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Ben Clift

Researcher at University of Warwick

Publications -  63
Citations -  1096

Ben Clift is an academic researcher from University of Warwick. The author has contributed to research in topics: Politics & Capitalism. The author has an hindex of 17, co-authored 56 publications receiving 961 citations. Previous affiliations of Ben Clift include Brunel University London.

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Economic patriotism : reinventing control over open markets

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors analyse how tensions between international market integration and spatially limited political mandates have led to the phenomenon of economic patriotism, which can include territorial allegiances at the supranational or the local level.
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Credible Keynesianism? New Labour Macroeconomic Policy and the Political Economy of Coarse Tuning

TL;DR: The authors argue that New Labour's macroeconomic fine-tuning is inspired by post-war Keynesian economic thinking and argue that the capacity to fine-tune is precisely what is being sought by New Labour in its quest for credibility through the redesign of British macroeconomic policy framework and institutions.
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Comparative capitalisms, ideational political economy and French post-dirigiste responses to the global financial crisis

TL;DR: This article argued that understanding the evolution of French capitalism requires recognition of the ongoing market-making role of the French State, in combination with the French conception of the market and its embedding within a social context characterised by the interpenetration of public and private elitist networks of France's financial network economy.
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The Second Time as Farce? The EU Takeover Directive, the Clash of Capitalisms and the Hamstrung Harmonization of European (and French) Corporate Governance*

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors focus on the EU Takeover Directive and its transposition into French law, arguing that the clash of European capitalisms as well as heightened uncertainty and differentiation in takeover regulation exacerbate problems of asymmetric vulnerability of EU states and firms.