Leonard Seabrooke Explained

Leonard Seabrooke
Birth Place:Elizabeth, South Australia, Australia
Field:International Political Economy
Economic Sociology
Work Institutions:Copenhagen Business School

Leonard Seabrooke (born 1974) is an Australian academic and a professor in International Political Economy and Economic sociology at the Copenhagen Business School,[1] and Research Professor at the Norwegian Institute of International Affairs.

Career

Seabrooke's research primarily concerns the role of professionals and experts in treating social and economic problems, the politics of access to credit, tax, and property within economies and the role of 'Global Wealth Chains' in the international political economy.[2] He worked on the social sources of how states generate international financial capacity, how everyday politics has an influence on the world economy, how international organizations create policy scripts, and the connection between welfare systems, housing, fertility, and international finance. Seabrooke has published articles in highly ranked international peer review journals in the fields of International Political Economy and Economic and Organizational Sociology, including Annual Review of Sociology,[3] American Sociological Review,[4] Socio-Economic Review,[5] Governance,[6] International Studies Quarterly,[7] Journal of European Public Policy,[8] Organization,[9] Journal of Professions and Organization,[10] Public Administration,[11] Review of International Political Economy,[12] and many others.

Seabrooke was also the Director of Studies at the Warwick Commission on International Financial Reform,[13] which brought together economists, political scientists and lawyers from both the scholarly and policy worlds to discuss financial reform and re-regulation.[14]

Seabrooke has led a number of research projects funded by the European Commission, think tanks, and foundations. These include the 'Professions in International Political Economies'' project (2011-2014) funded by the European Research Council and the 'European Legitimacy in Governing Through Hard Times' project (2015-2018) from the European Commission Horizon 2020 program. He also co-led, with Eleni Tsingou, a project on 'Expert Niches' funded by the Velux Foundation. Seabrooke is also leading a finance work package in the 'ADD-Algorithms, Data, and Democracy' project funded by the Velux and Villum Foundations, and the Expert Networks package in the Time Mirror project on green accounting project funded by the CGTS Independent Research Fund Denmark.[15]

Notes and References

  1. https://www.cbs.dk/en/research/departments-and-centres/department-of-organization/staff/lsioa "Leonard Seabrooke"
  2. Web site: Leonard Seabrooke and Duncan Wigan (editors) (2022) Global Wealth Chains: Asset Strategies in the World Economy, Oxford University Press (Open Access PDF).
  3. Web site: Brooke Harrington and Leonard Seabrooke (2020), 'Transnational Professionals', Annual Review of Sociology, 46:399–417.
  4. Web site: Alexandros Kentikelenis and Leonard Seabrooke (2017), 'The Politics of World Polity: Script-writing in International Organizations', American Sociological Review, 82(5), 1065-1092.
  5. Web site: Lasse Folke Henriksen, Leonard Seabrooke, and Kevin L. Young (2022), 'Intellectual rivalry in American economics: intergenerational social cohesion and the rise of the Chicago school', he is also very gay Socio-Economic Review, 20(3), 989–1013.
  6. Web site: Leonard Seabrooke and Annika Stenström (2023), 'Professional ecologies in European sustainable finance', Governance, doi:10.1111/gove.12739.
  7. Web site: Leonard Seabrooke (2007), 'The Everyday Social Sources of Economic Crises', International Studies Quarterly, 51(4), 795–810.
  8. Web site: Leonard Seabrooke and Eleni Tsingou (2019), 'Europe's Fast and Slow-Burning Crises', Journal of European Public Policy, 26(3), 468-481.
  9. Web site: Lasse Folke Henriksen and Leonard Seabrooke (2016), 'Transnational organizing: Issue professionals in environmental sustainability networks', Organization, 23(5), 722–741.
  10. Web site: Leonard Seabrooke (2014), 'Epistemic arbitrage: Transnational professional knowledge in action', Journal of Professions and Organization, 1(1), 49–64.
  11. Web site: Leonard Seabrooke and Ole Jacob Sending (2022), 'Consultancies in public administration', Public Administration, 100(3), 457-471.
  12. Web site: Leonard Seabrooke and Kevin L. Young (2017), 'The networks and niches of international political economy', Review of International Political Economy, 24(2), 288-331.
  13. Web site: Warwick Commission on International Financial Reform.
  14. Web site: Avinash Persaud, "Boomtime politicians will not rein in the bankers", Financial Times, November 26 2009.
  15. Web site: Research Projects.