Monika Bauhr and Nicholas Charron
- Soft Law Engagements and Hard Law Preferences: Comparing EU Lobbying Positions between UN Global Compact Signatory Firms and Other Interest Group Types pp. 383-405

- Onna van den Broek
- Foreign Investment and Right-to-Work Laws pp. 406-418

- Paulo Cavallo and Clint Peinhardt
- Personnel Power: Governing State-Owned Enterprises pp. 419-437

- Wendy Leutert and Samantha A. Vortherms
Volume 23, issue 2, 2021
- From State Capture to “Pariah” Status? The Preference Attainment of the Hungarian Banking Association (2006–14) pp. 179-201

- Miklós Sebők and Sándor Kozák
- The Arab Spring and the International Defense Market pp. 202-220

- Jeroen Klomp
- The Politics of Productivity: Differences in Exporting Firms Across Domestic Contexts pp. 221-242

- Megan Roosevelt
- Between Competition and Cooperation: Financial Incumbents and Challengers in German Pension Politics pp. 243-263

- Nils Röper
- Deindustrialization and the Demand for Protection pp. 264-281

- Heather-Leigh Kathryn Ba and Tyler Coleman
- “Exit” vs. “Voice”: Global Sourcing, Multinational Production, and the China Trade Lobby pp. 282-308

- Ka Zeng
Volume 23, issue 1, 2021
- Vanguards of globalization: Organization and political action among America's pro-trade firms pp. 1-35

- Iain Osgood
- The effects of bond ratings on income inequality in the developing world pp. 36-66

- Glen Biglaiser and Ronald McGauvran
- Historical institutionalism and technological change: the case of Uber pp. 67-90

- Madison Cartwright
- Market responses to global governance: International climate cooperation and Europe's carbon trading pp. 91-123

- Federica Genovese
- Why Do Corporations Engage in LGBT Rights Activism? LGBT Employee Groups as Internal Pressure Groups pp. 124-152

- Cory Maks-Solomon and Josiah Mark Drewry
- The Institute of International Finance: From Poacher to Gamekeeper? pp. 153-178

- Jasper Blom
Volume 22, issue 4, 2020
- Multinational Corporations and the Politics of International Trade in Multidisciplinary Perspective pp. 573-586

- Grace A. Ballor and Aydin B. Yildirim
- Unwanted Attention: Swiss Multinationals and the Creation of International Corporate Guidelines in the 1970s pp. 587-611

- Sabine Pitteloud
- Mobilizing Against the Antiglobalization Backlash: An Integrated Framework for Corporate Nonmarket Strategy pp. 612-638

- Louise Curran and Jappe Eckhardt
- Trade policy in a “GVC World”: Multinational corporations and trade liberalization pp. 639-666

- Christina Anderer, Andreas Dür and Lisa Lechner
- Toward a Corporate Duty for Lead Companies to Respect Human Rights in Their Global Value Chains? pp. 667-697

- Claire Bright, Axel Marx, Nina Pineau and Jan Wouters
Volume 22, issue 3, 2020
- The tenuous link between CSR performance and support for regulation: Business associations and Nordic regulatory preferences regarding the corporate transparency law 2014/95/EU pp. 413-448

- Daniel Kinderman
- What to lobby on? Explaining why large American firms lobby on the same or different issues pp. 449-476

- Niels Selling
- Institutional complementarity, firm behavior, and firm heterogeneity: A cross-national analysis pp. 477-509

- Isa Camyar and Bahar Ulupinar
- The good, the bad, or the ugly? Corporate strategies, size, and environmental regulation in the fish-farming industry pp. 510-538

- Irja Vormedal and Jon Birger Skjærseth
- Offshore production's effect on Americans’ attitudes toward trade pp. 539-571

- Andrew Kerner, Jane Sumner and Brian Richter
Volume 22, issue 2, 2020
- Anticipating exclusion: Global supply chains and Chinese business responses to the Trans-Pacific Partnership pp. 253-278

- Robert Gulotty and Xiaojun Li
- Foreign direct investment policy, domestic firms, and financial constraints pp. 279-306

- Sarah Bauerle Danzman
- Corporate political strategies in Europe: The determinants of firms' access to the European Commission pp. 307-338

- Amanda M. Alves
- Can IMF program design resurrect investor sentiment? An empirical investigation pp. 339-382

- Krishna Chaitanya Vadlamannati
- Cross-ideological coordination by private interests: Evidence from mortgage market regulation under Dodd-Frank pp. 383-411

- Sanford C. Gordon and Howard Rosenthal
Volume 22, issue 1, 2020
- Bank power and public policy since the financial crisis pp. 1-24

- Huw Macartney, David Howarth and Scott James
- The politics of bank structural reform: Business power and agenda setting in the United Kingdom, France, and Germany pp. 25-51

- David Howarth and Scott James
- Network effects in the formation of the financial industry's regulatory preferences in the European Union pp. 52-84

- Adam William Chalmers and Kevin L Young
- Policy entrepreneurship and the influence of the transnational financial industry in the EU reform of securitization pp. 85-112

- Giuseppe Montalbano
- Multilevel regulatory governance: Establishing bank-regulator relationships at the European Banking Authority pp. 113-134

- David Coen and John-Paul Salter
- Banks, power, and political institutions: the divergent priorities of European states towards “too-big-to-fail” banks: The cases of competition in retail banking and the banking structural reform pp. 135-160

- Elsa Massoc
- Compliance forces, domestic policy process, and international regulatory standards: Compliance with Basel III pp. 161-195

- Mehmet Kerem Coban
- To change banks or bankers? Systemic political (in)action and post-crisis banking reform in the UK and the Netherlands pp. 196-223

- Joseph Ganderson
- The open-endedness of macroprudential policy. Endogenous risks as an obstacle to countercyclical financial regulation pp. 224-251

- Bart Stellinga
Volume 21, issue 4, 2019
- Towards global business engagement with development goals? Multilateral institutions and the SDGs in a changing global capitalism pp. 445-463

- Benedicte Bull and Jason Miklian
- From market multilateralism to governance by goal setting: SDGs and the changing role of partnerships in a new global order pp. 464-486

- Benedicte Bull and Desmond McNeill
- Make development great again? Accumulation regimes, spaces of sovereign exception and the elite development paradigm of China's Belt and Road Initiative pp. 487-513

- Ruben Gonzalez-Vicente
- Business and morals: Corporate strategies for sustainable development in China pp. 514-539

- Dan Banik and Ka Lin
- CSP and governance in emerging and developing country firms: Of mirrors and substitutes pp. 540-568

- Ralf Barkemeyer, Fanny Salignac and Padmaja Argade
- The role of business in sustainable development and peacebuilding: Observing interaction effects pp. 569-601

- Jason Miklian
- Private sector development and the persistence of fragility in Sierra Leone pp. 602-631

- Brian Ganson and M’cleod, Herbert
Volume 21, issue 3, 2019
- Accounting for success: The Big Four as allies of finance in post crisis regulatory reform pp. 297-326

- Manolis Kalaitzake
- Ownership concentration and institutional investors’ governance through voice and exit pp. 327-350

- Patrick Jahnke
- Uncovering the structure of public procurement transactions pp. 351-384

- Mircea Popa
- Employer preferences and political alignments during the Eurocrisis: Evidence from the Portuguese case pp. 385-414

- Marco Lisi and João Loureiro
- The specialization curse: How economic specialization shapes public goods provision pp. 415-444

- Benjamin Barber and Nimah Mazaheri
Volume 21, issue 2, 2019
- How agents change institutions: Coalitional dynamics and the reform of commercial training in Switzerland pp. 145-171

- Lina Seitzl and Patrick Emmenegger
- Ranking, coordination, and global governance: The case of the Access to Medicine Index pp. 172-204

- Sander Quak, Johan Heilbron and Jessica Meijer
- Risky business: Do disclosure and shareholder approval of corporate political contributions affect firm performance? pp. 205-239

- Saumya Prabhat and David M. Primo
- Financial volatility and public scrutiny as institutional determinants of financial industry firms' CSR pp. 240-266

- Adam William Chalmers and Onna Malou van den Broek
- Presence and influence in lobbying: Evidence from Dodd-Frank pp. 267-295

- Pamela Ban and Hye Young You
Volume 21, issue 1, 2019
- U.S. Foreign Policy and the Governance of Finance pp. 1-26

- Kathryn C. Lavelle
- The revolution in federal procurement, 1980–present pp. 27-52

- Andrew J. Taylor
- Baumol's cost disease and the withering of the state pp. 53-85

- Joshua Semat, David Lowery, Suzanne Linn and William D. Berry
- Financial structure and the development of domestic bond markets in emerging economies pp. 86-112

- Iain Hardie and Lena Rethel
- Neither synthesis nor rivalry: Complementary policy models and technological learning in the Mexican and Brazilian petroleum and automotive industries pp. 113-144

- Alberto Fuentes and Seth Pipkin
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