Diane Stone Explained

Diane L. Stone (born April 1964) is an Australian-British academic. Her research and publication addresses the influence of ideas and expertise on policy, the political economy of higher education; the ‘new diplomacy’; policy networks; international philanthropy; think tanks and global governance.

Career

Diane Stone was a founding vice president of the International Public Policy Association for 8 years until June 2022.[1] She is Professor of Global Policy at the European University Institute in the Florence School of Transnational Governance. Until 2019, she worked at the University of Warwick for 23 years.

Stone was Foundation Professor of Public Policy at Central European University (CEU) in Budapest in 2004, thereafter remaining as Visiting Professor from 2008. From 2019 she became full time Dean to oversee the transition of the School of Public Policy to Vienna.

In 2012, she became a fellow of the Academy of the Social Sciences in Australia.[2] Stone was also one of a handful of Centenary Professors at the University of Canberra where she was based in the now closed Institute for Governance and Policy Analysis.

During 1999, Stone worked at the World Bank Institute as a member of the Secretariat that launched the Global Development Network.[3] She was an editor of .[4] Until 2020, she was Consulting Editor with Policy & Politics.[5]

Stone's research and publication has focused on the influence of ideas and expertise in policy making, and especially the impact of think tanks.[6] Other work has focused on policy networks.[7] especially networks sponsored by the World Bank.[8] Recent scholarship addresses the dynamics of global policy making and transnational administration[9] as well as processes of policy translation.[10]

At CEU, her research addressed international organisation influences on the transition countries of Central Europe.[11] She also researched international philanthropy in higher education, including that of the Open Society Foundations.[12]

At Warwick, research and publication addressed the new diplomacy in science, culture and diaspora.[13] Stone was a research leader in the European Commission's EL-CSID consortium on European Leadership in Cultural, Science and Innovation Diplomacy.[14]

Selected publications

Notes and References

  1. IPPA is a world-wide academic association supporting scholarship in policy studies: http://www.ippapublicpolicy.org/
  2. Politics and International Studies, University of Warwick website: https://www2.warwick.ac.uk/fac/soc/pais/people/stone/
  3. http://www.gdn.int/index.php
  4. Global Governance 2005-08; http://journals.rienner.com/loi/ggov?code=lrpi-site
  5. Consulting Editor 2016-2020, Policy and Politics, http://www.ingentaconnect.com/content/tpp/pap
  6. Diane Stone, Capturing the Political Imagination: Think Tanks and the Policy Process (London: Frank Cass, 1996)
  7. Diane Stone and Simon Maxwell (eds.) Global Knowledge Networks and International Development: Bridges Across Boundaries (Routledge, 2005).
  8. Diane Stone (Ed.) Banking on Knowledge: The Genesis of the Global Development Network (London, Routledge, 2000).
  9. Diane Stone, Knowledge Actors and Transnational Governance: The Public-Private Policy Nexus in the Global Agora (Palgrave MacMillan, 2013)
  10. Diane Stone, ‘Understanding the transfer of policy failure: bricolage, experimentalism and translation. Policy & Politics, 45(1): 55-70. January 2017
  11. Agnes Batory, Andrew Cartwright & Diane Stone (Eds.) Policy Experiments, Failures and Innovations: Beyond Accession in Central and Eastern Europe, Edward Elgar, 2017
  12. Private philanthropy or policy transfer? The transnational norms of the Open Society Institute. Diane. Stone. 1 April 2010. Policy & Politics. 38. 2. 269–287. bristoluniversitypressdigital.com. 10.1332/030557309X458416.
  13. European Leadership in Cultural, Science and Innovation Diplomacy: https://www.el-csid.eu/
  14. Web site: Final EL-CSID Report. www.el-csid.eu. 10 March 2019.