Teaching

My Teaching

Teaching is one of my academic passions. I agree with Claudia Goldin who has said that teaching can be the “handmaiden to research”.

I have taught undergraduates for many years and have been awarded with a teaching award by the LSE Student Union for the course EH 101 – The Internationalisation of Economic Growth, 1870 to the present day.

As part of the LSE summer school EC 103 – The Economic History of Inequality, I have conceptualised, written and held a lecture on Critical Junctures in the History of Inequality. You can download the slides below.

Teaching Resources

Feel free to download my teaching resources.

EH 101 – The Internationalisation of Economic Growth, 1870 to the present day

The course examines the inter-relationships between the development of the international economy and the growth of national economies since the late nineteenth century.

EC 103 – The Economic History of Inequality

The course offers a detailed survey of the key evidence on inequality, both contemporary and historical, and the sources and methods used to measure it. Students learn how to critically interrogate the quality of inferences from such evidence.

In 2025, I wrote an delivered one of the lectures in this course.

Teaching Experience

over 200

Classes Taught

1

Teaching Award

1

Lecture Written and Delivered

4.7/5

Average Teaching Feedback