
Nationality: France
Affiliation: Sciences Po
Student Status: Other professional (non-academic)
Level of Education: Ph.D.
Field of Study: Law
Joined: September 6, 2017
Jean Grosdidier
Paris, FR
Member: Financial Stability, History of Economic Thought, Philosophy of Economics, Political Economy of Europe, Latin America, Core, States and Markets
Organizer: Finance, Law, and Economics
Working groups
Research Interests
- Assumptions of Economic Theory
- Banking
- Capitalism
- Central Banking
- Continental Philosophy
- Credit
- Critical Theory
- Culture and Norms
- Currency
- Development Finance
- Economic Development
- Endogenous Money
- European Political Economy
- Finance
- Financial Crisis
- Financial Regulation
- Financialization
- Governance
- Inequality
- Institutional Economics
- International Financial Institutions
- Law and Finance
- Legal Theory of Finance (LTF)
- Modern Monetary Theory
- Monetary Economics
- Monetary Policy
- Monetary circuit
- Money
- Philosophy of Economics
- Policy
- Political Economy
- Political Economy of Development
- Political Philosophy
- Social Justice
- Sovereign Debt
- Value Theory
About
I am a Ph.D. candidate at Sciences Po Law School and former Residential Fellow at the Institute for Global Law and Policy at Harvard Law School (Cambridge, MA, USA). My research engages with dominant legal and economic reactions to the Euro crisis and explores “monetary constitutionalism”. I consider the various roles of lawyers and economists in the making of the Euro and focuses on the Eurozone’s mechanisms of banking, finance and payment systems. My research contributes to constitutional and economic thoughts of money by re-conceptualizing value within diverse monetary mechanisms and ambitions to connect concretely the making of legal tools, constitutional imagination and money’s potentialities in creating political communities. I've previously studied at the University of Paris II Panthéon-Assas, Paris West University Nanterre La Défense and Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales (EHESS). I was also a visiting doctoral student and a teaching fellow at Harvard Law School. My various teaching experiences include courses in Comparative Constitutional Law, Law and Social Sciences, European Economic Law and Global Economic Governance. Besides a passion for travels and movies, my research interests include constitutional and European legal theories, finance and economics/political economy, epistemology and political philosophy.