@article{nance_2022, title={The Bankers' Blacklist: Unofficial Market Enforcement and the Global Fight Against Illicit Financing}, volume={17}, ISSN={["1559-744X"]}, DOI={10.1007/s11558-022-09466-0}, number={4}, journal={REVIEW OF INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATIONS}, author={Nance, Mark}, year={2022}, month={Oct}, pages={899–910} } @article{nance_2018, title={Re-thinking FATF: an experimentalist interpretation of the Financial Action Task Force}, volume={69}, ISSN={["1573-0751"]}, DOI={10.1007/s10611-017-9748-5}, abstractNote={Most explanations of the Financial Action Task Force argue that material coercion plays a key role in the consolidation and diffusion of the global anti-money laundering regime. This paper looks carefully at the decision-making within FATF and argues that, at its most impactful, FATF operates in line with the principles of "experimentalist governance." Experimentalism emphasizes broad, participatory standard setting, contextualized implementation, intensive but diagnostic monitoring, and routinized updating in light of experience. The paper discusses the differences between the more common understandings of FATF before laying out the principles of experimentalist governance. It outlines the experimentalist form of FATF decision-making. It then provides evidence of experimentalist decision-making in three important aspects of FATF: the evolution of blacklisting; the role of monitoring; and the continuing implementation of the risk-based approach.}, number={2}, journal={CRIME LAW AND SOCIAL CHANGE}, author={Nance, Mark T.}, year={2018}, month={Mar}, pages={131–152} } @article{nance_daly_2018, title={The Nordic Model and Structural Change: Lessons from the Collapse of Saab Automobile AB}, volume={53}, ISSN={0020-5346 1613-964X}, url={http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/S10272-018-0748-1}, DOI={10.1007/S10272-018-0748-1}, abstractNote={The case of Saab and Trollhättan shows one way that societies can harness the productive side of creative destruction while mitigating the harm it causes.}, number={4}, journal={Intereconomics}, publisher={Springer Science and Business Media LLC}, author={Nance, Mark T. and Daly, Jack}, year={2018}, month={Jul}, pages={190–195} } @article{nance_2018, title={The regime that FATF built: an introduction to the Financial Action Task Force}, volume={69}, ISSN={["1573-0751"]}, DOI={10.1007/s10611-017-9747-6}, abstractNote={This article serves to introduce this special issue of Crime, Law, & Social Change on the Financial Action Task Force (FATF). It provides a primer on the history and purpose of FATF and lays out some of the central debates over FATF and the anti-money laundering (AML) regime. Finally, as a way of giving readers an overview of the articles in the special issue, it proposes a series of themes that academics and practitioners should consider in future research and work with FATF.}, number={2}, journal={CRIME LAW AND SOCIAL CHANGE}, author={Nance, Mark T.}, year={2018}, month={Mar}, pages={109–129} } @article{nance_boettcher_2017, title={Conflict, cooperation, and change in the politics of energy interdependence: An introduction}, volume={24}, ISSN={2214-6296}, url={http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/J.ERSS.2016.12.020}, DOI={10.1016/j.erss.2016.12.020}, abstractNote={This article lays out the core insights of the group of papers included in this special issue. It lays out the logic of the project and highlights how an energy and security approach to energy policy—as opposed to one emphasizing “energy security through energy independence”–shifts our perspective on likely energy policy.}, journal={Energy Research & Social Science}, publisher={Elsevier BV}, author={Nance, Mark T. and Boettcher, William A., III}, year={2017}, month={Feb}, pages={1–5} } @article{early_nance_cottrell_2017, title={Global governance at the energy-security nexus: Lessons from UNSCR 1540}, volume={24}, ISSN={["2214-6326"]}, DOI={10.1016/j.erss.2016.12.007}, abstractNote={Advances in nuclear, biological, and chemical technologies have transformational potential related to the global energy supply chain. At the same time, those advances pose significant security risks because those the same technologies can be diverted for violent purposes. Recognizing this threat, the United Nations Security Council in 2004 took the unprecedented step of invoking its Chapter VII authority to pass Resolution 1540, which obligated all UN members to develop, implement, and report on a comprehensive regulatory system for tracking the production and distribution of technology related to weapons of mass destruction (WMD). The resolution reflected a new international commitment to preventing the proliferation of WMD and a potentially revolutionary approach to transnational regulation. In contrast to traditional approaches that rely on rigorous third-party monitoring, verification, and enforcement, UNSCR 1540 relies on a more dynamic and iterative process of norm elaboration and dissemination that strengthens the social fabric necessary to react to emerging threats. While UNSCR 1540 faces ongoing challenges, it also holds promise as a model of cooperative governance in particularly complex and sensitive issues, such as those that characterize politics at the energy-security nexus.}, journal={ENERGY RESEARCH & SOCIAL SCIENCE}, author={Early, Bryan R. and Nance, Mark T. and Cottrell, M. Patrick}, year={2017}, month={Feb}, pages={94–101} } @article{nance_suder_hall_2016, title={Negotiating the Transatlantic Relationship: An International, Interdisciplinary Simulation of a Real-World Negotiation}, volume={49}, ISSN={["1537-5935"]}, DOI={10.1017/s1049096516000305}, abstractNote={ABSTRACT}, number={2}, journal={PS-POLITICAL SCIENCE & POLITICS}, author={Nance, Mark T. and Suder, Gabriele and Hall, Abigail}, year={2016}, month={Apr}, pages={333–337} } @article{nance_cottrell_2014, title={A turn toward experimentalism? Rethinking security and governance in the twenty-first century}, volume={40}, ISSN={["1469-9044"]}, DOI={10.1017/s026021051300017x}, abstractNote={Abstract}, number={2}, journal={REVIEW OF INTERNATIONAL STUDIES}, author={Nance, Mark T. and Cottrell, M. Patrick}, year={2014}, month={Apr}, pages={277–301} } @book{struett_carlson_nance_2013, title={Maritime piracy and the construction of global governance}, publisher={New York: Routledge}, year={2013} } @article{struett_nance_armstrong_2013, title={Navigating the Maritime Piracy Regime Complex}, volume={19}, ISSN={["1942-6720"]}, DOI={10.1163/19426720-01901008}, abstractNote={Maritime piracy is one of the oldest subjects of international law and recently it has reemerged as a serious threat to commerce and security. While states have become more engaged in punishing and preventing piracy, efforts as a whole have been poorly organized, ad hoc, mostly unilateral, slow to develop, and only minimally effective. This is true despite the existence of a regime complex that supposedly promotes effective cooperation on the issue. What explains the insufficient response to this rising economic and security threat? This article argues that the regime complex itself is a major part of the problem. It examines specifically four core elemental regimes that are identifiable by their key texts or organizations: the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea, the Convention for the Suppression of Unlawful Acts Against the Safety of Maritime Navigation, the International Maritime Organization, and the International Maritime Bureau. This analysis adopts a perspective that emphasizes how these different...}, number={1}, journal={GLOBAL GOVERNANCE}, publisher={Brill}, author={Struett, Michael J. and Nance, Mark T. and Armstrong, Diane}, year={2013}, pages={93–104} } @article{nance_jakobi_2012, title={Laundering Pirates? The Potential Role of Anti-money Laundering in Countering Maritime Piracy}, volume={10}, ISSN={["1478-1395"]}, DOI={10.1093/jicj/mqs035}, abstractNote={Officials only recently have begun considering the use of financial investigative techniques, especially anti-money laundering (AML) tactics, in counter-piracy efforts. Europol and INTERPOL are attempting to establish coordinated law enforcement approaches to the problem of piracy, while the Financial Action Task Force on Money Laundering has generated early research on the possible use of AML in particular. Based on an analysis of the evolution of the AML regime more broadly, we suggest that a financial law enforcement approach, on paper, could be a valuable additional tool in countering piracy. To date, however, two obstacles have limited the wider acceptance of those tools. First, until very recently, no 'norm entrepreneur' has stepped forward to make financial investigative tactics a central tool in counter-piracy efforts. Secondly, while 'following the money' has much potential as a means of fighting piracy, we still know too little about the on-shore side of piracy to put those tools to use.}, number={4}, journal={JOURNAL OF INTERNATIONAL CRIMINAL JUSTICE}, author={Nance, Mark T. and Jakobi, Anja P.}, year={2012}, month={Sep}, pages={857–880} }