Items where City Author is "Palan, Ronen"
Wei, X. & Palan, R. (2023). Global corporate structure of Chinese state-owned financial institutions through Hong Kong. Journal of International Relations and Development, 26(2), pp. 373-403. doi: 10.1057/s41268-023-00291-5
Samman, A. ORCID: 0000-0003-4721-4877 & Palan, R. (2022). Systemic unreason: A psychic history of states and corporations. Global Society, 37(3), pp. 336-353. doi: 10.1080/13600826.2022.2113040
Palan, R. & Phillips, R. (2022). Arbitrage power and the disappearing financialized firm. Finance and Society, 8(1), pp. 22-41. doi: 10.2218/finsoc.7125
Palan, R., Petersen, H. & Phillips, R. (2021). Arbitrage spaces in the offshore world: Layering, 'fuses' and partitioning of the legal structure of modern firms. Environment and Planning A (EPA), 55(4), pp. 1041-1061. doi: 10.1177/0308518x211053645
Phillips, R., Petersen, H. & Palan, R. (2021). Group subsidiaries, tax minimization and offshore financial centres: Mapping organizational structures to establish the ‘in-betweener’ advantage. Journal of International Business Policy, 4(2), pp. 286-307. doi: 10.1057/s42214-020-00069-3
Palan, R. (2020). An evolutionary approach to international political economy: the case of corporate tax avoidance. Review of Evolutionary Political Economy, 1(2), pp. 161-182. doi: 10.1007/s43253-020-00017-0
Lysandrou, P., Nesvetailova, A. & Palan, R. (2017). The best of both worlds: scale economies and discriminatory policies in London’s global financial centre. Economy and Society, 46(2), pp. 159-184. doi: 10.1080/03085147.2017.1359915
Palan, R. (2017). Futurity, Offshore, and the International Political Economy of Crime. In: Beckert, J. & Dewey, M. (Eds.), The Architecture of Illegal Markets: Towards an Economic Sociology of Illegality in the Economy. (pp. 108-122). Oxford University Press.
Palan, R. & Nesvetailova, A. (2017). Banks as Global Corporations: From Entities to ‘Ecological Habitats’. In: Baars, G. & Spicer, A. (Eds.), The Corporation: A Critical, Multi-Disciplinary Handbook. (pp. 268-279). Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.
Palan, R. & Mangraviti, G. (2016). Troubling tax havens: tax footprint reduction and jurisdictional arbitrage. In: Hay, I. & Beaverstock, J. (Eds.), International Handbook of Wealth and Super-Rich. (pp. 422-442). UK: Edward Elgar.
Murphy, R. & Palan, R. (2015). Why the UK’s Fiscal Charter is Doomed to Fail: An analysis of Austerity Economics during the First and the Second Cameron Governments (2015/03). City Political Economy Research Centre (CITYPERC).
Palan, R. (2015). Futurity, Pro-cyclicality and Financial Crises. New Political Economy, 20(3), pp. 367-385. doi: 10.1080/13563467.2014.951427
Palan, R. (2015). The Second British Empire: The British Empire and the re-emergence of global finance. In: Halperin, S. & Palan, R. (Eds.), Legacies of Empire Imperial Roots of the Contemporary Global Order. (pp. 40-68). Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.
Palan, R. & Nesvetailova, A. (2014). Elsewhere, Ideally Nowhere: Shadow Banking and Offshore Finance. Politik, 16(4), pp. 26-34.
Nesvetailova, A. & Palan, R. (2013). Sabotage in the financial system: Lessons from Veblen. Business Horizons, 56(6), pp. 723-732. doi: 10.1016/j.bushor.2013.07.009
Palan, R. (2013). New trends in global political economy. In: Global Political Economy. (pp. 1-18). Taylor and Francis. doi: 10.4324/9780203097762
Palan, R. & Nesvetailova, A. (2013). The Governance of the Black Holes of the World Economy: Shadow Banking and Offshore Finance (2013-03). London, UK: City Political Economy Research Centre (CITYPERC), Department of International Politics, City University London.