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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/11375/18051
Title: Reasserting Private Authority in Times of Crisis: Technical to Moral Discourses in Anglo-American Finance
Authors: Campbell-Verduyn, Malcolm
Advisor: Porter, Tony
Department: Political Science - International Relations
Keywords: private authority;crisis;discourse;finance;governance;Anglo-America;professionals;morality;Islamic finance;environmental finance;inequality;institutionalism
Publication Date: Nov-2015
Abstract: Contemporary global governance has become reliant on the expert knowledge of professional actors. Yet governance systems based on technical forms of private authority have proven highly unstable and vulnerable to crisis. How is private authority re-configured following challenges and pressures for change in times of crisis? This dissertation explores the agency exercised by a range of professional actors seeking to legitimately reassert power during periods in which their expert knowledge has become unsettled. A two-prong thesis is advanced. First, in drawing on explicitly normative discourses professional actors seek to reassert moral authority, rather than addressing flaws in their expert knowledge and emphasising their technical authority. Professional actors express attention to and involvement with a wider array of overtly ethical issues that had previously been abstracted away. Second, reassertions of authority may depend not merely on more explicit positioning within normative debates but upon the underlying ideas and values prioritised. The authority of professional actors remains precarious when value sets linked to crisis are continuously emphasised. A genealogical analysis of professional actors in Anglo-American finance since the outbreak of the most recent financial crisis in 2007 is undertaken through a revised variant of the discursive institutionalist framework. Informed by primary documents from professional actors and their associations along with original interviews and secondary media documents, the changing underpinnings of the authority of financial services providers, economists, and advisories based in the United States and United Kingdom are examined. The study contributes to a wider emphasis on the changing authority of a range of private actors as well as to an enhaced stress on both discourse and ethics in International Relations, Global/International Political Economy, and Global Governance scholarship. 
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/11375/18051
Appears in Collections:Open Access Dissertations and Theses

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