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FRIDAY, APRIL 4

1:30 - 1:45 PM | Introduction and Opening Remarks 

Peter DeMarzoPhilip H. Knight Professor and Dean of the Graduate School of Business (Interim)
Kathryn StonerMosbacher Director, Center on Democracy, Development and the Rule of Law
Didi KuoCenter Fellow, Freeman Spogli Institute for International Studies
Anat AdmatiGeorge G.C. Parker Professor of Finance and Economics, Stanford Graduate School of Business

1:45 - 3:15 PM | Session 1 — Why Trustworthy Governments are Essential 

For markets and capitalism to continue producing broad-based prosperity, governments must maintain the institutions that underpin the market economy, ensuring that property and human rights are protected, that people have fair access to society’s resources, and that contracts and laws are enforced effectively. This panel examines the forces that can help make institutions trustworthy or in turn cause trust to erode, framing key issues that the rest of the conference explores.

MODERATOR
Curtis Milhaupt, Stanford Law School

PANELISTS
Vic Khanna, University of Michigan Law School
Naomi Lamoreaux, Economics and History, Yale University
Alexander Cooley, Political Science, Barnard College

DISCUSSANT
Rick Messick, Global Anticorruption Blog

3:15 - 3:45 PM | Break

3:45 - 5:15 PM | Session 2: Opacity and Illicit Flows

The globalization of financial flows, and the opacity of the global economic system and of many governments, have increased opportunities for wealthy individuals, kleptocrats and terrorists to evade law enforcement. How can we conceptualize and measure these problems and the harm they cause? What is the role of anonymous and multinational corporations, secrecy jurisdictions, transnational actors, and cryptocurrencies in shaping these opportunities, and how might these problems be addressed?

MODERATOR
Victoria Baranetsky, The Center for Investigative Reporting

PANELISTS
Dan Nielson, Government, University of Texas at Austin 
Gary Kalman, Transparency International US
Brooke Harrington, Sociology, Dartmouth College

DISCUSSANT
Mark Weidemaier, University of North Carolina School of  Law

5:30 - 6:15 PM | Keynote: Investigating “the Brazen”

Tom Wright, Co-Founder of Project Brazen; co-author of the bestseller, Billion Dollar Whale: The Man Who Fooled Wall Street, Hollywood, and the World; Former Wall Street Journal Asia Economics Editor

MODERATOR
Anat Admati, Stanford Graduate School of Business

6:30 PM | Reception and Dinner 

 


SATURDAY, APRIL 5 

8:00 - 8:30 AM | Breakfast 

8:30 - 9:15 AM | Keynote: Is Cryptocurrency a Racket?

Judge Jed Rakoff, Senior Judge of the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York

MODERATOR
Rohit Chopra, Former CFPB Director and FTC Commissioner

9:15 - 10:45 AM | Session 3: The Law and Politics of Fighting Corruption

Can democratic governments and global institutions, through laws and international agreements, address corruption in its many forms within and across jurisdictions? What are the political forces that interfere with such efforts? This panel examines the mechanisms and tools that are available to policymakers, media and the public, to fight corruption in the private sector and in government, and the political and institutional challenges.

MODERATOR
Luigi Zingales, University of Chicago Booth School of Business

PANELISTS
Kevin Davis, New York University School of Law
Gerhard Schick, Finanzwende, Germany
John Githongo, Kenya

DISCUSSANT
Vikrant Vig, Stanford Graduate School of Business

10:45 - 11:15 AM | Break 

11:15 AM - 12:45 PM | Session 4: Greed, Norms, Culture, and Trust

Norms and culture, both in corporations, in government bodies, and in society at large, play a significant role in promoting trust and preventing misconduct. Global capitalism and democratic institutions reflect norms, but they also reshape them. This panel investigates the societal and democratic norms shaping transparency, whistleblowing, ways to hold power to account, and ultimately trust in institutions.

MODERATOR
Didi Kuo, Freeman Spogli Institute for International Studies, Stanford University

PANELISTS
Jonathan Katz, The Brookings Institution
Peter Solmssen, Former Siemens AG
Miriam Baer, Brooklyn Law School

DISCUSSANT
Paola Sapienza, Hoover Institution, Stanford University

12:45 - 1:45 PM | Lunch 

1:45 - 3:15 PM | Session 5: Corporate Misconduct and the Law

What are the tools for deterring corporate misconduct, and are these tools being used effectively? This panel of experts on white-collar crime will explain why laws and enforcement mechanisms may fail to deter corporate misconduct and why corporate leaders are rarely appropriately held accountable. What is the interplay of institutions, politics, and power that undermines the rule of law in the corporate context?

MODERATOR
Anat Admati, Stanford Graduate School of Business

PANELISTS
Ellen S. Podgor, Stetson University College of Law
Elizabeth Pollman, University of Pennsylvania Carey Law School
Fabio De Pasquale, Public Prosecutor's Office, Milan, Italy

DISCUSSANT
Jennifer Taub, Wayne State University Law School

3:15 - 3:45 PM | Break 

3:45 - 5:15 PM | Session 6 (Round Table): What Academics, Activists, and the Media Can Do

This roundtable will enable all participants to brainstorm how academics, activists, and journalists can work together to accomplish shared goals around global capitalism and accountability. How are each sector's resources, voices, and contributions best deployed? How might individuals and organizations align their work and objectives? And most importantly, how might we create a more trustworthy and fair economic system for the 21st century?

MODERATOR
Bethany McLean, Vanity Fair

5:15 - 5:30 PM | Closing Remarks 

5:30 PM | Closing Reception