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Mark Nance

Assoc Professor

Director, Master of International Studies

Associate Professor, School of Public and International Affairs

Caldwell Hall 219

View CV 

Bio

Mark Nance (Ph.D., University of Wisconsin-Madison) is an Associate Professor of Political Science and Director of the Master of International Studies program in NC State’s School of Public and International Affairs. He teaches International Political Economy, European politics, Transnational Illicit Economies, and Social Science Research and Writing. His research focuses generally on formal and informal means of global governance in the global political economy, especially in the illicit economy, and on global financial relations. His past work analyzed efforts to respond to maritime piracy and to the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction. Most of his work considers the extent and limits of meaningful cooperation in the context of international money laundering, with a particular focus on the Financial Action Task Force. His current work includes projects on the use of blacklists in the anti-money laundering regime and on politics of North-South financial relations. Those projects have led to on-going engagements with multiple national and international organizations involved in those efforts. He is a former Fulbright Scholar and has conducted field work in multiple countries.

Personal Zoom space: https://ncsu.zoom.us/my/nance.zoom

Projects

Crisis Capitalism? Bailing out the automobile industry–and autoworkers–in Sweden, Germany and the United States

Knowns and Unknowns in de-risking: side effects of the anti-money laundering regime

Mistaken beliefs and the global anti-money laundering regime (with Devin Case-Ruchala)

Office Hours

Or By Appointment

Publications

Edited special issues & volumes:

Mark T. Nance (ed). 2018. “Defining and Fighting Illicit Finance: The Financial Action Task Force and the Anti-Money Laundering Regime.” Crime, Law, and Social Change 69(2).

Mark T. Nance and William A. Boettcher III (eds). 2017. “Conflict or Cooperation? The Politics of Global Energy and Security.” Energy Research and Social Science 24: 1-106.

Struett, Michael J., Jon D. Carlson, and Mark T. Nance (eds.)  2012.  Maritime Piracy and the Construction of Global Governance.  New York: Routledge.

http://www.routledge.com/books/details/9780415518291

Peer-Reviewed Journal Articles:

Nance, Mark T. and Jack Daly 2018. “The Nordic Model and Structural Change: Lessons from the collapse of Saab Automobile AB.” Intereconomics: Review of European Economic Policy 53(4): 190-196.

Nance, Mark T. 2018. “The Regime that FATF Built: An introduction to the Financial Action Task Force.” Crime, Law, and Social Change 69(2): 109-129.

Nance, Mark T. 2018. “Re-thinking FATF: An experimentalist interpretation of the Financial Action Task Force.” Crime, Law, and Social Change 69(2): 131-152.

Nance, Mark T. and William A. Boettcher III. 2017. “Introduction: Conflict and Cooperation at the Energy-Security Nexus.” Energy Research and Social Science 24: 1-5.

Early, Bryan C., Mark T. Nance, and M. Patrick Cottrell. 2017. ““Global Governance at the Energy-Security Nexus:  Lessons from UNSCR 1540.”  Energy Research and Social Science 24: 94-101.

Nance, Mark T., Gabriele Suder, and Abigail Hall. 2016. “Negotiating the Transatlantic Relationship: An international, interdisciplinary simulation of a real-world negotiation.”  PS: Political Science & Politics: 49(2): 333-338.

Nance, Mark T. and M. Patrick Cottrell. 2014. “A turn toward experimentalism? Re-thinking security and governance in the 21st century.”  Review of International Studies 40(2): 277-301.

Struett, Michael J., Mark T. Nance, and Dianne Armstrong. 2013. “Navigating Complexity? Pitfalls for Cooperation in the Maritime Piracy Regime Complex.”  Global Governance 19(1): 93-104.

Nance, Mark T. and Anja P. Jakobi. 2012. “Laundering Pirates?  The potential role of anti-money laundering in countering maritime piracy.”  Journal of International Criminal Justice 10: 857-880.

Struett, Michael J. and Mark T. Nance (equal authorship).  2012.  “Constructing Pirates, Piracy, and Governance: An Introduction” in Struett, Carlson, and Nance (eds.) Maritime Piracy and the Construction of Global Governance.  New York: Routledge.

Nance, Mark T. and Michael J. Struett (equal authorship).  2012.  “Conflicting Constructions: Maritime Piracy and Cooperation under Regime Complexes” in Struett, Carlson, and Nance (eds.) Maritime Piracy and the Construction of Global Governance.  New York: Routledge.

Nance, Mark T. and William A. Boettcher III. 2017. “Introduction: Conflict and Cooperation at the Energy-Security Nexus.” Energy Research and Social Science 24: 1-5.

Early, Bryan C., Mark T. Nance, and M. Patrick Cottrell. 2017. ““Global Governance at the Energy-Security Nexus:  Lessons from UNSCR 1540.”  Energy Research and Social Science 24: 94-101.

Nance, Mark T., Gabriele Suder, and Abigail Hall. 2016. “Negotiating the Transatlantic Relationship: An international, interdisciplinary simulation of a real-world negotiation.”  PS: Political Science & Politics: 49(2): 333-338.

Nance, Mark T. and M. Patrick Cottrell.  2014.  “A Turn Toward Experimentalism? Re-thinking security and governance in the 21st century.”  Review of International Studies.

Struett, Michael J., Mark T. Nance, and Dianne Armstrong.  2013.  “Navigating Complexity? Pitfalls for Cooperation in the Maritime Piracy Regime Complex.”  Global Governance 19(1): 93-104.

Non-Peer Reviewed Articles:

Cobb, Michael D. and Mark T. Nance. 2011. “The Consequences of Measuring Non-Attitudes about Foreign Trade Preferences.”  Survey Practice, December: www.surveypractice.org.

Trubek, Louise, Mark Nance, and Tamara Hervey. 2009. “The Construction of Healthier Europe: Lessons and Questions for EU Governance from the Fight Against Cancer.”  Wisconsin International Law Journal 26(3): 804-843.

 

Book Chapters:

Nance, Mark T. 2015. “Naming and Shaming in Financial Regulation:  Explaining Variation in the Financial Action Task Force on Money Laundering” in Friman, H. Richard (ed.), The Politics of Leverage in International Relations: Name, Shame and Sanction. New York:  Palgrave Macmillan. Pp. 123-142.

Suder, Gabriele, Mark T. Nance, and Abigail Hall. 2014. “Improving IB Learning through Interdisciplinary Simulations” in Taras, Vasyl and Maria Alejandra Gonzalez-Perez (eds), Experiential Learning in International Business. New York: Palgrave-Macmillan. Pp. 665-678.

Struett, Michael J. and Mark T. Nance (equal authorship). 2012. “Constructing Pirates, Piracy, and Governance: An Introduction” in Struett, Carlson, and Nance (eds.) Maritime Piracy and the Construction of Global Governance. New York: Routledge. Pp. 1-19.

Nance, Mark T. and Michael J. Struett (equal authorship). 2012. “Conflicting Constructions: Maritime Piracy and Cooperation under Regime Complexes” in Struett, Carlson, and Nance (eds.) Maritime Piracy and the Construction of Global Governance. New York: Routledge. Pp. 125-148.

Trubek, David M., Patrick Cottrell, and Mark Nance. 2006. “‘Soft Law,’ ‘Hard Law,’ and European Integration: Toward a Theory of Hybridity” in Scott, Joanne and Gráinne de Búrca (eds.), New Governance and Constitutionalism in Europe and the US. Oxford: Hart Publishing Ltd. Pp. 65-94.

Also published as:  Trubek, David M., Patrick Cottrell, and Mark Nance. 2005. “‘Soft Law,’ ‘Hard Law,’ and European Integration: Toward a Theory of Hybridity.”  Jean Monnet Working Paper 02/05. Jean Monnet Center for International and Regional Economic Law & Justice, New York University School of Law.

Education

Ph.D. International Relations and Comparative Politics University of Wisconsin-Madison

Area(s) of Expertise

Global Governance, Comparative and International Political Economy, International Finance and Regulation, European Politics, Maritime Piracy, Economics and Public Opinion, Sweden, Germany, Spain, European Union