Teaching


I teach a range of courses on comparative and international political economy, grounded in an understanding of how political and economic institutions develop over time.

For the past five years, I have taught a graduate class on the rise and fall of different international monetary orders from the nineteenth century to today. The class examines the role of dominant states in shaping the global political economy with a focus on monetary dimensions of international order.

I also co-teach an undergraduate course on the politics of the international economy, from Bretton Woods to the global financial crisis, alongside Professor Helen Thompson. Focussing on Anglo-America, I teach a short module on the comparative political economy of the US and the UK.

From October 2020 I will be teaching a new graduate class on global capitalism and the Anthropocene.