Centre for Latin American and Caribbean Studies

Staff Profile

Dr Matt Davies

Reader in International Political Economy

Background

Role

I joined the staff in Politics at Newcastle University in 2006 as a Lecturer in International Political Economy. Until recently, I was the Director of the Postgraduate Taught Programmes in Politics and Degree Programme Director for the MA in World Politics and Popular Culture.

Qualifications

Ph.D., Graduate School of International Studies, University of Denver, 1996.
M.A., Graduate School of International Studies, University of Denver, 1986.
B.A. in Spanish, Colorado College.

Previous Positions

Visiting Professor (Profesor Adjunto), International Relations Institute, Pontificia Universidade do Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, 2016-present

Assistant Professor, Political Science Department, Pennsylvania State University-Erie, 1998-2005
Visiting Professor, Political Science Department, York University (Toronto), 2002-2004
Visiting Professor, Wabash College, Crawfordsville, Indiana, 1995-1997.

Memberships

International Studies Association
British International Studies Association

European International Studies Association


 I am also on the editorial board for the Popular Culture and World Politics book series published by Routledge.

Languages

English (first language)

Portuguese (basic)
Spanish (fluent)

Research

Research Interests

International Political Economy, Work, and Production

Culture and aesthetics, aesthetics and politics

Other Expertise

popular culture and everyday life

politics of Brazil

Current Work

My current research involves a theoretical critique of contemporary International Political Economy. The problem I address is the tendency of the field to ignore work. But the discipline itself is structured in such a way to devalue work or to treat it as something else -- e.g., a commodity in circulation. Thus I am drawing on cultural theory, aesthetics, theories of the body, and the critique of everyday life to develop a theoretical foundation for understanding what work is, to contribute to a critique of International Political Economy. My publications have covered diverse topics from a consideration of the division of labour in cultural political economy; to punk rock as international relations; to the consequences of the critique of everyday life for international political economy; to the power relations affecting unprotected workers in international political economy; to a theory of work as articulated in Buffy the Vampire Slayer, to a critique of financialization through an aesthetic theory of work. The theoretical influences I draw most heavily on are Henri Lefebvre, Raymond Williams, Jeffrey Harrod, David Levine, Walter Benjamin, and Antonio Gramsci; but I am also very interested in the aesthetic and political theory of Jacques Ranciere and the debates about politics and democracy between Ranciere, Zizek, and Laclau.

Future Research

Future research will continue to focus on work, poverty, and culture in the global political economy. I am currently completing two studies on precarity and politics, one focusing on the poltics of precarious workers in Argentina, Brazil, and Chile, and the other on the portrayal of precarious workers in three films, and a study on the body in international political economy based on an aesthetic theory of work.

Postgraduate Supervision

I welcome inquiries regarding PhD supervision in the fields of work or industrial relations in the International Political Economy; Cultural Political Economy; Popular Culture and World Politics; or in related fields. 

 Supervisions:

Chen-Wei Wang, From developmentalism to neoliberalism? Taiwan's Economic Transition (co-supervisor with Professor Barry Gills, completed 2011).
Mark Edward, The Presence and Construction of the Caribbean in Electronic Representations (co-supervisor with Dr Simon Philpott, completed 2011)

Can Cinar, The Exercise of Political Authority by the Credit Ratings Agencies: Standard and Poors (co-supervised with Kyle Grayson, MPhil in 2013).

Gerard Thomas, Classes and Markets: Equality during Financial Turmoil (co-supervised with Professor Tony Zito)

Paul McFadden, Work, Power, and the Contemporary Politics of Alienation: The Commodification of Aesthetic, Affect, Emotion, and Immateriality (co-supervised with Kyle Grayson)

Maria Bakola, Crises, Collective Action, and the Political Subject: 21st Century Political Economy and the Formation of Political Subjectivity (co-supervised with Nick Morgan)

Emily Merson (York University, Toronto, Canada), Embodying Ongoing Histories: Self-Determination and Visual Art in World Politics (co-supervised with Anna Agathangelou and David Mutimer of York University)

 

 

 

Teaching

Postgraduate Teaching

POL8005 Theories and Theorists of International Political Economy
POL8048 World Politics and Popular Culture
POL3054 Urban International Relations

Publications