Hubert Buch-hansen
Associate professor
Department of Business and Politics
Copenhagen Business Academy
Denmark
Biography
I am a political economist with wide-ranging research and teaching interests. Overall, I am interested in how the political economies of the Western world developed, in the functioning of the contemporary global capitalist system, and in the economic, social and environmental consequences thereof. Most of my research revolves around issues related to competition. My PhD thesis from 2008 and a 2011 book titled The Politics of European Competition Regulation (co-authored by Angela Wigger), both analyse the historical transformation of capitalism and competition regulation in Europe from the vantage point of a critical political economy perspective underpinned by critical realism. Currently I study the evolution of business networks and their impact on competition. More specifically, I conduct longitudinal analyses of cartels and interlocking directorates by means of social network analysis methods. Finally, by cross-fertilising insights from political economy and degrowth/steady-state economics I explore what transitions to genuinely environmentally sustainable societies entail, and what the main obstacles to and opportunities for such transitions are.
Research Interest
I am a political economist with wide-ranging research and teaching interests. Overall, I am interested in how the political economies of the Western world developed, in the functioning of the contemporary global capitalist system, and in the economic, social and environmental consequences thereof. Most of my research revolves around issues related to competition. My PhD thesis from 2008 and a 2011 book titled The Politics of European Competition Regulation (co-authored by Angela Wigger), both analyse the historical transformation of capitalism and competition regulation in Europe from the vantage point of a critical political economy perspective underpinned by critical realism. Currently I study the evolution of business networks and their impact on competition. More specifically, I conduct longitudinal analyses of cartels and interlocking directorates by means of social network analysis methods. Finally, by cross-fertilising insights from political economy and degrowth/steady-state economics I explore what transitions to genuinely environmentally sustainable societies entail, and what the main obstacles to and opportunities for such transitions are.
Publications
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2014: ‘Interlocking directorates and collusion: an empirical analysis’, International Sociology, Vol. 29, No 3, pp. 249-267.
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2014: ‘Explaining (Missing) Regulatory Paradigm Shifts. EU Competition Regulation in Times of Economic Crisis’, New Political Economy, Vol. 19, No. 1, pp. 113-137 (with A. Wigger).
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"2015: ‘The Scale and Geography of Collusion in the European Market: A Longitudinal View’, JCMS: Journal of Common Market Studies (with C. Levallois) (published in early view) "