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Dive into the research topics where Jean-Christophe Graz is active.

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Featured researches published by Jean-Christophe Graz.


Competition and Change | 2006

Hybrids and Regulation in the Global Political Economy

Jean-Christophe Graz

While regulation theory literature has made important contributions to the much-debated domain of globalisation by focusing on various aspects of post-Fordism, it has not yet fully engaged with the implications that can be drawn from critical approaches in international political economy. Recent studies have explored the transnational bases of new patterns and agents of change beyond states, firms and institutions traditionally involved in regulatory practices. Hybrid is often used as a default attribute reflecting lack of clear understanding of the breadth of this new type of influence and the opacity of the means involved. Drawing on the insights of philology and mythology, the paper argues that the notion of hybrid is relevant in elucidating the ontological ambiguity between imaginary and real aspects of globalisation. Furthermore, it specifies the categories involved in the analysis of emerging forms of hybrid regulation. Recent scholarship on globalisation tends to focus on the private–public nexus of the subjects involved in new forms of institutional arrangements and authority. Here, subjects, objects and space are analysed as joint issues. By focusing particularly on transformations affecting the role of the state, forms of competition, and their rescaling on a transnational basis, the concept of global hybrid is seen as complementary to the emancipation of regulation approaches from early emphasis on national levels of compromises.


Service Industries Journal | 2012

Connecting India: the rise of standards in service offshoring

Jean-Christophe Graz; Nafi Niang

This paper explores the role of international standards in the globalisation of the service economy. Various strands of economic analyses consider that core attributes of services affect their ability to be reliably delocalised, industrialised, and standardised. In contrast, international political economy (IPE) approaches draw attention to power configurations supporting conflicting use of standards across industries and nations. The paper examines the case of the Indian service industry in business process outsourcing to probe these opposing views. The findings suggest that standards matter in types of services conventionally identified as unlikely to be standardised, and that their use raises little conflict. An IPE perspective on service standardisation highlights, however, the importance of potential power issues likely to be included in more progressive forms of standardisation.


International Journal of It Standards and Standardization Research | 2011

The INTERNORM Project: Bridging Two Worlds of Expert-and Lay-Knowledge in Standardization

Jean-Christophe Graz; Christophe Hauert

This paper presents a pilot project to reinforce participatory practices in standardization. The INTERNORM project creates an interactive knowledge center based on the sharing of academic skills and experiences accumulated by the civil society, especially consumer associations, environmental associations and trade unions to strengthen the participatory process of standardization. The first objective of the project is action-oriented: INTERNORM provides a common knowledge pool supporting the participation of civil society actors to international standard-setting activities by bringing them together with academic experts in working groups and providing logistic and financial support to their participation in meetings of national and international technical committees. The second objective is analytical: the standardization action provides a research field for a better understanding of the participatory dynamics underpinning international standardization. This paper presents three incentives that explain civil society non-involvement in standardization that overcome conventional resource-based hypotheses: an operational incentive related to the use of standards in the selective goods provided by associations to their membership; a thematic incentive provided by the setting of priorities by strategic committees created in some standardization organization; and a rhetorical incentive related to the discursive resource that civil society concerns offers to the different stakeholders.


Études internationales | 2004

Quand les normes font loi : Topologie intégrée et processus différenciés de la normalisation internationale

Jean-Christophe Graz


Études internationales | 2008

Gare aux hybrides : Mythes et réalités de la gouvernance de la mondialisation

Jean-Christophe Graz


Académique | 2013

La normalisation des services aux États-Unis et en Europe

Christophe Hauert; Jean-Christophe Graz


International Political Sociology | 2012

Transnational Authority in the Knowledge-Based Economy: Who Sets the Standards of ICT Training and Certification?

Jean-Christophe Graz; Eva Hartmann


Archive | 2010

Global Regulation of the Knowledge-Based Economy: The Rise of Standards in Educational Services

Jean-Christophe Graz; Eva Hartmann


Archive | 2010

Standards and Service Offshoring in India: Moving Beyond Industry and Institutional Specificities

Jean-Christophe Graz; Nafy Niang


Participations | 2016

Les arènes de la normalisation internationale à l’épreuve de la participation : le projet INTERNORM

Christophe Hauert; Marc Audétat; Danielle Bütschi; Alain Kaufmann; Jean-Christophe Graz

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Nafi Niang

University of Lausanne

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