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The Princeton Institute for International and Regional Studies Produced by the Office of Communications | Copyright © 2014 by The Trustees of Princeton University | 450332 To visit the PIIRS research community on Global Systemic Risk on the Web, go to www.princeton.edu/piirs/research-communities/ global-systemic-risk, or scan the QR code. Image: Manish Nag; data source: nceas.ucsb.edu RISK REGULATION AND CRISIS: A SOCIAL SCIENCE PERSPECTIVE ON GLOBAL UNCERTAINTIES BRIDGET M. HUTTER London School of Economics and Political Science Bridget Hutter is a professor of risk regulation in the Department of Sociology at the London School of Economics and Political Science. She served as director of LSE’s Centre for Analysis of Risk and Regulation from 2000-10. Her research interests are in the broad area of regulation and risk management, including the regulation of economic life; organizational risk management; risk anticipation, resilience and natural disasters; and risk regulation in China. She is author and editor of numerous publications on the subject of risk regulation and has an international reputation for her work on compliance, regulatory enforcement, and business risk management. Her most recent books are “Anticipating Risks and Organising Risk Regulation” (editor, 2010), and “Organizational Encounters with Risk” (co-editor, 2005). She received her Ph.D. at the University of Oxford. 4:30 PM THURSDAY, APRIL 10 , 2014 Burr Hall, Room 219 For more information, contact Jayne Bialkowski, [email protected] or 609-258-2635. GLOBAL SYSTEMIC RISK The PIIRS Research Community on Global Systemic Risk will pursue a multidisciplinary inquiry focusing on the robustness and fragility of global human-made organizational systems — energy exploration and production, electricity transmission, food and water supplies, and the financial system, among others —to better understand the nature of risk, the structure of increasingly fragile systems, and the ability to anticipate and prevent catastrophic consequences. A PIIRS Research Community
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RISK REGULATION CRISIS · 2019. 4. 23. · reputation for her work on compliance, regulatory enforcement, and business risk management. Her most recent books are “Anticipating Risks

Mar 26, 2021

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Page 1: RISK REGULATION CRISIS · 2019. 4. 23. · reputation for her work on compliance, regulatory enforcement, and business risk management. Her most recent books are “Anticipating Risks

The Princeton Institute forInternational and Regional Studies

Produced by the Of� ce of Communications | Copyright © 2014 by The Trustees of Princeton University | 450332

To visit the PIIRS research community on Global Systemic Risk on the Web, go to

www.princeton.edu/piirs/research-communities/global-systemic-risk, or scan the QR code.

Image: Manish Nag; data source: nceas.ucsb.edu

R I S K R E G U L AT I O N A N D C R I S I S :A S O C I A L S C I E N C E P E R S P E C T I V E O N G L O B A L U N C E R TA I N T I E S

B R I D G E T M . H U T T E RLondon School of Economics and Political Science

Bridget Hutter is a professor of risk regulation in the Department of Sociology at the London School of Economics and Political Science. She served as director of LSE’s Centre for Analysis of Risk and Regulation from 2000-10. Her research interests are in the broad area of regulation and risk management, including the regulation of economic life; organizational risk management; risk anticipation, resilience and natural disasters; and risk regulation in China. She is author and editor of numerous publications on the subject of risk regulation and has an international reputation for her work on compliance, regulatory enforcement, and business risk management. Her most recent books are “Anticipating Risks and Organising Risk Regulation” (editor, 2010), and “Organizational Encounters with Risk” (co-editor, 2005). She received her Ph.D. at the University of Oxford.

4 : 3 0 P M

T H U R S DAY, A P R I L 1 0 , 2 0 1 4Burr Hall, Room 219

For more information, contact Jayne Bialkowski, [email protected] or 609-258-2635.

G L O B A L S Y S T E M I C R I S K

The PIIRS Research Community on Global Systemic Risk will pursue a multidisciplinary inquiry focusing on the robustness and fragility of global human-made organizational systems — energy exploration and production, electricity transmission, food and water supplies, and the financial system, among others —to better understand the nature of risk, the structure of increasingly fragile systems, and the ability to anticipate and prevent catastrophic consequences.

A PIIRS Research Community