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Mark T. Nance (Ph.D., University of Wisconsin-Madison) is an associate professor of political science in the School of Public and International Affairs at North Carolina State University. His research focuses generally on formal and informal means of governing the economy and lies at the intersection of international organization, international law, and international and comparative political economy. His research has been published recently in Crime, Law & Social Change, Review of International StudiesGlobal Governance, and the Journal of International Criminal Justice. He co-edited Maritime Piracy and the Construction of Global Governance (Routledge 2012); a special issue of Energy Research and Social Science on the link between energy production and human and national security; and an special issue of Crime, Law & Social Change on the Financial Action Task Force. Standing projects include the development and implementation of international anti-money laundering standards and experimentalist governance in non-proliferation. His primary teaching responsibilities at NC State are in International Political Economy and European Politics. He also has taught comparative political economy courses in Monterrey, Mexico, and Sao Paulo, Brazil.  In 2017-8, Mark was a Fulbright Schuman Scholar at the Quality of Government Institute at the University of Gothenburg’s Department of Political Science. While there, he worked on two projects. His primary research was an analysis of responses to crises in the automobile industries in Sweden, Germany, and the US. He also continued working on illicit finance, beginning a project on de-risking and financial exclusion as a side-effect of anti-money laundering efforts.