Open to goods, closed to people?ReferencesConconi, P., G. Facchini, and M. Zanardi (2012). “Fast Track Authority and InternationalTrade Negotiations”, American Economic Journal: Economic Policy, forthcoming.Facchini, G., and M. F. Steinhardt (2011). “What Drives US Immigration Policy?,”Evidence from Congressional Roll Call Votes”, Journal of Public Economics 95, 734-743.Fernández-Kelly, P., and D. S. Massey (2007). “Borders for Whom? The Role ofNAFTA in Mexico-US Migration”, Annals of the American Academy of Political andSocial Science 610, 98-118,Hanson, G. H., K. Scheve, and M. J. Slaugther (2007). “Public Finance and IndividualPreferences over Globalization Strategies”, Economics and Politics 19, 1-33.Hatton, T. J. (2007). “Should We Have a WTO for International Migration?” EconomicPolicy 22, 339-383.Faini, R. (2002). “Development, Trade, and Migration”, Revue d’Économie et duDéveloppement, Proceedings from the ABCDE Europe Conference, 1-2: 85-116.Mayda, A. (2008). “Why are People more pro Trade than pro Migration?” EconomicsLetters 101, 160-163.Mundell, R. (1957). “International Trade and Factor Mobility”, American EconomicReview 47, 321-335.Munshi, K. (2003). “Networks in the Modern Economy: Mexican Migrants in the USLabor Market”, Quarterly Journal of Economics 118, 549-599.Razin, A., and E. Sadka (1997). “International Migration and International Trade”, inHandbook of Population and Family Economics 1, 851-887.139
Rethinking Global Economic Governance in Light of the CrisisRodrik, D. (2002). “Comments at the Conference on Immigration Policy and theWelfare State”, in Boeri, T., G. H. Hanson, and B. McCormick (eds.), ImmigrationPolicy and the Welfare System, Oxford University Press.About the authorsPaola Conconi holds is a B.A. in Political Science from the University of Bologna, anM.A. in International Relations from the School of Advanced International Studies ofJohns Hopkins University, and a M.Sc. and a Ph.D. in Economics from the Universityof Warwick. Her main research interests are in the areas of international trade,international migration, regional integration and political economy. Her contributionto the project will be on governance of trade institutions, on which she has publishedvarious papers in international journals such as the Journal of International Economicsor the Journal of Public Economics.Giovanni Facchini is a Professor of Economics at Erasmus University Rotterdam andat the University of Milan, having taught previously at the University of Essex, theUniversity of Illinois at Urbana Champaign and at Stanford. His research focuses oninternational trade and factor mobility. He has published in journals such as the Journalof the European Economic Association, the Review of Economics and Statistics, theJournal of International Economics, the Journal of Public Economics, among others.Giovanni is a CEPR Research Affiliate, a fellow of CES-Ifo and IZA, and a FacultyAffiliate at the Institute for Government and Public Affairs at the University of Illinois-Urbana Champaign. He coordinates research on international migration at the CentroStudi Luca d’Agliano in Milan. He obtained a PhD in Economics from StanfordUniversity in 2001.Max Friedrich Steinhardt is a Senior Researcher in “Demography, Migration andIntegration” at the Hamburg Institute of International Economics (HWWI). Hisresearch interests lie in the fields of labour economics, economics of migration,applied microeconometrics and regional economics. He studied economics at the140