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Rethinking Global Economic Governance in Light of the CrisisFinancial Integration Thirty Years On. From Reform to Crisis, Cambridge UniversityPress.Klagsbrunn, Victor (2010), “Brazil and Argentina in the global financial system:contrasting approaches to development and foreign debt”, in G Underhill, J Blom andD Mügge (eds.) Global Financial Integration Thirty Years On. From Reform to Crisis,Cambridge University Press.Leijonhufvud, Axel (2011), “Shell game: Zero-interest policies as hidden subsidies tobank”, <strong>Vox</strong>EU.org column, 25 January 2011.Minsky, H (1982), “The Financial-Instability Hypothesis: Capitalist processes and thebehaviour of the economy,” in Kindleberger and Laffargue (eds.), Financial Crises:theory, history, and policy, New York: Cambridge University Press.Ocampo, José and Stephany Griffith-Jones (2010). “Combating procyclicality inthe international financial architecture: towards development-friendly financialgovernance” in G Underhill, J Blom and D Mügge (eds.) Global Financial IntegrationThirty Years On. From Reform to Crisis, Cambridge University Press.Persaud, A. (2000), “Sending the Herd Off the Cliff Edge,” The Journal of Risk Finance2(1), 59 –65.Tsingou, E (2012), “Club Model Politics and Global Financial Governance: the case ofthe Group of Thirty”, (unpublished PhD Thesis, University of Amsterdam).Underhill, G. (2010), “Theory and the Market after the Crisis: the Endogeneity ofFinancial Governance,” CEPR Discussion Paper CEPR-DP8164, DecemberUnderhill, G. (2011) Reforming global finance: Coping better with the pitfalls offinancial innovation and market-based supervision, PEGGED Policy Paper, December2011, available online at http://pegged.cepr.org/index.php?q=node/389.64

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