Susan K. Sell is Professor at the School of Regulation and Global Governance (REGNET) at the Australian National University. Susan has been at the forefront of critical international political economy (IPE) scholarship for over two decades. An admirer of earlier critical IPE voices, like Susan Strange, Susan has forged a career shining a light on the dark side of global governance in a world of hyper-globalisation and acquisitive transnational private power. For Susan, it has always been about who wins and who loses within the often opaque workings of the global economy.
Her research has applied this lens to powerful effect, particularly in the area of global health. Although critical IPE is experiencing a resurgence of interest, that was not always the case. In a wide-ranging conversation, Susan reflects on being an often lone critical voice during the triumphalist 1990s liberal moment, navigating a discipline which, until recently, was overwhelmingly male, as well as the potential for COVID-19 to serve as a “horrendous opportunity”, and what the future of global private power might look like.
Susan can be found on the ANU website.
Selection of publications:
What COVID-19 Reveals About Twenty-first Century Capitalism: Adversity and Opportunity, 2020
Health under capitalism: a global political economy of structural pathogenesis, 2019 (with Owain D. Williams)
Who Governs The Globe? 2010 (with Deborah Avant and Martha Finnemore)
TRIPS was never enough: vertical forum shifting, FTAs, ACTA, and TPP, 2011
Private Power, Public Law: The Globalization of Intellectual Property Rights, 2003
view more