Publikationen
Key Publications
Berten, John & Matthias Kranke (2022) ‘Anticipatory Global Governance: International Organisations and the Politics of the Future.’ Global Society 36(2): 155–169.
Kranke, Matthias (2022) ‘Tomorrow’s Debt, Today’s Duty: Debt Sustainability as Anticipatory Global Governance.’ Global Society 36(2): 223–239.
Kranke, Matthias (2022) ‘Exclusive expertise: the boundary work of international organizations.’ Review of International Political Economy 29(2): 453–476.
Kranke, Matthias (2022) ‘Pathologies of a Different Kind: Dysfunctional Interactions between International Organizations.’ Global Studies Quarterly 2(1): ksab038 (open access).
Kranke, Matthias & Svenja Quitsch (2021) ‘International organisations in global sustainability transitions.’ Environmental Innovation and Societal Transitions 41: 49–51.
Kranke, Matthias (2020) ‘IMF-World Bank Cooperation Before and After the Global Financial Crisis.’ Global Policy 11(1): 15–25 (open access).
Kranke, Matthias, and David Yarrow (2019) ‘The Global Governance of Systemic Risk: How Measurement Practices Tame Macroprudential Politics.’ New Political Economy 24(6): 816–832 (open access).
Broome, André, Alexandra Homolar and Matthias Kranke (2018) ‘Bad science: International organizations and the indirect power of global benchmarking.’ European Journal of International Relations 24(3): 514–539 (open access).
Yarrow, David and Matthias Kranke (2016) ‘The performativity of sports statistics: towards a research agenda.’ Journal of Cultural Economy 9(5): 445–457.
Eimer, Thomas R. and Matthias Kranke (2015) ‘Teaching the Transnationalization of Politics: Participant Observation of Public Events.’ International Studies Perspectives 16(2): 127–141.
Kranke, Matthias (2014) ‘Which “C” Are You Talking About? Critical Meets Cultural IPE’ (review article). Millennium: Journal of International Studies 42(3): 897–907.
Lütz, Susanne and Matthias Kranke (2014) ‘The European rescue of the Washington Consensus? EU and IMF lending to Central and Eastern European countries.’ Review of International Political Economy 21(2): 310–338.