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1 Curriculum Vitae (February 2013) GARY ARTHUR DYMSKI Email addresses: [email protected] and [email protected] EDUCATION 1975 B.A., University of Pennsylvania, Urban Studies 1977 M.P.A., Maxwell School, Syracuse University, Public Budgeting 1983 M.A., University of Massachusetts, Amherst, Economics 1987 PhD, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, Economics FIELDS: Public Policy, Political Economy, Money and Banking, Macroeconomics ACADEMIC APPOINTMENTS 2012-13 Leadership Chair in Applied Economics, Leeds University Business School, University of Leeds 2012-13 Division Director of Research, Economics Division, Leeds University Business School, 2012- 2001-13 Professor of Economics, University of California, Riverside (on leave as of April 2012) 1995-2000 Associate Professor of Economics, University of California, Riverside 1991-95 Assistant Professor of Economics, University of California, Riverside 1987-91 Assistant Professor of Economics, University of Southern California 1986-87 Acting Assistant Professor of Economics, University of Southern California 2003-09 Executive Director, University of California Center in Sacramento 2002-03 Director, Planning Process, Center for Sustainable Suburban Development, UC Riverside 2001-02 Associate Dean for Research and Graduate Studies, College of Humanities, Arts, and Social Sciences, University of California, Riverside 2010 Visiting Professor, CEDEPLAR, Federal University of Minas Gerais, Brazil, Federal Fluminense University, Niteroi, Brazil, and Institute of Economics, Federal University of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil 2009 Visiting Scholar, Center for Urban & Regional Developmt Studies, University of Newcastle, UK 2009 Visiting Scholar, Doctoral Program in Economics, University of Athens, Greece 2008 Visiting Scholar, CEDEPLAR, Federal University of Minas Gerais, Brazil 2005 Visiting Professor, Graduate Program in Development, Society and Agriculture, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil 2003 Visiting Scholar, Department of Economics, University of Sao Paulo, Brazil 2001 Visiting Scholar, Institute of Economics, Federal University of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil 2000 Visiting Scholar, Center for International Research on the Japanese Economy, University of Tokyo, Tokyo, Japan 1992 Visiting Lecturer, Bangladesh Institute for Development Studies, Dhaka NON-ACADEMIC EMPLOYMENT 1979-81 Staff Director and Fiscal Advisor, Democratic Caucus, Indiana State Senate 1977-79 Economic Analyst, Legal Services Organization of Indiana, Indianapolis, Indiana 1975-77 Senior Research Analyst, Office of Institutional Research, Syracuse University HONORS 2009 Certificate of Appreciation, California State Senate 2003 Certificate of Appreciation, For Sisters Only Student Association, UC Riverside 2002 Lifetime Honorary Membership, Golden Key Society, UC Riverside Chapter 2000 Professor of the Year, UC Riverside Honors Program 1990 Omicron Delta Epsilon Award for Excellence in Teaching, USC 1985-86 Leo Model Research Fellowship, The Brookings Institution 1983-84 University Fellowship, University of Massachusetts 1975 Phi Beta Kappa, University of Pennsylvania

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Page 1: Curriculum Vitae (February 2013) GARY ARTHUR DYMSKIinctpped.ie.ufrj.br/spiderweb/pdf/cv_dymski.pdf · Curriculum Vitae (February 2013) GARY ARTHUR DYMSKI Email addresses: g.dymski@leeds.ac.uk

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Curriculum Vitae (February 2013) GARY ARTHUR DYMSKI

Email addresses: [email protected] and [email protected] EDUCATION

1975 B.A., University of Pennsylvania, Urban Studies 1977 M.P.A., Maxwell School, Syracuse University, Public Budgeting 1983 M.A., University of Massachusetts, Amherst, Economics 1987 PhD, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, Economics

FIELDS: Public Policy, Political Economy, Money and Banking, Macroeconomics ACADEMIC APPOINTMENTS

2012-13 Leadership Chair in Applied Economics, Leeds University Business School, University of Leeds 2012-13 Division Director of Research, Economics Division, Leeds University Business School, 2012- 2001-13 Professor of Economics, University of California, Riverside (on leave as of April 2012) 1995-2000 Associate Professor of Economics, University of California, Riverside 1991-95 Assistant Professor of Economics, University of California, Riverside 1987-91 Assistant Professor of Economics, University of Southern California 1986-87 Acting Assistant Professor of Economics, University of Southern California 2003-09 Executive Director, University of California Center in Sacramento 2002-03 Director, Planning Process, Center for Sustainable Suburban Development, UC Riverside 2001-02 Associate Dean for Research and Graduate Studies, College of Humanities, Arts, and

Social Sciences, University of California, Riverside 2010 Visiting Professor, CEDEPLAR, Federal University of Minas Gerais, Brazil, Federal Fluminense University, Niteroi, Brazil, and Institute of Economics, Federal University of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil 2009 Visiting Scholar, Center for Urban & Regional Developmt Studies, University of Newcastle, UK 2009 Visiting Scholar, Doctoral Program in Economics, University of Athens, Greece 2008 Visiting Scholar, CEDEPLAR, Federal University of Minas Gerais, Brazil 2005 Visiting Professor, Graduate Program in Development, Society and Agriculture, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil 2003 Visiting Scholar, Department of Economics, University of Sao Paulo, Brazil 2001 Visiting Scholar, Institute of Economics, Federal University of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil 2000 Visiting Scholar, Center for International Research on the Japanese Economy, University of Tokyo, Tokyo, Japan 1992 Visiting Lecturer, Bangladesh Institute for Development Studies, Dhaka NON-ACADEMIC EMPLOYMENT

1979-81 Staff Director and Fiscal Advisor, Democratic Caucus, Indiana State Senate 1977-79 Economic Analyst, Legal Services Organization of Indiana, Indianapolis, Indiana 1975-77 Senior Research Analyst, Office of Institutional Research, Syracuse University

HONORS

2009 Certificate of Appreciation, California State Senate 2003 Certificate of Appreciation, For Sisters Only Student Association, UC Riverside 2002 Lifetime Honorary Membership, Golden Key Society, UC Riverside Chapter 2000 Professor of the Year, UC Riverside Honors Program 1990 Omicron Delta Epsilon Award for Excellence in Teaching, USC 1985-86 Leo Model Research Fellowship, The Brookings Institution 1983-84 University Fellowship, University of Massachusetts 1975 Phi Beta Kappa, University of Pennsylvania

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GRANTS, CONTRACTS, & GIFTS

2011-2012 Principal Investigator, UC Humanities Reseach Institute grant, “Representing, and Healing an Invisible Crisis: California Foreclosure Dialogues,” augmented by a Chancellor’s Innovation Fund grant, UCR, ongoing

2007 Principal Investigator, UC Mexus mini-grant, “From Redlining and Discrimination to Ethnic Banks and Remittances,” A Workshop on Financial Processes & Urban Inequality, UCCS, July 9-13, 2007 2006-2009 Co-Principal Investigator, with Peter Cowhey, Institute for Global Cooperation and Conflict, UCSD, “Governmental Official Training in California Homeland Security” 2006 Principal Investigator, UCR Center for California Native Nations, “Securing Sovereignty: A Com- prehensive Economic Development Strategy for the Agua Caliente Band of Cahuilla Indians”. 2006 Principal Investigator and Organizer, “Brazil: The Promise and the Crisis - A Rio-Riverside Dialogue

and Conference,” Center for Ideas and Society, UCR, June 1-2, 2006 2005-2006 Affiliate Researcher, United Nations Development Program 2002-2003 Director-designate, Edward J. Blakely Center for Sustainable Suburban Development, University of California, Riverside (Challenge grant and endowment gift) 1998-2002 Lead researcher, HUBZones Program, Small Business Administration 1999-2000 Principal investigator, “HUBZones Eligibility Study: Linking Worker Residence and Firm Location to

Understand Firm Survival and Job Creation,” Center for Economic Studies, Census Bureau, Washington, DC

1999-2002 Campus director, American Economic Association Minority Pipeline Project, MacArthur Foundation 1996-2000 Planning and conference grants from UC Pacific Rim Research Program, for a collaborative study of

housing finance, financial globalization, and the social contract in Japan, South Korea, and the US 1998-2000 Grant from Center for Global Partnership, Japan Foundation, for the above housing-finance project 1991-2005 Faculty Research Grants, Academic Senate, UC-Riverside 1996-97 Contract with Consumers Union to evaluate effects of banking mergers 1994-95 Rosenberg Foundation Grant to investigate bank innovation and credit availability in L.A. 1990-91 Grant from the City of Los Angeles to evaluate mortgage lending and banking services in Los Angeles

(with Western Center on Law and Poverty) 1989 Workshop grant, Center for International Studies, USC 1988 Faculty Research and Innovation Fund Grant, USC

PROFESSIONAL (Editorial)

Board of Editors, International Review of Applied Economics, 1993-present. Member, Editorial Collective, Latin American Perspectives. 2011-present. Board of Editors, Review of Keynesian Economics, 2012-present. Board of Editors, Econômica,Universidad Federal Fluminense, Brazil. 2006-present. Associate Editor, Japanese Journal of Administrative Science, 2005-present. Board of Advisors, Problemas del Desarrollo, Revista Latinoamericana de Economia, Institute for Economics Research, National Autonomous University of Mexico. 2000-present. Board of Editors, GeoForum, 1995-2011. Board of Editors, Journal of Economic Issues, 2001-4. Board of Editors, Review of Radical Political Economics, 1979-1981. PROFESSIONAL (Academic)

Board Member, Post Keynesian Study Group, United Kingdom, 2012- Overseas Academic Advisor, Japanese Society for Political Economy. Elected, November 2011. Member, American Economic Association, 1982-present. Member, AEA Committee on the Status of Minority Groups in the Economics Profession, 2003-2008.

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Member, Economists for Peace and Security, 1999-present. Fellow, 2007-present. Member, Union for Radical Political Economics, 1978-present. Member, Association for Evolutionary Economics, 1997-present. Board member, 2003-06. Chair of the James Street Scholar Award Committee, 2011-12. Member, Japanese Society for Political Economy. Elected November 2001. Member, Association for Institutional Thought, 1996-present. Member, Working group on “Globalization, City-Regions, And Economic Development,” UCLA,

August 2001-July 2003. Organized by Michael Storper and Allen J. Scott. Member, Engendering Macroeconomics working group, UNDP, 1997-2003. Member, Brookings Institution urban-sprawl working group, Los Angeles, 1998-2003. Member, Research group on 2nd-generation Asian Americans, Center for Ideas and Society, UCR, 2002. Member, Seminar on Modernity and its Discontents, Center for Ideas and Society, UCR, Winter 2002 quarter. Coordinator, Open Project on the Social Impacts of Economic Globalization, Ministry of Education, Govt of

Japan; directed by Professor Tetsuji Kawamura, Musashi University, Tokyo. 2003-2007. Member, California-Brazil Partnership Action Team, 2005-2009. Member, Steering Committee, California Policy Research Center, 2003-2007. Board member, California Program on Access to Care, 2008-09. Ex-officio member, California Hazards Institute of the University of California, 2006-2009. Board Member, Asian-American Pacific Islander Policy Initiative, University of California, 2006-2009. Executive Committee, Pacific Rim Research Program, University of California, 1999-2003. BOOKS

The Bank Merger Wave: The Economic Causes and Social Consequences of Financial Consolidation in the United States. M.E. Sharpe, Inc., Armonk NY. June 1999.

Japanese edition published, 2004, Nihon-Keizai-Hyoron-Sha Publishers, Tokyo. Translated by Shinya Imura and Akira Matsumoto,

EDITED BOOKS AND VOLUMES

Editor, The Political Economy of Race and Class, Published as a special issue of the Review of Radical Political Economics, 17(3), Fall 1985. 182 pgs.

Co-Editor with Gerald Epstein and Robert Pollin of Transforming the U.S. Financial System: An Equitable and Efficient Structure for the 21st Century. M.E. Sharpe, Inc. Published October 1993. Sponsored by Economic Policy Institute. 365 pgs.

Japanese edition published, 2001. Translated by Harada Yoshinara. Co-Editor with Bob Pollin of New Directions in Monetary Macroeconomics: Essays in the Tradition of Hyman P. Minsky. University of Michigan Press. Published in April 1994. 414 pgs.

Japanese edition published, April 2004, Koyo Shobo, Kyoto. Translation by Hirofumi Ueda, Hiroshi Fujii, and Sadayoshi Takaya.

Co-editor with Dorene Isenberg of Seeking Shelter on the Pacific Rim: Financial Globalization, Social Change, and the Housing Market. Armonk, NY: M.E. Sharpe, December 2001. 382 pgs. Co-editor with Silvana De Paula of Reimagining Growth: Towards a Renewal of Development Theory. London: Zed Books, August 2005, 308 pgs. Co-editor with Amiya Bagchi of Capture and Exclude: Developing Nations and the Poor in Global Finance, Delhi: Tulika Books, 2007, 344 pgs.

Co-editor with Kiichiro Yagi, Nobuharu Yokokawa, Shinjiro Hagiwara, The Crisis of 2008 and the Future of Capitalism, London: Routledge, 2012.

JOURNAL ARTICLES

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“An Introduction to the Political Economy of Race and Class,” Review of Radical Political Economics, 17 (3), Fall 1985: 1-7. “A Keynesian Theory of Bank Behavior,” Journal of Post Keynesian Economics 10(4), Summer 1988: 499-526.

“Keynesian versus Credit Theories of Money and Banking: A Reply to Wray,” Journal of Post Keynesian Economics 12(1), Fall 1989: 157-63.

“Capitalism and the Democratic Economy,” with John Elliott. Social Philosophy and Policy, 6(1) August 1988: 259-282.

Reprinted in Capitalism, Ed. by Ellen Frankel Paul, Fred D. Miller Jr., Jeffrey Paul and John Ahrens. Basil Blackwell: Oxford, 1989: 140-164.

“Roemer versus Marx: Alternative Perspectives on Exploitation,” with John Elliott, Review of Radical Political Economics 20(2/3), Summer/Fall 1988: 25-33.

Reprinted in Exploitation, Ed. by Kai Neilsen and Bob Ware. New York: Humanities Press, 1997: 197-207.

“Should Anyone Be Interested in Exploitation?” with John Elliott, Canadian Journal of Philosophy, Supp. Vol. 15 (special issue on analytical Marxism), 1989: 333-74.

“The Taxonomy of Primary Exploitation,” with John Elliott, Review of Social Economy 47(4), Winter 1989: 338-77. “Roemer's Theory of Capitalist Exploitation: The Contradictions of Walrasian Marxism,” with James Devine. Review of Radical Political Economics 21(3), Fall 1989: 13-17.

Reprinted in Exploitation, Ed. by Kai Neilsen and Bob Ware. New York: Humanities Press, 1997.

“Debt Crisis and Class Conflict in Latin America,” with Manuel Pastor, Jr., Review of Radical Political Economics 22(1) Spring 1990: 155-178. Reprinted in Capital and Class Vol. 43, Spring 1991: 203-232.

“Bank Lending, Misleading Signals, and the Latin American Debt Crisis,” with Manuel Pastor, Jr. International Trade Journal 6(2), 1990: 151-191.

“Money and Credit in Radical Political Economy: A Survey of Contemporary Perspectives,” Review of Radical Political Economics 22(2/3) Summer/Fall 1990: 38-65.

Japanese translation/reprint: “Money and Credit in Radical Political Economy: A Survey of Contemporary Perspectives.” Review of Politics and Economics, No. 72, 1990: 19-63. Kokushikan University, Tokyo. Translated by Yasutoshi Noshita.

“Roemer's ‘General’ Theory of Exploitation is a Special Case: The Limits of Walrasian Marxism,” with Jim Devine. Economics and Philosophy 7(2), October 1991: 235-276.

“Walrasian Marxism Once Again: A Reply to John Roemer,” with Jim Devine. Economics and Philosophy 8(1), April 1992: 157-162.

“Towards a New Model of Exploitation: The Case of Racial Domination.” International Journal of Social Economics, 19(7/8/9), 1992: 292-313.

“A “New View” of the Role of Banking Firms in Keynesian Monetary Theory,” Journal of Post Keynesian Economics 14(3), Spring 1992: 311-320. “Keynesian Uncertainty and Asymmetric Information: Complementary or Contradictory?” Journal of Post Keynesian Economics 16(1), Fall 1993: 49-54. “The Theory of Bank Redlining and Discrimination: An Exploration,” Review of Black Political Economy 23(3), Winter 1995: 37-74.

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“Economic Polarization and US Policy Activism,” International Review of Applied Economics 10(1), January 1996: 65-84. “Exploitation and Racial Inequality: The US Case,” Research in Political Economy. Vol. 15. 1996: 111-138.

“Financial Transformation and the Metropolis: Booms, Busts, and Banking in Los Angeles,” with John Veitch, Environment and Planning A 28(7), July 1996: 1233-1260.

“Business Strategy and Access to Capital in Inner City Revitalization,” Review of Black Political Economy 24(2-3): Fall 1995-Winter 1996: 51-65.

Reprinted in The Inner City. Eds. Thomas Boston and Catherine Ross. Transactions Books, 1997: 51-66.

“On Krugman’s Model of Economic Geography,” Geoforum 27(4). Great Britain: Elsevier Science Ltd., November 1996: 439-452.

“Deciphering Minsky”s Wall Street Paradigm,” Journal of Economic Issues 31(2), June 1997: 501-508. “Can the Global Neoliberal Regime Survive Victory in Asia? The Political Economy of the Asian Crisis,” with James Crotty, International Papers in Political Economy, 5(2). 1998: 1-47.

Spanish translation/reprint: “¿Podrá el régimen neoliberal sobrevivir a la victoria en Asia? La Econom¡a Politica de la Crisis Asiatica,” Revista Bimestre Cubana 86, III(10), Enero-Junio 1999: 21-41.

“Asset Bubbles in the Korean and Japanese Crisis: A Spatialized Minsky Approach” Journal of Regional Studies (Korea), 1998: 135-159.

“ ‘Economia de bolha’ e crise financeira no Leste Asiatico e na Califórnia: uma perspectiva espacializada de Minsky (A Spatialized Minsky Approach to Asset Bubbles and Financial Crisis),” Economia e Sociedade, (11): UNICAMP, Campinas, Sao Paulo. December 1998: 73-136.

“Banking in the New Financial World: From Segmentation to Separation?” Arche Interdisciplinar, Vol. II, No. 21. Special issue on macroeconomics, Candido Mendes University, Ipanema, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, 1998: 21-46.

“Credit and Banking Structure: Asian and African-American Experience in Los Angeles,” with Lisa Mohanty, American Economic Review Papers and Proceedings, May 1999, 89(2): 362-366.

“Financial Crisis, Gender, and Power: An Analytical Framework,” with Maria Sagrario Floro, World Development 28(7), July 2000: 1269-83. “Illegal-Seizure and Market-Disadvantage Approaches to Restitution: A Comparison of the Japanese American and African American Cases,” Review of Black Political Economy, 27(3), Winter1999: 47-78. “Can Entrepreneurial Incentives Revitalize the Urban Inner Core” A Spatial Input-Output Approach,” Journal of Economic Issues 35(2), June 2001: 415-22.

“Is Discrimination Disappearing” Racial Differentials in Access to Credit[UCS5], 1992-1998,” International Journal of Social Economics 28(10/11/12), 2001: 1025-45.

“Banking on Social Capital in the Era of Globalization: Chinese Ethnobanks in Los Angeles,” with Wei Li, Yu Zhou, and Maria Chee, Environment and Planning A. Vol. 33, 2001: 1923-48.

Reprinted in Tsun-Wu Chang and Shi-Yeoung Tang, editors, Essays on Ethnic Chinese Abroad. Volume 1: Migration, Entrepreneurs and Commerce. Taipei, Taiwan: Academia Sinica, 2002: 429-56.

“Post-Hegemonic U.S. Economic Hegemony: Minskian and Kaleckian Dynamics in the Neoliberal Era,” Keizai Riron Gakkai Nempo (Journal of the Japanese Society for Political Economy), 39, April 2002: 247-64.

“Chinese American Banking and Community Development in Los Angeles County: The Financial Sector and Chinatown/Ethnoburb Development,” with Wei Li, Yu Zhou, Carolyn Aldana, and Maria Chee, Annals of the American Association of Geographers 92(4), 2002: 777-796.

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“The Global Bank Merger Wave: Implications for Developing Countries,” The Developing Economies. Special Issue on “M&A and Privatization in Developing Countries,” 40(4), December 2002: 435-66. “Rhonda M. Williams: Competition, Race, Agency, and Community,” with Jessica Gordon Nembhard, Review of Black Political Economy 29(4), Spring 2002: 25-42. “The Macrostructure of Financial Exclusion: Mainstream, Ethnic, and Fringe Banks and MoneySpace in Los Angeles,” with Wei Li. Espaces, Populations, Societies, 2003-1: 183-201.

A shortened version, “The Macrostructure of Financial “Rights to the City”: Banking, Financial Exclusion, and MoneySpace in Los Angeles,” appears as Chapter XX (15 pages) in the Proceedings of the 2003 Rights to the City Conference, Rome, Italy: International Geographical Union.

“Immigration, Finance, and Urban Evolution: An Illustrative Model, with a Los Angeles Case Study,” Review of Black Political Economy 30(4), Spring 2003: 27-48.

“Financial Globalization and Cross-Border Co-Movements of Money and Population: Foreign Bank Offices in Los Angeles,” with Wei Li, Environment and Planning A 2004, 36(2), February 2004: 213-40. “Financial Globalization, Social Exclusion, and Financial Crisis,” International Review of Applied Economics 19(4), October 2005: 441-459. “Banking Strategy and Financial Exclusion: Tracing the Pathways of Globalization,” Revista de Economia, UFRS, Curitiba, Vol. 31(1-29), 2005: 107-43.

“La Crise des Banques Coréennes aprés la Crise,” (“The Post-Crisis Korean Banking Crisis”), Revue de Tier Monde, Special Issue on Asia, No 186, Avril-Juin 2006: 361-384.

“Targets of Opportunity in Two Landscapes of Financial Globalization,” Geoforum, 37, 2006: 307-311. “Money and Credit in Heterodox Theory: Reflections on Lapavitsas,” Historical Materialism, 14:1, 2006: 49-73.

“Money as a positional good and global power asymmetries: reflections on “Positional goods and asymmetric development,” Econômica 8(2), December 2006, Niteroi, Brazil.

“What has Never Happened Before and is Happening Again: Development and Discrimination in the San Joaquin Valley,” Berkeley La Raza Law Journal, special issue, “The New Face of California: The Great Central Valley,” 17(2), Fall 2006: 221-45.

“Banking Strategy and Credit Expansion: A Post Keynesian Approach,” with Antonio Alves and Luiz Fernando de Paula, Cambridge Journal of Economics, 32, 2007: 395-420. “Global Banking and Financial Services to Immigrants in Canada and the United States,” with Wei Li and Alex Oberle, Journal of International Migration and Integration 10(1), 2009: 1-29. “The Global Customer and the Spatiality of Exclusion after the ‘End of Geography’,” Cambridge Journal on Regions, Economy, and Society 2:2, July 2009: 267-85.

“Racial Exclusion and the Political Economy of the Subprime Crisis,” Historical Materialism 17(2), 2009: 149-179.

Published in Spanish translation in a book version of this special issue of Historical Materialism: “La exclusión racial y la economìa polìtica del la crisis del crédito de alto riesgo,” Pp. 91-146 in La Crisis de la Financiarización. Costas Lapavitsas, coordinador, Carlos Morera, compilador.Ciudad de México: Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, Instituto de Investigaciones Económicas, y Consejo Latinoamericano de Ciencias Sociales. June 2011.

“Afterword: Mortgage Markets and the Urban Problematic in the Global Transition,” International Journal of Urban and Regional Research, 33:2, Symposium, “sociology & geography of mortgage markets,” June 2009: 427-42.

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“Financing Community Development in the U.S.: A Comparison of “War on Poverty” and 1990s Approaches,” Review of Black Political Economy 36(3-4), September/December 2009: 245-73. “Ethnobanking in the USA: from antidiscrimination vehicles to transnational entities,” with Wei Li, Carolyn Aldana, and Hyeon-Hyo Ahn, International Journal of Business and Globalisation 4(2), 2010: 163-91. “Why the Subprime Crisis is Different: A Minskyian Approach,” Cambridge Journal of Economics, 34(2), March 2010: 239-55.

“Development as Social Inclusion: Reflections on the US subprime crisis,” Development 53(3), 2010: 368-75. “Confronting the Quadruple Global Crisis,” Geoforum 41, November 2010: pp. 837-40.

“Limits of Policy Intervention in a World of Neoliberal Mechanism Designs: Paradoxes of the Global Crisis,” Panoeconomicus (παυœconomicus) 58(3), September 2011, pp. 285-308. “Ten Ways to See a Favela: Notes on the political economy of the new city,” Economica (UFF/Brazil), 13(1), December 2011, pp. 7-36.

“The Global Crisis and the Governance of Power in Finance,” World Review of Political Economy, 2(4), Winter 2011, 581-602.

CHAPTERS

“Analytical Marxism,” Dictionary of Marxist Thought, Ed. Tom Bottomore. Revised 1991 edition. Oxford: Basil Blackwell: 19-21.

“Systematic Risk in International Lending: Theory and Estimation,” with Ronald Solberg. In Country Risk Analysis: A Handbook. Ed. Ronald Solberg (Unwin Hyman, 1992): 133-160. “Race and the Financial Dynamics of Urban Growth: L.A. as Fay Wray,” with John Veitch, in City of Angels, Ed. by Gerry Riposa and Caroline Dersch. CSU Long Beach: Kendall/Hunt Press, 1992: 131-58. “Hyman Minsky as Hedgehog: The Power of the Wall Street Paradigm," with Robert Pollin, in Financial Conditions and Macroeconomic Performance. Ed. Steven Fazzari. Armonk, NY: M.E. Sharpe, 1993: 27-62.

“Introduction", with Gerry Epstein and Bob Pollin, in Transforming the U.S. Financial System: An Equitable and Efficient Structure for the 21st Century, 1993: 3-20. (See “Edited Books and Volumes” above)

“How to Rebuild the US Financial Structure: Level the Playing Field and Renew the Social Contract,” in Transforming the U.S. Financial System: An Equitable and Efficient Structure for the 21st Century, 1993: 101-32. (See “Edited Books and Volumes” above)

“Asymmetric Information, Uncertainty, and Financial Structure: “New” versus “Post-” Keynesian Microfoundations,” in New Directions in Monetary Macroeconomics: Essays in the Tradition of Hyman P. Minsky, 1994: 77-103. (See “Edited Books and Volumes” above)

“The Costs and Benefits of Financial Instability: Big-Government Capitalism and the Minsky Paradox,” with Robert Pollin, in New Perspectives in Monetary Macroeconomics: Essays in the Tradition of Hyman P. Minsky, 1994: 369-401. (See “Edited Books and Volumes” above)

“Introduction,” with Bob Pollin, in New Perspectives in Monetary Macroeconomics: Essays in the Tradition of Hyman P. Minsky, 1994:1-18. (See “Edited Books and Volumes” above) Pp. 1-18.

“Taking it to the Bank: Race, Credit, and Income in Los Angeles,” with John Veitch, in Residential Apartheid: The American Legacy, Ed. by Robert D. Bullard, Charles Lee, and J. Eugene Grigsby, III. Los Angeles: Center for Afro-American Studies, UCLA, 1994: 150-179.

“Kalecki's Monetary Economics,” In An Alternative Macroeconomic Theory: the Kaleckian Model and Post Keynesian Economics. Ed. J. E. King. Amsterdam: Kluwer Academic Publishers, 1996: 115-140. “Comment (Is Intermediation Redundant in the U.S. Economy?),” in Dimitri Papadimitriou, ed., Financial Prosperity in the 21st Century, New York: St. Martin’s Press, 1996: 344-359.

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“Globalization, Polarization, and US Policy Activism,” in The Relevance of Keynesian Policies Today, Eds. Philip Arestis and Malcolm Sawyer. London: Macmillan, 1996: 78-106. “Basic Choices in Keynesian Models of Credit.” In Money in Motion: The Circulation and Post Keynesian Approaches, Eds, Edward Nell and Ghislain Deleplace. Macmillan Publishing Company, 1996: 377-398. “Credit Flows to Cities,” with John Veitch, in Reclaiming Prosperity: A Blueprint for Progressive Economic Reform, Eds. Jeff Faux and Todd Schafer. Armonk, NY: M.E. Sharpe, Inc., 1996: 227-235.

“Financing the Future in Los Angeles: From Depression to 21st Century,” with John Veitch, in Rethinking Los Angeles, Eds. Michael Dear, H. Eric Schockman, and Greg Hise. Thousand Oaks: Sage Publications, 1996: 35-55.

“Why Does Race Matter in Housing and Credit Markets?” Race, Markets, and Social Outcomes, Eds. Patrick L. Mason and Rhonda Williams. Boston: Kluwer Academic Press, 1996: 157-190.

“Money as a ‘Time Machine’ in the New Financial World,” in Vol. 1: Keynes, Money and the Open Economy: Essays in Honour of Paul Davidson, Ed. Philip Arestis. Cheltenham: Edward Elgar, 1996: 85-104. “Racial Inequality and Capitalist Exploitation,” in Exploitation, Ed. by Kai Neilsen and Bob Ware. New York: Humanities Press, 1997: 335-347.

Reprinted in Philosophy and the Problems of Work, Ed. by Kory P. Schaff. New York: Rowman and Littlefield, 2001.

“Social Efficiency and the “Market Revolution” in U.S. Housing Finance,” with Dorene Isenberg, in The Welfare State System in Japan and the United States, Eds. Shinya Imura, Takashi Nakahama, and Hiroshi Shibuya. Tokyo: Nihon Keizai Hyoron Sha, 1997 (in Japanese): 171-206.

“The Evolution of U.S. Bank Behavior: Five Strategies, 1935 to 1998,” Discussion Paper Series No. 6, The Institute of Economic Research, Chuo University, Tokyo, July 1998.

“Housing Finance in the Age of Globalization: From Social Housing to Life-Cycle Risk,” with Dorene Isenberg, in Globalization and Progressive Economic Policy, Eds. Dean Baker, Gerald Epstein and Robert Pollin. Cambridge University Press, 1998: 219-239.

“Disembodied Risk or the Social Construction of Creditworthiness?” in New Keynesian Economics/Post Keynesian Alternatives, Ed. Roy Rotheim. London: Routledge, 1998: 241-261.

“Access to Capital and Inner-City Revitalization: Urban Policy after Proposition 209,” in Back to Shared Prosperity: The Growing Inequality of Wealth and Income in America, Ed. Ray Marshall. Armonk, NY: M.E. Sharpe, 2000: 374-86.

“Financial Globalization and Housing Policy: From “Golden Age” Housing to “Global Age” Insecurity,” with Dorene Isenberg, in Full Employment and Price Stability in a Global Economy, Eds. Paul Davidson and Jan Kregel. Cheltenham: Edward Elgar, 2000: 139-165.

“Social Injustice and Outcome Equality: The Case of Racial and Gender Inequality in the Credit Market” in Robert Pollin, ed., Capitalism, Socialism and Radical Political Economy: Essays In Honor Of Howard J. Sherman, Cheltenham, UK and Northamption, MA: Edward Elgar, 2000: 227-46.

“Postscript” to “Can Global Neoliberalism Survive Victory in Asia” The Political Economy of the Korean Crisis,” with James Crotty. In Money, Finance, and Capitalist Development, Ed. by Philip Arestis and Malcolm Sawyer, Edward Elgar Publishing, 2001: 53-100.

“Subsidizing Sprawl: Federal Housing Policies for the Rich and the Poor,” with Carolyn Rodriguez, in Growing Together: The Atlas of Southern California, Volume 4, Ed. by Michael Dear. Los Angeles: University of Southern California, 2001.

“Introduction,” in Seeking Shelter on the Pacific Rim: Financial Globalization, Social Change, and the Housing Market, 2001: 1-21. (See “Edited Books and Volumes” above)

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“U.S. Housing as Capital Accumulation: The Contradictory Transformation of American Housing Finance, Households, and Communities,” in Seeking Shelter on the Pacific Rim: Financial Globalization, Social Change, and the Housing Market, 2001 (See “Edited Books and Volumes” above)

“Housing-Centered Crises of Social Reproduction in the United States, Japan, and South Korea,” in Seeking Shelter on the Pacific Rim: Financial Globalization, Social Change, and the Housing Market. 2001, 349-68 (See “Edited Books and Volumes” above)

“Sraffa in the City: Exploring the Urban Multiplier,” in Growth, Distribution, and Effective Demand: Alternatives to Economic Orthodoxy “ Essays in Honor of Edward J. Nell, Ed. by George Argyrous, Mathew Forstater, and Gary Mongiovi. Armonk, NY: M.E. Sharpe, 2004: 220-238.

“Asia in Los Angeles: Ethnic Chinese Banking in the Age of Globalization,” with Maria Chee and Wei Li, in Chinese Enterprise, Transnationalism and Identity, Ed. by T. Gomez and M. H. Hsiao. London: Routledge, 2004: 203-231

“The International Debt Crisis,” in Handbook of Globalisation, Ed. Jonathan Michie, Edward Elgar, 2003: 90-103.

“Using Remittances to Finance Development in Mexico: The Implications of Banking Transformation,” in Migración Internacional y Remesas en México, Ed. by Jerjes Aguirre Ochoa and Oscar Hugo Pedraza Rendón, Morelia, Michoacan, México: Instituto de Investigaciones Económicas y Empresariales, 2004: 51-82.

“A Spatialized Approach to Asset Bubbles and Minsky Crises,” (in Portuguese, “Bolhas de ativos e crises em Minsky: Uma abordagem especializada”) in Globalização Financieira: Ensaios de Macroeconomica Aberta (Financial Globalisation: Essays on Open Macroeconomics), Eds. Fernando Ferrari-Filho and Luiz Fernando de Paula. Petr¢polis: Editora Vozes, 2004: 402-448.

“Urban Sprawl, Racial Separation, and Federal Housing Policy,” with Carolyn Aldana, in Up Against the Sprawl: Public Policy and the Making of Southern California, Eds. Jennifer Wolch, Manuel Pastor, Jr., and Peter Dreier. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 2004: 99-119.

“Bancado a transformação: financiando o desenvolvimento, superando a pobreza,” in Brasil em Desenvolvimento. Volume I, Eds. Ana Célia Castro, Antonio Licha, Helder Queiroz Pinto, Jr., and João Saboia. Rio de Janeiro: Civilização Brasiliera, 2005: 81-142.

“Black-Owned Banks: Past and Present,” with Robert Weems, in African Americans in the United States Economy, Ed. by Cecilia Conrad, John Whitehead, Patrick Mason, and James Stewart. Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, 2005: 246-51. “Efficiéncia Social e a Regulação Bancária: Lições da Experiência Americana” (“The Social Efficiency and Regulation of Banking: Lessons from U.S. Experience,”), in Rogério Sobrerira, editor, Regulação Financeira e Bancária. São Paulo: Editora Atlas, 2005: 96-120. “Racial Inequality and African Americans” Disadvantage in the Credit and Capital Markets,” in African Americans in the United States Economy, Eds. Cecilia Conrad, John Whitehead, Patrick Mason, and James Stewart. Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, 2005: 151-6. “Introduction,” Chapter 1 in Reimagining Growth, 2005: 3-26. (See “Edited Books and Volumes” above)

“Poverty and Social Discrimination: A Spatial Keynesian Approach,” Chapter 8 in Reimagining Growth, 2005: 230-57. (See “Edited Books and Volumes” above) “Discrimination in the Credit and Housing Markets: Findings and Challenges,” in Handbook on the Economics of Discrimination, Ed. by William Rodgers. Cheltenham, UK: Edward Elgar, 2006: 215-259. “Wealth and Asian Americans: An Exploration,” with Lisa Mohanty and Wei Li, in Wealth Accumulation in Communities of Color in the United States, Ed. by Jessica Gordon Nembhard and Ngina Chiteji, Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 2006: 219-40.

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“Globally Connected and Locally Embedded Financial Institutions: Analyzing the Ethnic Chinese Banking Sector,” with Wei Li, Ch. 3 in Chinese Ethnic Business: Global and Local Perspectives, Ed. by Eric Fong and Chiu Luk, London: Taylor and Francis, 2006: 35-63.

“How Ethnobanks Matter: Banking and Community/Economic Development in Los Angeles,” Chapter 8 in Landscapes of the Ethnic Economy, ed. By David H. Kaplan and Wei Li, Rowman and Littlefield Publishers, Inc., with Wei Li, Gary Dymski, Maria W.L. Chee, Hyeon-HyoAhn, Carolyn Aldana, Jang-Pyo Hong, and Yu Zhou, London: Rowman and Littlefield, 2006: 113-34.

“Banking and Financial Crises,” in Handbook of Alternative Monetary Economics, Ed. by Philip Arestis and Malcolm Sawyer, Edward Elgar, 2006: 385-402.

“Exclusão e Eficiência: A Transformação Global do Core Banking, um Estudo de Caso sobre o Brasil,” Chapter 11 in Eficiência Do Sistema Financeiro: Avaliando a Funcionalidade do Setor Bancário Brasileiro, edited by Luiz Fernando de Paula e José Luís Oreiro. São Paulo: Editora Campus/Elsevier, 2006.

“Global Financial Integration II: Exclusion, Vulnerability and Systemic Fragility,” in Capture and Exclude: Developing Nations and the Poor in Global Finance, 2007. (See “Edited Books and Volumes” above)

“The Globalization of Financial Exploitation,” in Capture and Exclude: Developing Nations and the Poor in Global Finance, 2007. (See “Edited Books and Volumes” above) “The Racial U-Curve in U.S. Residential Credit Markets in the 1990s: Empirical Evidence from a Post-Keynesian World,” with Carolyn Aldana, in Empirical Post Keynesian Economics: Looking at the Real World, Ed. by Ric Holt and Steve Pressman (M.E. Sharpe, Inc., 2007): 70-109. “Korea’s Banks and the Korea-U.S. Free Trade Agreement: Between Neoliberalism and the Asian Bloc,” in Korea-US FTA and the Korean Economic Crisis (in Japanese), ed. by Kangkook Lee, Kyoto: Koyo Shobo, 2009 pp. 151-78. “Heterodox Economics as Crisis Theory: From Profit-Squeeze to the Global Liquidity Meltdown,” in Heterodox Macroeconomics: Keynes, Marx and Globalization, edited by Jonathan Goldstein and Michael Hillard, New York: Routledge, 2009: 66-84. “Ethics and Financial Globalization: Some Reflections,” with Celia Kerstenetzky, in Jan Piel and Irene van Staveren, editors, Handbook of Economics and Ethics, Edward Elgar, 2009: 193-201. “Financial Risk and Governance in the Neoliberal Era,” in Managing Financial Risks: From Global to Local, edited by Gordon L. Clark, Adam D. Dixon, and Ashby H.B. Monk, Oxford U. Press, 2009: 48-68.

Translated into Spanish as “Gobernabilidad y riesgo financiero en la era neoliberal,” and published in the online journal Ola Financeira, Número 9 (Mayo-Agosto de 2011). http://www.olafinanciera.unam.mx/

“From Financial Exploitation to Global Instability: Two Overlooked Roots of the Subprime Crisis,” in Martijn Konings, ed. The Great Credit Crash. London: Verso Press, 2010: pp. 72-102. “A Spatialized Approach to Asset Bubbles and Minsky Crises,” in The Elgar Companion to Minsky, edited by L. Randall Wray and Dimitri Papadimitriou (Edward Elgar), 2010: pp. 222-245. “Linking Financial Globalization with Financial Exclusion via a Minskyian Bridge,” in Daniela Tavasci and Jan Toporowski, editors, Minsky, Financial Development and Crises. London: Palgrave, 2010: pp. 50-76.

“Quatro Crises do Sistema Mundial e o Futuro do “Novo Brasil,” in Dossié da Crise II, Associação Keynesiana Brasileira, Agosto de 2010: pp. 20-25. Web-published at http://www.ppge.ufrgs.br/akb.

“The Global Crisis and the Governance of Power in Finance,” in The Financial Crisis: Origins and Implications, edited by Philip Arestis, Rogério Sobreira, and José Luís Oreiro, London: Palgrave-Macmillan, 2010: pp. 63-86.

“Using Finance to Promote Equitable Development in the United States: Can Grameen Bank be Transplanted?” in Development, Equity, Poverty, a volume honoring Dr. Aziz Khan, edited by Anirban

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Dasgupta, Lopamudra Banerjee, and Riswan Islam. New York: UNDP and Delhi: Macmillan Publishers India Ltd., 2010.

“Keynesian Approaches to Financial Crisis,” A Modern Guide to Keynesian Macroeconomics and Economic Policies, co-edited by Eckhard Hein and Engelbert Stockhammer, Edward Elgar, 2011.

“The Subprime Crisis and the Urban Problematic,” in Subprime Cities: The Political Economy of Mortgage Markets, edited by Manuel B. Aalbers. London: Wiley-Blackwell, Studies in Urban and Social Change, 2011.

“The Reinvention of Banking and the Subprime Crisis: On the Origins of Subprime Loans, and How Economists Missed the Crisis,” in Subprime Cities: The Political Economy of Mortgage Markets, edited by Manuel B. Aalbers. London: Wiley-Blackwell, Studies in Urban and Social Change, 2011.

“On the Possible Replacement of the Efficient-Market Hypothesis: Social Efficiency as a “Thick” Approach to Financial Policy,” New Ecoomics as Mainstream Economics, edited by Philip Arestis and Malcolm Sawyer, Hampshire: Palgrave Macmillan, 2011, pp. 77-115.

“Banking and finance in the US and in Latin America after the crisis: Three futures,” translated into Spanish as Tres Futuros de la Banca en el Continente Americano después de la Crisis: El Trilema Financiero y el Complejo ���Wall Street, in Tres Crisis: economia, finanzas y media ambiente, co-edited by Eugenia Correa, Alicia Girón, Arturo Guillén, and Antonina Ivanova, Mexico: UNAM/UAM, México: Miguel Ángel Porrua, 2011, pp. 151-172.

“Financial Mergers and Acquisitions: From Regulation to Strategic Repositioning to Geo-Economics,” Chapter 22 in The Oxford Handbook of Mergers & Acquisitions, co-edited by David Faulkner, Satu Teerikangas, and Richard Joseph. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2012. Pp. 566-92.

“Genie out of the Bottle: The Evolution of Too-Big-to-Fail Policy and Banking Strategy in the US,” published in Portuguese as “O Gênio Fora da Garrafa: A Evolução da Política Too Big To Fail e a Estratégia Bancária dos Estados Unidos,” in As transformações no sistema financeiro internacional. Organizadores (editors), Marcos Antonio Macedo Cintra, Keiti da Rocha Gomes.- Brasília: Instituto de Pesquisa Econômica Aplicada (IPEA), 2012. pp. 177-244.

“Introduction,” with Nobuharu Yokokawa, in The Crisis of 2008 and the Future of Capitalism, co-edited by Kiichiro Yagi, Nobuharu Yokokawa, Shinjiro Hagiwara, and Gary Dymski. London: Routledge, 2012, pp. 1-8.

“Can the US Economy Escape the Law of Gravity? A Minsky-Kalecki Approach to the Crisis of Neoliberalism,” in The Crisis of 2008 and the Future of Capitalism, co-edited by Kiichiro Yagi, Nobuharu Yokokawa, Shinjiro Hagiwara, and Gary Dymski. London: Routledge, 2012, pp. 222-46.

ENCYCLOPEDIA ARTICLES

“Minsky”s Wall Street Paradigm.” In the Encyclopedia of Political Economy. Ed. Phillip O”Hara. London: Routledge, 1999.

Entries, Reader’s Guide to the Social Sciences. Two volumes. Ed. by Jonathan Michie. London: Fitzroy Dearborn Publishers, 2001: “Banks and Banking;” “Banking Law;” “Cities (Economics);” “International Debt Crisis;” “Financial Globalization and Integration;” “Macroeconomics;” “Speculative Bubbles;” “Instability;” “Financial Services;” “Economic Geography.”

“Banking,” “Microfinance,” “Joseph E. Stiglitz,” and “Ponzi scheme,” entries in the International Encyclopedia of Social Sciences, edited by William Darity.

BOOK REVIEWS

“The Capitalist Revolution,” by Peter L. Berger. Journal of Economic Behavior and Organization, 9 (1) February 1988: 114-117.

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“Analyzing Modern Business Cycles: Essays Honoring Geoffrey Moore,” Journal of Economic Literature 29(3). Ed. Daniel Klein. September 1991: 1178-89.

“Kalecki and Unemployment Equilibrium,” by Mario Sebastiani. Journal of Economic Literature. 33(2), June 1995: 317-318.

“Analytical Marxism,” by Tom Mayer. Science and Society. 60(2), Summer 1996: 232-235.

“Making Sense of a Changing Economy: Technology, Markets and Morals,” by Edward J. Nell. Journal of Economic Literature, 35(3), September 1997: 1434-35.

“A Critique of Orthodox Economics: An Alternative Model,” by Harold Lydall, Journal of Economic Literature, 37, December 1999: 1734-5.

“Credit to the Community:ÿ Community Reinvestment and Fair Lending Policy in the United States,” by Dan Immergluck, Urban Studies, 43:13, December 2006.

FORTHCOMING ACADEMIC PUBLICATIONS AND WORKING PAPERS

“Mortgage Discrimination,” Entry 100 in the International Encyclopedia of Housing and Home. Editor in Chief: Susan Smith. Senior Editor: Susan Wachter. Forthcoming, 2011.

“The International Debt Crisis,” revised version, for Handbook of Globalisation, Second edition, Ed. Jonathan Michie, Edward Elgar. Forthcoming 2011.

“Understanding the Subprime Crisis: Institutional Evolution and Theoretical Views,” Chapter 2 in Where Credit is Due: Bringing Equity to Credit and Housing After the Market Meltdown, co-edited by Christy Rogers and john powell, University Press of America. Forthcoming 2011.

“Bank Lending and the Subprime Crisis,” Oxford Handbook of the Political Economy of Financial Crisis, edited by Gerald Epstein and Martin Wolfson. Oxford: Oxford University Press, forthcoming 2012.

“The Neoclassical Sink and the Heterodox Spiral: ��� Why the Twin Global Crisis has not Transformed Economics,” G.C. Harcourt and Peter Kreisler, eds., Oxford Handbook of Post-Keynesian Economics, Oxford: Oxford University Press, forthcoming 2012.

“Race, Gender, Power, and the Subprime/Foreclosure Crisis: A Meso Analysis,” with Jesus Hernandez and Lisa Mohanty, Feminist Economics, forthcoming 2012.

“Disconnected Societies: Rich versus Poor in the Development Debate,” in an edited volume published by the Society for International Development, The Hague: The Netherlands, forthcoming 2012.

“The Financial Trilemma and the Future of American Banking,” in a festschrift volume honoring Jane D’Arista, co-edited by Tom Schlesinger and Gerald Epstein, M.E. Sharpe, Inc., forthcoming 2012.

“Analytical Aspects of Financial Access and Financial Exclusion: Context, Concepts, and Graphical Approaches,” in a volume edited by Sunanda Sen, forthcoming 2012.

“Labour after the Great Complacence: Unsustainable employment portfolios in the USA, the UK and Australia,” John Buchanan, Gary Dymski, Julie Froud, Sukhdev Johal and Karel Williams, Paper prepared for Work after Fordism: A workshop on theorising organisational diversity and dominant trends in comtemporary capitalism. Queen Mary University of London, 12 – 13 May 2011

POPULAR ARTICLES

“A Critique of Supply Side Economics,” World & I 8(2), February 1993: 528-545.

“Labor Resistance in Korea,” with Jim Crotty, Z Magazine. September 1998: 19-23.

“The Korean Struggle: Can the East Asian Model Survive?” with Jim Crotty, Z Magazine, July-August 1998: 194-198.

“The Korean Struggle Intensifies,” with Jim Crotty, Z Magazine, September 1998.

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Translated and posted by the Samsung Economic Research Institute, 2002.

“The Korean Struggle and the Asian Crisis,” with Jim Crotty, Dollars and Sense, November 1998.

“Exclusão Financiera e Transformação Global dos Bancos,” in Plurale em Revista, Ano Um, No. 2, Novembro 2007, Pp. 25-28.

“The crisis and its opening for the Left,” Re-Public: Reimagining Democracy, Athens, Greece. May 2009. Online at http://www.re-public.gr/en/”p=893

“Comparing Greece and California: Toward a United States of Europe,” Re-Public: Reimagining Democracy, Athens, Greece. October 12, 2010. Online at http://www.re-public.gr/en/”p=2419

REPORTS AND POLICY STUDIES

Taking it to the Bank: Race, Poverty, and Credit in Los Angeles. with John Veitch and Michelle White. Los Angeles: Western Center on Law and Poverty. Released by Mayor Tom Bradley of Los Angeles on November 6, 1991. Printed in United States Senate, Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs. Report on the Status of the Community Reinvestment Act: Views and Recommendations. Vol. II of II, September 1991 (Washington, DC: USGPO).

“Macroeconomic Policy and Financial Restructuring,” with Robert Pollin, Gerald Epstein, and James Galbraith, released by the Economic Policy Institute, June 1992. 16 pgs.

“A Report Card on the Greenspan Fed,” with Robert Pollin, Gerald Epstein, and James Galbraith, released by the Economic Policy Institute, February 1992. 8 pgs.

“The Banking Crisis, the Community Crisis, and the RTC,” testimony presented to the National Advisory Board of the Resolution Trust Corporation, Washington DC, March 18, 1994. 14 pgs.

“Analysis of a Living-Wage Ordinance in the City of Los Angeles,” for the Los Angeles City Council, presented before the Council on October 9, 1996.

“Bank Mergers and the Structure of US Banking Markets: The causes and consequences of bank consolidation in the 1990s,” A report to the Consumers Union, July 1997. 108 pgs.

“Growing Together,” Policy paper 5, in the series “Finding Solutions,” Southern California Studies Center Urban Policy Seminar Series, Moderated by Antonio Villaraigosa and Jennifer Wolch, co-sponsored by USC Sustainable Cities Program & USC Lusk Center for Real Estate. September, 2002.

“Estimating the Effectiveness of the HUBZones Program in Stimulating Lower-Income Urban and Rural Areas: A Research Plan,” August 1999 (updated, December 1999). Office of General Contracting and Minority Economic Development, Small Business Administration, Washington DC.

“Interest Rates, Credit Structures, and Usury in Emerging Markets,” Report presented to the Micro Finance Regulatory Council, Government of South Africa, Johannesberg, March 21, 2003.

“The Social Impact of Business Strategies,” Testimony presented to Select Committee on Ending Poverty in California, chaired by Senator Richard Alarcon, California State Senate, Sacramento, June 12, 2003.

“Financial Exclusion and the Global Transformation of Markets for Core Banking Services,” Report presented to United Nations Development Program, February 2006.

“An Investment and Development Strategy for the Agua Caliente Band of Cahuilla Indians: An Economic-Development Manual,” October 2006, mimeo, UC Riverside.

“UCCS: An Update on Activities and Future Plans, Academic Years 2003-04 to 2006-07,” Japanese Journal of Administrative Science 19(2), March 2006, Pp. 193-202.

“The University of California Center Sacramento: Public Engagement through Research, Public Service, and Teaching,” Japanese Journal of Administrative Science 21(2), 2008, pp. 161-77.

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“Uprooting the Great Stagnation: The Building Blocks of a Strategy for Remaking American Housing and Jobs in the Post”Crisis Economy,” presented at “The Next Stage: Financial Reforms, Jobs and Housing, the Dollar and the International System,” Sponsored by Economists for Peace and Security, November 13, 2009.

ACADEMIC AND POLICY EVENTS, 2012-2013

Keynote speech, “Policy trilemmas and social fragmentation in Europe and the US,” XV Diamantina Conference, Cedeplar, Federal University of Minas Gerais, Diamantina, August 29-31, 2012.

Workshop presentation, “The Economic Consequences of the Bank Bailouts: Parallels and Discontinuities between the 1920s and Today,” 16th SCEME Seminar in Economic Methodology – Joint with the Post Keynesian Economics Study Group and Brighton Business School, 'A Europe starving and disintegrating before their eyes': Reappraising Keynes's Economic Consequences of the Peace. Charleston Farmhouse and Tilton House, UK, 12 - 13 September 2012.

Seminar presentation, “Policy trilemmas and social fragmentation in Europe and the US,” Political Economy seminar series, Leeds University Business School, October 10, 2012.

Workshop presentation, “Securitization and the Delocalization of Local Credit Markets: TBTF Megabanks and the Future of Banking,” Workshop: A Comparative Political Economy of Securitization, University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, October 15-16, 2012.

Conference presentation, special session on Kalecki Today: “Kalecki and Kowalik on ‘Crucial Reform’ in Post-War Socialism and Capitalism: Democracy and Power in Economic Transitions,” Economic Policy in Times of Crisis: 24th Annual Conference of the European Association for Evolutionary Political Economy (EAEPE), Krakow, October 18-21, 2012.

Conference presentation, “From the efficient-market hypothesis to a ‘socially efficient’ and economically-functional banking system: A reconnaissance,” 16th Conference of the Research Network on Macroeconomics and Macroeconomic Policies, Berlin, October 25-27, 2012.

Seminar presentation, “Policy trilemmas and social fragmentation in Europe and the US,” Political Economy seminar series, Kingston University, London, November 7, 2012.

Conference presentation, “Does Capitalism have another ‘Crucial Reform’ in it? Reflections on the work of Tadeusz Kaowalik and Michal Kalecki,” Ninth annual historical materialism conference: Weighs Like a Nightmare, SOAS, University of London, November 8-11, 2012.

Seminar presentation, “The Logic and Impossibility of Austerity as a Macroeconomic Policy Prescription,” Cambridge University, Cambridge, UK, November 14, 2012.

Seminar presentation, “The Neoclassical Sink and the Heterodox Spiral: ��� Why the Twin Global Crisis has not Transformed Economics,” Development Program, Cambridge University, Cambridge, November 20, 2012.

Seminar presentation, “The Global Crisis and the Governance of Power in Finance,” Geography and Environment seminar series, University of Southampton, Southhampton, November 21, 2012.

Keynote speech, Trilemma Forcefields in the Eurozone Crisis: Neoliberal Mechanism Designs at the Breaking Point.” 6th International Conference at Dijon: Sovereign Debts, Economic Policies and Bank Reforms, Dijon, December 6-8, 2012.

Special presentation, “The Political Economy of the Financial Transactions Tax in Europe,” University of Greenwich, Greenwich, UK, December 10, 2012.

Conference presentation, “From Prison and Housing Construction to Wealth Evisceration to City Destruction: The Cumulative Cycle of Structural Race/Gender Divides in California’s Central Valley,” Association for Social Economics session at the Allied Social Science Association meetings, San Diego, CA, January 4-6, 2013.

Poster Session, “The Political Economy of ‘Financial Literacy’: Globalizing Inclusion or Expanding the

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Rentier Frontier,” New Research On Economic Comparisons And Institutions, Association for Comparative Economic Systems, at the Allied Social Science Association meetings, San Diego, CA, January 4, 2013.

Interactive Session, “The Logic and Impossibility of Austerity as a Macroeconomic Policy Prescription,” Session on Deep Recession, Debt Crisis, Financial Instability, and Policy, Association for Evolutionary Economics, at the Allied Social Science Association meetings, San Diego, CA, January 5, 2013.

Plenary Presentation, “Securitization  in  the  Shadows:  Has  the  Rise  of  the  Shadow  Banking  System  Complemented,  or  Transformed,  Credit  Markets?” in the conference Shadow Banking: A European Perspective, City University London, London, February 1-2, 2013.

Seminar presentation, “Policy Trilemmas and Social Fragmentation in the US and Europe,” Department of Economics, London Metropolitan University, February 19, 2013.

Workshop participant and discussant, Founding workshop of the School for Policy, Innovation, Development, and Research (SPIDER), Federal University of Rio de Janeiro, BNDES, Rio de Janeiro, February 27-March 1, 2013.

Workshop presentation, “Trilemma Forcefields in the Eurozone Crisis: Neoliberal Mechanism Designs at the Breaking Point,” Institute of Economics, UNICAMP, Campinas, Brazil, March 19, 2013.

Workshop presentation, “Trilemma Forcefields in the Eurozone Crisis: Neoliberal Mechanism Designs at the Breaking Point,” Institute of Economics, UFRJ, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, March 21, 2013.

Conference presentation, “From Prison and Housing Construction to Wealth Evisceration to City Destruction: The Cumulative Cycle of Structural Race/Gender Divides in California’s Central Valley,” (with Jesus Hernandez, Melody Chiong, and Maiana Voge), Special session on sacrifice zones, annual conference of the American Association of Geographers, Los Angeles, April 11-13, 2013.

Conference presentation, “Beyond Financial Exclusion,” (with Andrew Leyshon and Shaun French), Special session on economic growth and financial structure, annual conference of the American Association of Geographers, Los Angeles, April 11-13, 2013.

Workshop on Minsky-Polanyi Scholarship, Co-sponsored by the University of California, Davis, and Ford Foundation, Point Reyes, California, May 24-26, 2013.

Keynote speech, Conference at Pula, Croatia, Juraj Dobrila University, May 29-June 1, 2013.

Workshop presentation, “Gender, race and the invisible US housing crisis: from excess debt load to foreclosure,” Leeds Workshop on Race and Gender Imbalances, June 24-25, 2013.

ACADEMIC AND POLICY EVENTS, 2011-2012

Conference plenary presentation, “Race, Gender and Power in the Subprime/Foreclosure Crisis: A Meso Analysis,” 8th International Conference on Developments in Economic Theory and Policy, Faculty of Economics and Business. University of the Basque Country, Bilbao, July 1-3, 2011.

Conference presentation, “Keynesian Approaches to Financial Crisis,” 8th International Conference on Developments in Economic Theory and Policy, Faculty of Economics and Business. University of the Basque Country, Bilbao, July 1-3, 2011.

Lecture, “Finance and Crisis,” 3rd International Summer School on Keynesian Macroeconomics and European Economic Policies, IG Metall Bildungstätte Berlin, Berlin, August 4, 2011.

Panel, “The Euro Crisis and the Global Crisis,” 3rd International Summer School on Keynesian Macroeconomics and European Economic Policies, IG Metall Bildungstätte Berlin, Berlin, August 4, 2011.

Presentation, Workshop Celso Furtado on New Developmentalism and a Structuralist Development Macroeconomics, Centro Internacional Celso Furtado, Escola de Economia de São Paulo - Fundação Getúlio Vargas, São Paulo, Brasil, August 15-16, 2011.

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Seminar, The global crisis: financial-market fear, structural imbalances, and megabank power in a world of neoclassical mechanism designs,” Petrobras Institute, Petrobras, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, September 13, 2011.

Principal organizer, II Workshop sobre Pesquisa em Favelas (Research in Favelas), Brazilian National Development Bank (BNDES), Centro, Rio de Janeiro, September 15-16, 2011.

Coordinator, session on political economy of favelas, II Workshop sobre Pesquisa em Favelas (Research in Favelas), Brazilian National Development Bank (BNDES), Centro, Rio de Janeiro, September 15-16, 2011.

Conference presentation, “How Efficient-Financial Market Theory Created Too-Big-to-Fail Mega-Banks and Created a Two-Track Credit System,” Association for Social Economics/Association for Evolutionary Economics session on “Revisiting the Chicago School after the Financial Crisis,” Allied Social Science Association meeting, Chicago, January 6, 2012.

Session chair, Association for Evolutionary Economics session on “Money, Banking and Bailouts,” Allied Social Science Association meeting, Chicago, January 7, 2012.

Conference presentation, “Banking & the global crisis: neoliberal plan, megabank power, market fear, hostage economy,” Association for Evolutionary Economics session on Institutionalism and the Great Crisis, January 7, 2012.

Session organizer and conference presentation, “Race, Power, and the Subprime/Foreclosure Crisis: A Meso Analysis,” Union for Radical Political Economists/National Economic Association session, “From Subprime Lending to Foreclosures: America’s Invisible Crisis of Race and Inequality,” January 8, 2012.

Conference presentation, “The Eurozone at the Breaking Point: Trilemma Forcefields in a World of Neoliberal Mechanism Designs,” Session on “The Euro Crisis,” Annual conference, American Association of Geographers, New York, NY, February 24, 2012.

Conference presentation, “Housing in a World of Neoliberal Mechanism Designs: The Shelter Crisis in the Post-Crisis World,” Session on “Housing and the Global Economic Crisis,” Annual conference, American Association of Geographers, New York, NY, February 25, 2012.

Organizer and convener, “The Invisible Crisis: Foreclosures in California,” Culver Center for the Arts, UC Riverside, March 17, 2012.

Speech, “Why the Global Economic Crisis isn’t Over (5 years after it started),” Speak Out! Series, Univeristy of California, Riverside, April 6, 2012.

Workshop keynote address, “Housing Market and Urban Development after the Financial Crisis,” International Workshop: “Crisis in Europe, Europe in Crisis – Financial Markets, Regions, Cities and Uneven Development in Europe,” Hamburg, Germany, May 4, 2012.

Conference presentation, “Trilemma Forcefields in the Eurozone Crisis: Neoliberal Mechanism Designs at the Breaking Point,” in “Understanding Crisis in Europe,” Bristol Business School, University of Bristol, May 11, 2012.

ACADEMIC AND POLICY EVENTS, 2010-2011

Conference plenary presentation, “On the Possible Replacement of the ‘Efficient Market’ Hypothesis: Toward a New Economics,” 7th International Conference on Developments in Economic Theory and Policy, Faculty of Economics and Business. University of the Basque Country, Bilbao, July 1-2, 2010.

Special seminar, “Finance, space, and inequality: Credit floods and liquidity starvation, or inclusive balanced growth?” XVI Fôrum BNB de Desenvolvimento, XV Encontro Regional de Economia, cosponsored by ANPEC and Banco Nordeste, Fortaleza, Brasil, July 19-20, 2010.

Lecture series, “Financial Crisis, Exclusion, and Regulation: A rethinking in the shadow of the global crisis,” Instituto de Economia, Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro, August 2, 5, 9, 16, 23, 2010.

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Seminar presentation, “The Global Crisis and the Governance of Power in Finance,” Instituto de Economia, Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro, August 10, 2010.

Seminar presentation, “The Four Stages of the Global Crisis: Is This the End, or the Triumph, of the Financial Oligarchy?” Instituto de Economia, UNICAMP (State University of Campinas), Campinas, August 18, 2010.

Seminar presentation, “Financial globalization, financial crisis, and financial exclusion: ÿdefining terms and building theory,” Instituto de Economia, Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro, August 20, 2010.

Workshop opening session, First Workshop of the Rede Sobre Pesquisa em Favelas (Network on Research in Favelas), Casa do Estudante Universitário, Avenida Rui Barbosa, Flamengo, Rio de Janeiro, August 26, 2010.

Seminar presentation, “The Four Stages of the Global Crisis: Is This the End, or the Triumph, of the Financial Oligarchy?” Petrobras Strategies Group, Petrobras, Rio de Janeiro, September 3, 2010.

Conference presentation, “On the Governance of Power in Finance: Reshaping Economics in a Global Crisis,” Coimbra Conference 2010 - The Revival of Political Economy: Prospects for Sustainable Provision. University of Coimbra, Coimbra, Portugal, October 21-23, 2010.

Conference keynote presentation, “Three challenges of the global economic transition: Financialization 2.0, in(fra)vestments, favelas,” XXXVII Brazilian Economics Meeting (ANPEC), Salvador, Brazil, December 9, 2011.

Conference presentation, “On the Possible Replacement of the “Efficient Market” Hypothesis: Toward a New Economics,” Association for Evolutionary Economics session on the New Economics, Allied Social Science Association, Denver, January 5th, 2011.

Seminar presentation, “Finance, space, and inequality: Credit floods and liquidity starvation, or inclusive, balanced growth?” Instituto de Economia, Universidade Federal do Rio Grande de Norte, Natal, Brazil, February 22, 2011.

Seminar presentation, “Three challenges of the global economic transition: Financialization 2.0, in(fra)vestments, favelas,” Instituto de Economia, Universidade Federal do Rio Grande de Norte, Natal, Brazil, February 23, 2011.

Speech, “Rich vs. Poor in the Development Debate,” Netherlands Society for International Development, Auditorium, Vrije Universiteit [VU University], Amsterdam, Netherlands, March 21, 2011.

Seminar presentation, “Three challenges of the global economic transition: Financialization 2.0, in(fra)vestments, favelas,” Amsterdam Institute for Social Science Research, University of Amsterdam, Netherlands, March 22, 2011.

Research-in-progress seminar presentation, “On the Governance of Power in Finance,” Institute for Social Studies, Den Haag [The Hague], Netherlands, March 24, 2011.

Commentator, screening of film Inside Job, Culver Center for the Arts, UC Riverside, April 1, 2011.

Policy briefing, “California's Fiscal Crisis: How did it happen? How bad is it? What to do about it?” Bernard Schwartz Symposium on “Crisis in the State and Cities,” Economists for Peace and Security, Washington, DC, April 12, 2011.

Keynote address, “Financialization & housing after the subprime crash: A triple dilemma in the capitalist post-crisis,” Safe as Houses? Housing and Financial Markets Workshop, The Australian Working Group on Financialisation (AWGF) and the Markets and Society Research Network, University of Sydney, Sydney, Australia, April 19, 2011.

Seminar presentation, “On the Governance of Power in Finance,” Department of Political Economy, University of Sydney, Sydney, Australia, April 20, 2011.

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Conference presentation, “Recentering the Political Economy of the Subprime Crisis: The Past and Future of US Racial Inequality,” HM New York conference, sponsored by the Society for Historical Materialism, New School for Social Research, New York, May 7, 2011.

Seminar presentation, “California's Fiscal Crisis: How did it happen? How bad is it? What to do about it?” Randall Lewis Seminar Series, Center for Sustainable Suburban Development, University of California, Riverside, Tuesday, May 17, 2011.

Lecture, “Low Cost Housing and the Mortgage Crisis,” Hyman Minsky Summer Seminar, Levy Economics Institute of Bard College, Annandale-on-Hudson, New York, June 21, 2011.

Conference presentation, “The Political Economy of Too-Big-to-Fail Megabanks in the Capitalism of the Future,” Conference on the Capitalism of the Future, in honor of Geoffrey Harcourt, Robinson College, Cambridge University, Cambridge, UK, June 25-26, 2011.

ACADEMIC AND POLICY EVENTS, 2009-2010

Conference presentation, “From Liquidity Starvation to Credit Floods to Foreclosure Crisis: Inequality, Finance, and Uneven Regional Development in the Neoliberal Era,” Special Session on Regional Economics, 6th International Conference on Developments in Economic Theory and Policy, Faculty of Economics and Business. University of the Basque Country, Bilbao, July 2-3, 2009.

Conference presentation, “Why the Subprime Crisis is Different: a Minskyian Approach,” 6th International Conference on Developments in Economic Theory and Policy, Faculty of Economics and Business. University of the Basque Country, Bilbao, July 2-3, 2009.

Seminar presentation, “The Political Economy of the Subprime Crisis,” Comcast Fellows Workshop, Chicano/Latino Youth Leadership Project, UCCS, Sacramento, July 17, 2009.

Seminar presentation, “Financial Risk and Governance in the Neoliberal Era,” Comcast Fellows Workshop, Chicano/Latino Youth Leadership Project, UCCS, Sacramento, July 24, 2009.

Conference presentation, “Keynesian Policy Solutions in a World of Neoclassical Design Mechanisms: Paradoxes of the Global Crisis” in a plenary session, Impact of the Global Crisis on Latin America, 2nd Conference of the Brazilian Association for Keynesian Economics, Porto Alegre, September 11, 2009.

Keynote speech, “The “Great Recession”: Three questions about California”s economic, banking, & financial-structure crisis,” Biennial retreat, Northern California Legal Services, Presentation Camp, Santa Cruz Mountains, October 5, 2009.

Roundtable on the Economic Crisis, Red Globalizaci¢n Financiera y Desarrollo Sustentable, UNAM, México, DF, October 14, 2009.

Conference presentation, "Banking and finance in the US and in Latin America after the crisis: Three futures", Red Globalización Financiera y Desarrollo Sustentable, UNAM/UNBCS, La Paz, Baja California Sur, México, October 15-16, 2009.

Seminar presentation, “Banks without Capital or, Capitalism without Banking,” University of Westminster, School of Business, London, November 5, 2009.

Conference presentation, “The Roots and Branches of Sub-prime Crisis Banking: Toward Socially-Responsive Banking,” in the conference Recovery towards what? Finance, justice, sustainability, sponsored by the Bretton Woods Project, November 6, 2009, Congress Centre, Central London, UK.

Keynote Speech, “Keynesian Policy Solutions in a World of Neoclassical Design Mechanisms,” in the conference, Whither Financialization, SOAS/University of London, November 7, 2009, London, UK

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Conference presentation, “On the Possible Replacement of the “Efficient Market” Hypothesis: Toward a New Economics,” at the conference, The New Economics as 'Mainstream' Economics, Murray Edwards College, Cambridge, UK, sponsored by the Cambridge Trust for New Thinking in Economics, January 28, 2010.

Seminar presentation, “The Crisis after the Subprime Crisis: Why the US Must Reinvent Industrial Policy,” Centre for Research on Socio-Cultural Change, Manchester Business School, Manchester University, UK, February 1, 2010.

Seminar presentation, “Financial Globalization, Financial Crisis, and Financial Exclusion,” Institute for Development Studies at Sussex University, Brighton, UK, February 3, 2010.

Seminar presentation, “From Bretton Woods to the Subprime Crisis: Is Financial Governance Feasible in the Neoliberal Era?” Laurentian University, Sudbury, Ontario, March 2, 2010.

University Seminar, “The 2007-10 Crisis of Banking, Housing and Economy: Origins, Policy Responses, and the US's Economic Futures,” Laurentian University, Sudbury, Ontario, March 3, 2010.

Conference presentation, “On the Possible Replacement of the “Efficient Market” Hypothesis: Toward a New Economics,” at the conference, “The New Economics as 'Mainstream' Economics,” at the conference, Economia e Interdisciplinaridade(s), Universidade Federal Fluminense, Niteroi, Brazil, April 29, 2010.

Lecture series, “Financial Crisis, Financial Exclusion, and Financial Regulation: A rethinking in the shadow of the sub-prime and European crises,” CEDEPLAR, Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais, May-June 2010, selected dates.

Conference presentation, “The Global Crisis and the Governance of Power in Finance,” at the conference Central Banking after the Crisis / La Banque Centrale aprés la Crise, Toronto, Ontario, Canada, May 21-22, 2010.

Conference keynote speech, “Understanding the Geography of the Post-Crisis Global Crisis: Implications for Brazil,” at the XIV Seminario Sobre a Economia Mineira, sponsored by CEDEPLAR/Federal University of Minas Gerais, Diamantina, May 25, 2010.

Conference presentation, “Why the Subprime Crisis is Different: A Minskyian Approach,” at the XIV Seminario Sobre a Economia Mineira, sponsored by CEDEPLAR/Federal University of Minas Gerais, Diamantina, May 27, 2010.

Seminar presentation, “Why the Subprime Crisis is Different: A Minskyian Approach,” Department of Economics, University of Sao Paulo, Sao Paulo, June 8, 2010.

Conference presentation, “The Four Stages of the Global Crisis: Is This the End, or the Triumph, of the Financial Oligarchy?” in the conference The Developmental State: Crisis and Renewal, at the Centro de Ciencias Juridicas e Economicas, Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro, June 10-11, 2010.

ACADEMIC AND POLICY EVENTS, 2008-2009

Conference presentation, “Tenure: The Game,” at the American Economic Association Minority Pipeline Conference, University of California, Santa Barbara, July 11, 2008.

Conference presentation, “Money and Space: A Framework for Theory and Policy,” Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais, Diamantina, Brazil, August 27, 2008.

Seminar series, “Financial Development, Financial Exclusion, Financial Crisis,” Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais, Belo Horizonte, Brazil, September 1-5, 2008.

Seminar, “Financial Risk and Governance in the Neoliberal Era” Universide Federal de Rio Grande de Sul, Porto Alegre, Brazil, September 27, 2008.

Seminar, “From Financial Exploitation to Global Instability: Understanding the Roots of the Subprime Crisis,” Department of Economics, California State University, Chico, November 6, 2008.

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Conference presentation, “The Way Forward: U.S. Economic Policy Options for the Obama Administration,” Policy and Security Implications of the Financial Crisis: A Plan for America, a conference and workshop sponsored by Economists for Peace and Security and by the Levy Economics Institute, New School for Social Research, New York, November 13-14, 2008.

Seminar, “Sources and Impacts of the Subprime Crisis: From Financial Exploitation to Global Instability,” Senate Office of Research, California State Senate, November 17, 2008.

Discussant, Dissertation Session (Paper by Melissa Knox, UC Berkeley), Committee on the Status of Minority Groups in the Economics Profession, Allied Social Science Association meetings, San Francisco, January 5, 2009.

Discussant, Session on Progressive Economic Policies for Workers, Communities and Families, organized by Marlene Kim (Papers by Jeannette Wicks-Lim, University of Massachusetts-Amherst, and Michael Reich, UC Berkeley), Allied Social Science Association meetings, San Francisco, January 5, 2009.

Conference presentation, “The Sky Did Not Fall in 2008: Hegemonic Transition and the Subprime Crisis,” in the Session on The U.S. Financial Crisis: Heterodox Perspectives, organized by Eric Tygmoine, Allied Social Science Association meetings, San Francisco, January 5, 2009.

Colloquium presentation, “Sources & Impacts of the Subprime Crisis: From Financial Exploitation to Global Economic Meltdown,” 2008-09 Colloquium Series, “Financial Crises and Globalization,” organized by Christopher Chase-Dunn, Department of Sociology, UC Riverside, January 13, 2009.

Workshop presentation, “Banks without Capital or Capitalism without Banking: Socially-Efficient Finance after the Subprime Meltdown,” Center for Urban and Regional Development Studies, Newcastle University, February 4, 2009.

NEG Distinguished Annual Lecture, “The Political Economy of the Subprime Meltdown: Understanding the Crisis at Different Spatial Scales,” Center for Urban and Regional Development Studies, Newcastle University, February 5, 2009.

Conference presentation, “Banks without Capital or Capitalism without Banking: Socially-Efficient Finance after the Subprime Meltdown,” Conference on the World Financial Crisis, 2007 - “, Cambridge University, February 9, 2009.

Workshop presentation, “Sources & Impacts of the Subprime Crisis: From Financial Exploitation to Global Economic Meltdown,” London City University, February 11, 2009.

Seminar series, Financial Development, Financial Exclusion, Financial Crisis, University of Athens, February 16-20, 2009.

Conference presentation, “Using Finance to Promote Equitable Development in the Post-Subprime World: Learning from the Grameen and South-Shore Banking Models,” at a festschrift conference honoring Azizur Khan, Political Economy Research Institute, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, March 27-28, 2009.

Workshop participant, Planning workshop of the Socialist International for the G-20 Conference, organized by George Papandreou (president of SI), United Nations, New York, March 30, 2009.

Conference presentation, “What's Left of Banking after the Subprime Crisis” Spatial Implications and Policy Directions," International Working Group on Financialization 3rd meeting, University of Nottingham London Office, London, April 23, 2009.

Participant, first annual Housing Policy Research Summit, sponsored by Housing California, held in Sacramento, April 27, 2009.

Conference presentation, “Roads to the foreclosure crisis: global, macro, and micro scales,” in the conference, Solving California's Foreclosure Crisis: Local Impacts and Strategic Responses, Lewis Center for Regional Policy Studies, School of Public Affairs, UCLA, May 1, 2009.

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Address, “Central Challenges for Social Democrats in Europe and Globally,” Panel on Economy and Crisis, Athens Symposium on the Future and Challenges of the Social-Democrat Parties, Megaron “ The Athens Concert Hall, Athens Greece, May 12, 2009.

ACADEMIC AND POLICY EVENTS, 1986-87 TO 2007-2008 -- On request

REFEREEING

Journals: American Journal of Economics and Sociology, Antipode, Applied Geography, Cambridge Journal of Economics, Canadian Journal of Urban Research, Economic Geography,Economic Inquiry, Economics and Philosophy, Environment and Planning A, Feminist Economics, International Review of Applied Economics,Journal of Business Research, Journal of Economic Behavior and Organization, Journal of Economic Education, Journal of Economic Geography, Journal of Economic Issues, Journal of Economic Surveys, Journal of Evolutionary Economics, Journal of Money, Credit, and Banking, Journal of Population Economics, Journal of Post Keynesian Economics, Journal of Risk and Insurance, Journal of Urban Affairs, Journal of Urban Economics, Law and Policy, Metroeconomica, Political Economy Quarterly (Japan), Problemas del Desarrollo, Progress in Human Geography, Review of Black Political Economy, Review of International Political Economy, Review of Political Economy, Review of Social Economy, Sankhya B (journal of the Indian Statistical Institute), Social Science Research, Society and Space, Sociological Perspectives, The Canadian Geographer, Transactions (journal of the Institute of British, Geographers), World Development. Presses and Associations: Cambridge University; Cornell University; John Wiley and Sons (Handbook of Technology Management); Routledge; Stanford University; Temple University, University of Michigan Press; M.E. Sharpe American Council of Learned Societies, Australian Research Council, National Science Foundation,United Kingdom Economic and Social Research Council, Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada.

ADVISING AND CONSULTING

Fair Housing Congress of Southern California, California Reinvestment Committee, Consumers Union, California Office, Concerned Citizens of South Central Los Angeles, El Rescate (Pico-Union area of Los Angeles), La Biblioteca de San Bernardino, Fair Housing Council of San Fernando Valley, Fair Housing Council of San Gabriel Valley, Fair Housing Council of Riverside County, City of Los Angeles Treasurer?s Office, State Treasurer of California, State Treasurer of Connecticut, Financial Markets Center (Philmont VA), Micro Finance Regulatory Council, Department of Trade and Industry, Government of South Africa, Kansas City City Council. REFERENCES – On request.