Grant projects
Sarah Bauerle Danzman and W. Kindred Winecoff. Market Concentration, Transnational Corporate Networks, and Politically-Connected Firms
— NSF proposal underdevelopment for January, 2020 submission.
— Seed funding from the Ostrom Workshop, Indiana University, 2018-19. $10,000
— Seed funding from the Social Science Research Funding Program, Indiana University, 2019-20. $36,629.
Journal articles and book chapters
Heather Ba and W. Kindred Winecoff. Under review. “American Financial Hegemony And Global Economic Growth Volatility.” Presented at the 2019 Annual Meeting of the American Political Science Association, Washington, D.C.
W. Kindred Winecoff and Kevin Young. In preparation for Winter 2021 submission. “Networks.” For the Oxford Handbook of International Political Economy, Jon Pevehouse and Leonard Seabrooke (eds.). Oxford University Press.
Ore Koren and W. Kindred Winecoff. In progress for Spring 2021 submission. “When the Federal Reserve Fights Crises It Inadvertently Contributes to Civil Conflict.”
W. Kindred Winecoff. 2020. “‘The Persistent Myth of Lost Hegemony,’ Revisited: Structural Power as a Complex Network Phenomenon.” European Journal of International Relations 26(SI): 209-252. 25th anniversary special issue.
Aashna Khanna and W. Kindred Winecoff. 2020. “The Money Shapes the Order.” International Studies Perspectives 21(2): 109-153. Part of a symposium on “Global Monetary Order and the Liberal Order Debate” with Carla Norrlof, Paul Poast, Benjamin J Cohen, Sabreena Croteau, Daniel McDowell, and Hongying Wang.
Eelke M. Heemskerk, Kevin Young, Frank W. Takes, Bruce Cronin, Javier Garcia-Bernardo, Vladimir Popov, W. Kindred Winecoff, Lasse Folke Henriksen and Audrey Laurin-Lamonthe. 2018. “The promise and perils of using big data in the study of corporate networks: problems, diagnostics and fixes.” Global Networks 18(1): 3-32.
Sylvia Maxfield, W. Kindred Winecoff, and Kevin Young. 2017. “An empirical investigation of the financialization convergence hypothesis.” Review of International Political Economy 24(6): 1004-1029.
Sarah Bauerle Danzman, Thomas Oatley, and W. Kindred Winecoff. 2017. “All Crises are Global: Capital Cycles in an Imbalanced International Political Economy.” International Studies Quarterly 61(4): 907-923. Selected for the ISA 2019 Annual Convention Collection on “Re-envisioning International Studies: Vision and Progress.”
W. Kindred Winecoff. 2017. “How Did International Political Economy Become Reductionist? A Historiography of a Subdiscipline.” In Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Politics, edited by William R. Thompson, Oxford University Press.
W. Kindred Winecoff. 2017. “Global Banking As a Politicized Habitat.” Business and Politics 19(2): 267-297. Included as one of ten papers in the journal’s 20th Anniversary Collection. Also nominated for the David P. Baron Award for best article published in Business and Politics in 2017.
W. Travis Selmier II and W. Kindred Winecoff. 2017. “Re-conceptualizing the Political Economy of Finance in the Post-Crisis Era.” Business and Politics 19(2): 167-190.
William Kindred Winecoff. 2016. “Against Dyadic Design.” International Studies Quarterly online symposium “Dyadic Research Designs: Progress or Postmortem?”
W. Kindred Winecoff. 2015. “Structural Power and the Global Financial Crisis: A Network Analytical Approach.” Business and Politics 17(3): 495-526.
W. Kindred Winecoff. 2014. “Bank Regulation, Macroeconomic Management, and Monetary Incentives in OECD Economies.” International Studies Quarterly 58(3): 448-461.
W. Kindred Winecoff. 2014. “The Triffin Dilemma, the Lucas Paradox, and Monetary Politics in the 21st Century.” In Handbook of the International Political Economy of Monetary Relations, edited by Thomas Oatley and W. Kindred Winecoff. Cheltenham, UK: Edward Elgar Publishing.
Thomas Oatley and W. Kindred Winecoff. 2014. “The political economy of the international monetary and financial systems.” In Research Handbook on International Monetary Relations, edited by Thomas Oatley and W. Kindred Winecoff. Cheltenham, UK: Edward Elgar Publishing.
Thomas Oatley, W. Kindred Winecoff, Sarah Bauerle Danzman, and Andrew Pennock. 2013. “The Political Economy of Global Finance: A Network Model.” Perspectives on Politics 11(1): 133-153.
Thomas Oatley and W. Kindred Winecoff. 2012. “The Domestic Rooting of Financial Regulation in an Era of Global Capital Markets.” In Research Handbook on Hedge Funds, Private Equity, and Alternative Investments, edited by Phoebus Athanassiou. Cheltenham, UK: Edward Elgar Publishing.
In progress (some have stalled out)
As these remain in progress I am not yet posting links to them, but if you’d like to see a copy e-mail me and I might be willing to share.
Book projects
W. Kindred Winecoff. Global Banking as a Complex Political Economy. In progress for 2019-20 submission.
W. Kindred Winecoff. States and Markets in the 21st Century. In progress for 2020-21 submission.
Works under review and as-yet-unpublished conference papers
W. Kindred Winecoff. “‘The Persistent Myth of Lost Hegemony,’ Revisited.” Revise and resubmit, European Journal of International Relations. Presented at the 2019 Annual Meeting of the International Studies Association, Toronto, CA.
Aashna Khanna and W. Kindred Winecoff. “The Money Shapes the Order”. Revise and resubmit, International Studies Perspectives.
W. Kindred Winecoff and Kevin Young. In progress for Fall, 2019 submission. “Networks in International Political Economy.” For the Oxford Handbook of International Political Economy, edited by Jon Pevehouse and Leonard Seabrooke.
W. Kindred Winecoff. “Structural Power and the Federal Reserve’s International Lending During the Global Financial Crisis.” Revise and resubmit, International Interactions. Presented at the 2016 annual meeting of the Southern Political Science Association, San Juan, Puerto Rico.
Samuel Brazys and W. Kindred Winecoff. In progress for Fall 2019 submission. “The Politics of Prominence and the Struggle for Position in the Network of Preferential Trade Agreements.” Presented at the 2016 Annual Meeting of the International Political Economy Society, Durham, NC.
Alex Antony, Rashid Marcano-River, Bilyana Petrova, and W. Kindred Winecoff. In progress for Fall 2019 submission. “The Paradise Papers As a Covert Network.” Presented at the 2017 Annual Meeting of the Midwest Political Science Association, Chicago, IL.
Damian Raess, Dora Sari, and W. Kindred Winecoff. In progress for Fall 2019 submission. “The Diffusion of Labor Provisions in PTAs: The Case of the Global South.” Presented at the 2017 Annual Meeting of the American Political Science Association, San Francisco, CA.
Heather Ba, Elizabeth Menninga and W. Kindred Winecoff. In progress for Fall 2019 submission.“Complex Interdependence as a Multiplex Network Phenomenon.” Presented at the 2018 Annual Meeting of the International Studies Association, San Francisco, CA.
Elizabeth Menninga and W. Kindred Winecoff. In progress for Fall 2019 submission. “Multilayer Network Fractionalization Complex and Global Economic Growth.”
Heather Ba and W. Kindred Winecoff. In progress for Fall 2019 submission. “American Financial Hegemony And Economic
Growth Stability.” Presented at the 2019 Annual Meeting of the American Political Science Association, Washington, D.C.
W. Kindred Winecoff. In progress for Winter 2020 submission. “Power and Prominence in the Global Monetary System: Where It Comes From, What It Means, and How It Is(n’t?) Changing.” Presented at a 2017 conference at the Centre for Rising Powers, University of Cambridge and at the 2018 annual meeting of the Society for the Advancement of Socio-Economics, Kyoto, Japan