Tyler Girard is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Political Science at Purdue University.
""A convincing explanation of how financial inclusion has been embraced as a goal for a variety of private and public-sectorplayers around the globe. Tyler Girard argues that 'participatory ambiguity' has enabledad hoccoalitions--often among oddbedfellows--whose multilayered interactions have created networks that effectively manage the contradictions between development, economic security, fairness, and profit-making. This is a compelling and persuasive book.""--William W. Grimes, Frederick S. Pardee School of Global Studies, Boston University ""How did the financial inclusion agenda come about? How have actors, institutions, and new technologies such as fintech shaped this global agenda? What are its implications for the distribution of power and authority in global governance? Tyler Girard's book provides an illuminating analysis addressing these most vital questions of contemporary international political economy."" --Saori N. Katada, University of Southern California ""How does an idea become a global agenda? Tyler Girard's systematic, empirically grounded examinationuncovers a messy, bottom-up process where a range of disparate actors, including those from the Global South, co-create a new global financial inclusion agenda. Vital reading for those interested in financial inclusion and scholars concerned with the broader relationship between ideas and policy.""--Antoinette Handley, University of Toronto