Mark Steven Copelovitch
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Mark Steven Copelovitch Department of Political Science [email protected] 401 North Hall, 1050 Bascom Mall https://markcopelovitch.com University of Wisconsin – Madison Phone: 617-510-1454 Madison, WI 53706 Citizenship: USA CURRENT POSITION University of Wisconsin – Madison Department of Political Science and Robert M. La Follette School of Public Affairs • Professor, 2018-present • Associate Professor (with tenure), 2013-2018 • Assistant Professor, 2006-2013 • Faculty affiliate: Center for European Studies, Center for German and European Studies, Jean Monnet European Union Center of Excellence EDUCATION Harvard University • Ph.D., Department of Government, Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, 2005 • A.M., Political Science, 2003 • Thesis: Governing Global Markets: Private Debt and the Politics of International Monetary Fund Lending. o Robert Noxon Toppan Prize, Best Dissertation on a Subject of Political Science, Faculty of Arts and Sciences • Committee: Jeffry Frieden (chair), Michael Hiscox, Lisa Martin, Andrew Moravcsik Yale University • B.A., Yale College, magna cum laude, with Distinction in Political Science, 1997 PREVIOUS ACADEMIC POSITIONS Hertie School of Governance, Berlin, Germany • Visiting Scholar, 2013-14 Princeton University Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs • Postdoctoral Fellow, Niehaus Center for Globalization and Governance, 2005-6 1 RESEARCH AND PUBLICATIONS Books 1. Mark Copelovitch and David A. Singer. 2020. Banks on the Brink: Global Capital, Securities Markets, and the Political Roots of Financial Crises. New York: Cambridge University Press. 2. Mark S. Copelovitch. 2010. The International Monetary Fund in the Global Economy: Banks, Bonds, and Bailouts. London: Cambridge University Press. Edited journal issues 1. Mark Copelovitch and Jon C.W. Pevehouse. 2019. Special Issue on “International Organizations in a New Era of Populist Nationalism,” Review of International Organizations 14(2). 2. Mark Copelovitch, Jeffry Frieden, and Stefanie Walter. 2016. Special Issue on “The Political Economy of the Euro Crisis,” Comparative Political Studies 49(7). Peer-reviewed journal articles 1. The Political Consequences of External Economic Shocks: Evidence from Poland (with John Ahlquist and Stefanie Walter). 2020. American Journal of Political Science. 2. Challenges to the Liberal World Order. Cause for Pessimism or Optimism? (with Sara Hobolt and Stefanie Walter). Contribution to “Understanding Contemporary Challenges to the Global Liberal Order.” 2019. Journal of European Public Policy. 3. Mark Copelovitch and Jon C.W. Pevehouse. 2019. “International Organizations in a New Era of Populist Nationalism,” Review of International Organizations 14(2): 169- 186. 4. Mark Copelovitch, Christopher Gandrud, and Mark Hallerberg. 2018. Financial Data Transparency, International Institutions, and Government Borrowing Costs. International Studies Quarterly 62(1): 23-41. 5. Mark Copelovitch and David A. Singer. 2017. Capital Inflows and Financial Crises: How Securities Markets Affect Bank Stability in Industrialized Countries. Economics and Politics 29(3): 179-208. 6. Mark S. Copelovitch, Jeffry Frieden, and Stefanie Walter. 2016. The Political Economy of the Euro Crisis. Comparative Political Studies 49(7): 811-40. 7. Mark S. Copelovitch and Tonya L. Putnam. 2014. Design in Context: Existing International Agreements and New Cooperation. International Organization 68(2): 1- 23. 8. Mark S. Copelovitch and Jon C. Pevehouse. 2013. Ties That Bind? Preferential Trade Agreements and Exchange Rate Policy Choice. International Studies Quarterly 57(2): 385-99. 9. Mark S. Copelovitch and David Ohls. 2012. Trade, Institutions, and the Timing of GATT/WTO Accession in Post-Colonial States. Review of International Organizations 7(1): 81-107. 2 10. Mark S. Copelovitch. 2010. Master or Servant? Common Agency, Preference Heterogeneity, and the Political Economy of IMF Lending. International Studies Quarterly 54(1): 49-77. 11. Mark S. Copelovitch and David A. Singer. 2008. Financial Regulation, Monetary Policy, and Inflation in the Industrialized World. Journal of Politics 70(3): 663-680. Edited volume contributions 1. Mark S. Copelovitch and Jon C. Pevehouse. 2014. Bridging the Silos: Trade and Exchange Rates in International Political Economy, in The Politics of International Trade, Oxford Handbook Series, Lisa L. Martin (ed.). Oxford: Oxford University Press. 2. Mark S. Copelovitch. 2013. Picking Up (and Rearranging) the Pieces: The Great Recession and the Politics of Global Financial Governance, in Governance Challenges and Innovations: Financial and Fiscal Governance, The Hertie School of Governance (ed.). Oxford: Oxford University Press. 3. William Roberts Clark, Mark S. Copelovitch, Mark Hallerberg, Lucia Quaglia, and Stefanie Walter. 2013. Challenge in Focus: Financial and Fiscal Governance, in The Governance Report 2013, The Hertie School of Governance (ed.). Oxford: Oxford University Press. Other publications 1. Mark Copelovitch, Jeffry Frieden, and Stefanie Walter. “Four Lessons from the Euro Crisis – and Why the Future of the Euro Remains Uncertain.” London School of Economics EUROPP blog, October 7, 2016 (http://bit.ly/2dVrTK3). 2. Mark Copelovitch, Jeffry Frieden, and Stefanie Walter. “Was man über die Eurokrise wissen muss.” De Facto, June 14, 2016 (http://www.defacto.expert/2016/06/14/eurokrise-2/). 3. Mark Copelovitch, Jeffry Frieden, and Stefanie Walter. “The Euro Zone is in Crisis. Here are the Four Most Important Lessons to Take Away.” Monkey Cage (Washington Post), March 31, 2016 (https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/monkey-cage/wp/2016/03/31/the-euro-zone- is-in-crisis-here-are-the-four-most-important-lessons-to-take-away/). 4. Mark Copelovitch, Christopher Gandrud, and Mark Hallerberg, “Financial Regulatory Transparency and Sovereign Borrowing Costs.” Econbrowser (http://econbrowser.com/archives/2016/02/guest-contribution-financial-regulatory- transparency-and-sovereign-borrowing-costs). 5. Mark Copelovitch, Christopher Gandrud, and Mark Hallerberg. “Financial Regulatory Transparency: New Data and Implications for EU Policy.” Bruegel Policy Contribution, Issue 2015/20 (December): http://bruegel.org/wp- content/uploads/2015/12/pc_2015_20-1.pdf. 6. Mark Copelovitch, Christopher Gandrud, and Mark Hallerberg. “Opaque Europe: Financial Supervisory Transparency, Why It’s Important, and How to Improve It.” Bruegel blog (http://bruegel.org/2015/12/opaque-europe-financial-supervisory- transparency-why-its-important-and-how-to-improve-it/). 3 7. “Greece Votes ‘No.’ Is This the End of the Eurozone?” Monkey Cage (Washington Post), July 7, 2015. https://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/monkey- cage/wp/2015/07/07/greece-votes-no-is-this-the-end-for-the-eurozone/. 8. Review of The Politics of IMF Lending, by Michael Breen. 2014, Review of International Organizations 9(1): 125-30. 9. Books on the Global Financial Crisis: An Annotated Field Guide. APSA Political Economy Newsletter, Winter 2011. Reprinted at http://www.themonkeycage.org/2011/01/books_on_the_global_financial_.html. 10. “Some Thoughts on the IMF Reform Debate,” Econbrowser blog post, October 7, 2010 (http://econbrowser.com/archives/2010/10/some_thoughts_o) 11. “Is Spain Next?” Econbrowser blog post, June 17, 2010 (http://econbrowser.com/archives/2010/06/is_spain_next) 12. Master or Servant? Agency Slack and the Politics of IMF Lending. La Follette School Policy Report 17(2), University of Wisconsin – Madison, Winter 2008. RESEARCH IN PROGRESS Working papers • The Political Impact of Monetary Shocks: Evidence from India's 2016 Demonetization (with Rikhil Bhavnani) (https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=3095228). Under review, American Political Science Review. • Partisan Technocrats? How High Officials in International Organizations Matter (with Stephanie Rickard). Under review, Review of International Organizations (as of February 24, 2020). • Central Bank Independence, Macroeconomic Constraints and the Political Economy of Macroprudential Policy (with Allison Myren) • This Time Should Have Been Different: The Causes and Consequences of Macroeconomic Policy Failure in the Great Recession (https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=3059991) • The Trilemma and Trade Policy: The Monetary and Financial Roots of WTO Disputes (with Jon C.W. Pevehouse and Sujeong Shim) • Formal Rules Matter: The Limits of US Influence in the IMF and World Bank (with Ryan Powers, Daniel Nielson, and Michael Tierney) In progress • Investor Responses to International Financial Shocks: Evidence from Poland (with Anna Oltman and Stefanie Walter) 4 HONORS AND AWARDS • Vilas Associate Award, Division of Social Sciences, UW – Madison, 2017-19 • Honored Instructor (University Housing), UW – Madison, Fall 2016, Spring 2017, Fall 2019 • Departmental nominee (La Follette School), Romnes Fellowship, 2018-19 • European Commission Erasmus Plus Jean Monnet Project, 2015-2017, Key faculty • Provost nominee, Andrew Carnegie Fellows Program, University of Wisconsin – Madison, 2015 • Daniel Louis and Genevieve Rustvold Goldy Faculty Fellow, University of Wisconsin – Madison, La Follette School of Public Affairs, 2015-16 • Trice Family Faculty Scholar, University of Wisconsin – Madison, Department of Political Science, 2013-16 • Alternate, Fulbright Scholar Award, German Fulbright Foundation, 2013-14 • Departmental nominee (Political Science), University Distinguished Teaching Award, University of Wisconsin – Madison, 2012, 2013 • Outstanding Mentor Award, Ronald E.