Biography
Jeremy Green is Professor of Political Economy.
Jeremy Green’s research, writing, and teaching spans a wide range of topics within political economy.
Before taking up a position at Cambridge, Jeremy was a Lecturer in Politics at the School of Sociology, Politics, and International Studies at the University of Bristol. He is co-founder and co-convenor of the Political Studies Association specialist group in Comparative and British Political Economy.
Research
His current work examines contemporary and historical dimensions of the political economy of green transition, exploring interactions between anthropogenic climate change and capitalism. He has previously written on the links between late capitalist development and international order in 19th century Europe, the post-war political economy of Anglo-American finance, globalisation, and British capitalism. His work is interdisciplinary in its orientation, drawing upon influences from politics, economics, historical sociology, and geography.
Publications
- Green, J. (2022). Comparative capitalisms in the Anthropocene: a research agenda for green transition. New Political Economy, 1-18.
- Green, J (2020) The Political Economy of the Special Relationship: Anglo-American Development from the Gold Standard to the Financial Crisis. Princeton University Press, Princeton New Jersey.
- Green, J., & Gruin, J. (2020). RMB transnationalization and the infrastructural power of international financial centres. Review of International Political Economy, 28(4), 1028-1054.
- Green, J (2019) Is Globalisation Over? Polity, Cambridge.
- Green, J (2018) The offshore city, Chinese finance, and British capitalism: Goe-economic rebalancing under the Coalition government. The British Journal of Politics and International Relations, 20(2), 285-302.
- Green, J.,& Lavery, S. (2018). After neoliberalisation? Montary indiscipline, crisis and the state. Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers, 43(1), 79-94.
- Green, J. (2016). Anglo-American development, the Euromarkets, and the deeper origins of neoliberal deregulation. Review of International Studies,42(03), 425-449.
- Green, J., & Lavery, S. (2015). The Regressive Recovery: Distribution, Inequality and State Power in Britain's Post-Crisis Political Economy. New Political Economy, 20(6), 894-923.
- Green, J., & Hay, C. (2015). Towards a new political economy of the crisis: Getting what went wrong right. New political economy, 20(3), 331-341.
- Green, J. (2014). Beyond coxian historicism: 19th century world order and the promise of uneven and combined development. Millennium-Journal of International Studies, 42(2), 286-308.
- Green, J. (2012). Uneven and combined development and the Anglo-German prelude to World War I. European Journal of International Relations, 18(2), 345-368.
- Green, JBR, Hay, C & Taylor-gooby, P, 2015, ‘The British Growth Crisis: The Search for a New Model’. Palgrave Macmillan, Basingstoke.
- Green, JBR, 2015, ‘Anglo-American Financial Interdependence and the Rise of Income Inequality’. in: Jeremy Green, Colin Hay, Peter Taylor-Gooby (eds) The British Growth Crisis: The Search for a New Model. Palgrave Macmillan, Basingstoke, pp. 77-104.
Teaching and Supervisions
Course convenor for MPhil 'Global Capitalism and the Anthropocene', and also for the UG paper, POL18.