Trevor Jackson

Assistant Professor


Trevor Jackson is an economic historian who researches inequality and crisis, mostly but not exclusively in early modern Europe. His first book, Impunity and Capitalism: the Afterlives of European Financial Crises, 1690-1830, was published by Cambridge University Press in fall 2022​.  It examines how impunity has gradually shifted since the seventeenth century from the sole possession of a legally-immune sovereign to a functional characteristic of technically-skilled professional managers of capital, to an imagined quality of markets themselves, such that a constituent element of the modern economic sphere is that within it, great harm can and will happen to great many people, and nobody will be at fault.  His current research interests focus on the problem of gluts, overproduction, and overaccumulation since the seventeenth century, the problems of temporality and finitude in economic thought, and problems in the historical measurement and meaning of capital.  He also has an ongoing research interests in the histories of extinction and catastrophe, as well as early modern occupational health.  His second book, a synthetic history of early modern capitalism tentatively entitled This Creative Destruction, is under contract with W.W. Norton.

Dr. Jackson teaches courses on international economic history ranging from the early modern period to the twentieth century, as well as courses on capitalism and inequality, the history of economic crisis, and the history of economic thought. He has a joint appointment with the Political Economy program.  Prior to joining the faculty at UC Berkeley, he taught economic history at George Washington University, and was a faculty fellow on "Capitalism's Hardwiring" at the Charles Warren Center at Harvard University.  He sometimes writes about money, banking, and economic crisis for the popular press, at places like Dissent, The Baffler, The Nation, and the New York Review of Books.

Publications

Impunity and Capitalism: the Afterlives of European Financial Crises, 1690-1830.  Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2022.

“Smart Money and Permanent Injury: Occupational Health in Early Modern English Capitalism, 1590-1803,” Social History, Vol. 49, No. 4 (Nov. 2024), forthcoming.

“The New History of Old Inequality,” Past & Present, Vol. 259, No. 1 (May 2023): 262-89.

“Revolution and Extinction: The Chrono-economics of Capitalism,” Critical Historical Studies, Vol. 9, No. 2, (Fall 2022): 283-306.

“Between Independence and Impunity: The Theory of Proto-Central Banking After the Crisis of 1720,” Eighteenth Century Studies, Vol. 54, No. 1 (Fall 2020): 33-52.

“The Crash Next Time,” The New York Review of Books, Vol. 71, No. 6, April 4, 2024.

“Technocratic Melancholia and the Temporal Problem of Capital,” Forum on “Economic Narratives,” Journal of Modern European History, Vol. 21, No. 4 (Nov., 2023).

“The Unforgiven,” New York Review of Books Online, July 8, 2023.

"The Price of Crypto," The New York Review of Books, June 2023

"Overproduction and its Discontents," The Baffler, May 2023

"The Crypto Crisis," Dissent, August 2022

Education

PhD, University of California, Berkeley, 2017

MSc, London School of Economics and Political Science, 2010

BA, California State University, Sacramento, 2009