In the Name of Transparency: Organizing European pharmaceutical markets through struggles over transparency devices

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Abstract

The controversies surrounding the heavily redacted contracts between the European Commission and Covid-19 vaccine producers have highlighted ‘transparency’ as a hotly debated concept in the pharmaceutical market. We combine research on transparency with literature on the organization of markets to investigate how such struggles over competing visions of transparency end up shaping markets and their politics. Focusing on the case of the European pharmaceutical market, we demonstrate how market transparency was implemented through devices that enacted specific visions of transparency and produced distinct market organizations over time: transparency for states (until about 1990), transparency for corporations (ca. 1990 to 2010) and transparency for state coalitions (since 2010). We discuss how the specific instrumentations and materializations of such visions of transparency play a crucial role in market politics. This debate also highlights why engaging in controversies over transparency has become increasingly important for those contesting the market status quo – in pharmaceutical markets and beyond.

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Geiger, S., & Bourgeron, T. (2023). In the Name of Transparency: Organizing European pharmaceutical markets through struggles over transparency devices. Organization Studies, 44(11), 1751–1773. https://doi.org/10.1177/01708406231171802

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