MPIfG Discussion Paper
From Max Planck Institute for the Study of Societies
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- 19/6: Changing perspectives in political economy

- Renate Mayntz
- 19/5: Strong firms, weak banks: The financial consequences of Germany's export-led growth model

- Benjamin Braun and Richard Deeg
- 19/4: Der Brexit und die ökonomische Identität Großbritanniens: Zwischen globalem Freihandel und ökonomischem Nationalismus

- Lisa Suckert
- 19/3: An overview of German new economic sociology and the contribution of the Max Planck Institute for the Study of Societies

- John Wilkinson
- 19/2: Is there a motherhood penalty in academia? The gendered effect of children on academic publications

- Mark Lutter and Martin Schröder
- 19/1: The German undervaluation regime under Bretton Woods: How Germany became the nightmare of the world economy

- Martin Höpner
- 18/11: European social policy: Progressive regression

- Wolfgang Streeck
- 18/10: Comparative political economy and varieties of macroeconomics

- Lucio Baccaro and Jonas Pontusson
- 18/9: The conditions of socioeconomic development exploring the legitimacy of social norms, trust, and corruption in Chile and Argentina

- Daniel Míguez and Matías Dewey
- 18/8: Unsichere Zukünfte und die Entstehung von Kooperation: Wie Erwartungen kollektives Handeln ermöglichen

- Timur Ergen and Martin Seeliger
- 18/7: There is an alternative: A two-tier European currency community

- Fritz W. Scharpf
- 18/6: A small history of the homeownership ideal

- Sebastian Kohl
- 18/5: Government of the people, by the elite, for the rich: Unequal responsiveness in an unlikely case

- Lea Elsässer, Svenja Hense and Armin Schäfer
- 18/4: Anomie or imitation? The Werther effect of celebrity suicides on suicide rates in 34 OECD countries, 1960-2014

- Mark Lutter, Karlijn L. A. Roex and Daria Tisch
- 18/3: Does pattern bargaining explain wage restraint in the German public sector?

- Donato Di Carlo
- 18/2: Explaining the growth of CSR within OECD countries: The role of institutional legitimacy in resolving the institutional mirror vs. substitute debate

- Daniel Kinderman and Mark Lutter
- 18/1: International monetary regimes and the German model

- Fritz W. Scharpf
- 17/21: Fiscal fault, financial fix? Capital Markets Union and the quest for macroeconomic stabilization in the euro area

- Benjamin Braun and Marina Hübner
- 17/20: From economic gains to social losses: How stories shape expectations in the case of German municipal finance

- Florian Fastenrath, Agnes Orban and Christine Trampusch
- 17/19: Unhinged: Industrial relations liberalization and capitalist instability

- Lucio Baccaro and Chris Howell
- 17/18: Varieties of economization in competition policy: A comparative analysis of German and American antitrust doctrines, 1960-2000

- Timur Ergen and Sebastian Kohl
- 17/17: Woher kommen Erwartungen? Die soziale Strukturierung imaginierter Zukünfte

- Jens Beckert
- 17/16: Liberalization, hysteresis, and labor relations in Western European commercial aviation

- Filippo Gian-Antonio Reale
- 17/15: Vom asymmetrischen Euro-Regime in die Transferunion: Und was die deutsche Politik dagegen tun könnte

- Fritz W. Scharpf
- 17/14: Ungleiche Mittelschichten: Über Unterschiede im Immobilienvermögen und im Erbe innerhalb der Mitte Deutschlands

- Philipp Korom
- 17/13: Transnationale Lohnkoordination zur Stabilisierung des Euro? Gab es nicht, gibt es nicht, wird es nicht geben

- Martin Höpner and Martin Seeliger
- 17/12: Zählen - Messen - Entscheiden: Wissen im politischen Prozess

- Renate Mayntz
- 17/11: Digitale Souveränität: Technikutopien und Gestaltungsansprüche demokratischer Politik

- Fokko Misterek
- 17/10: Grundfreiheiten als Liberalisierungsgebote? Reformoptionen im Kontext der EU-Reformdebatte

- Martin Höpner
- 17/9: What money does: An inquiry into the backbone of capitalist political economy

- Kai Koddenbrock
- 17/8: Die Historizität fiktionaler Erwartungen

- Jens Beckert
- 17/7: Coalitional cohesion in technology policy: The case of the early solar cell industry in the United States

- Timur Ergen
- 17/6: Effectiveness of the European semester: Explaining domestic consent and contestation

- Aleksandra Maatsch
- 17/5: Handeln und Struktur, Akteur und System: Die kausale Rekonstruktion von sozialen Makrophänomenen am Beispiel der Finanzkrise

- Renate Mayntz
- 17/4: Quality and inequality: Taste, value, and power in the third wave coffee market

- Edward F. Fischer
- 17/3: Privatized Keynesianism or conspicuous consumption? Status anxiety and the financialization of consumption in Chile

- Felipe González
- 17/2: Varieties of housing finance in historical perspective: The impact of mortgage finance systems on urban structures and homeownership

- Timothy Blackwell and Sebastian Kohl
- 17/1: Ambiguities of social Europe: Political agenda setting among trade unionists from Central and Eastern Europe and Western Europe

- Martin Seeliger
- 16/16: Workers united? How trade union organizations at the European level form political positions on the freedom of services

- Martin Seeliger and Ines Wagner
- 16/15: Forced structural convergence in the eurozone: Or a differentiated European monetary community

- Fritz W. Scharpf
- 16/14: De-constitutionalization and majority rule: A democratic vision for Europe

- Fritz W. Scharpf
- 16/13: Diversified quality production revisited the transformation of production systems and regulatory regimes in Germany

- Arndt Sorge and Wolfgang Streeck
- 16/12: Speaking to the people? Money, trust, and central bank legitimacy in the age of quantitative easing

- Benjamin Braun
- 16/11: Inherited advantage: The importance of inheritance for private wealth accumulation in Europe

- Philipp Korom
- 16/10: From elite lawbreaking to financial crime: The evolution of the concept of white-collar crime

- Arjan Reurink
- 16/9: After blood diamonds: The moral economy of illegality in the Sierra Leonean diamond market

- Nina Engwicht
- 16/8: Unverdientes Vermögen oder illegitimer Eingriff in das Eigentumsrecht? Der öffentliche Diskurs um die Erbschaftssteuer in Deutschland und Österreich

- Jens Beckert and H. Lukas R. Arndt
- 16/7: How much do sociologists write about economic topics? Using big data to test some conventional views in economic sociology, 1890 to 2014

- Adel Daoud and Sebastian Kohl
- 16/6: Uncertainty and the dangers of monocultures in regulation, analysis, and practice

- Richard Bronk and Wade Jacoby
- 16/5: Financial fraud: A literature review

- Arjan Reurink