Fudan-Arab Lecture Series No.26
复旦—阿拉伯讲座系列第26期
Title/题目
Oil, Finance, and the Global Political Economy
石油、金融与全球政治经济
Speaker/主讲人
Prof. Adam Hanieh, SOAS, University of London, Visiting Scholar, FDDI, Fudan University
亚当·哈尼耶教授,伦敦大学亚非学院;复旦大学发展研究院访问学者
Host/主持人
Associate Prof. Haoqi Qian, IGPP
钱浩祺副教授,全球公共政策研究院
Discussant / 评论人
Associate Prof. Ping Jiang, IGPP
蒋平副教授,全球公共政策研究院
Associate Prof. Ruixian Huang, East China University of Political Science and Law
黄瑞衔副教授,华东政法大学商学院
Time/时间
12:00-13:20, April 22, Wednesday, 2026
2026年4月22日,12:00-13:20,周三
Venue/地点
Room 805E, 8th Floor, West Sub-building of Guanghua Towers
光华楼西辅楼8楼805E会议室
https://v.wjx.cn/vm/Qsn1EtF.aspx#
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主讲人介绍/ The Speaker:
Prof. Adam Hanieh
Adam Hanieh is Director of the SOAS Middle East Institute, MBI Jaber Chair of Middle East Studies and Professor in the Development Studies Department at SOAS, University of London. His current research looks at the interplay of fossil fuels, capitalism, and the climate emergency, with a particular focus on the Gulf states of the Middle East. He is the author of four monographs, including Money, Markets, and Monarchies: The Gulf Cooperation Council and the Political Economy of the Contemporary Middle East (Cambridge University Press, 2018), which won the 2019 British International Studies Association IPE Group Book and Crude Capitalism: Oil, Corporate Power, and the Making of the World Market (Verso 2024), which was co-winner of the 2025 Best Book by an International Scholar, Global and Transnational Section of the American Sociological Association. Hanieh is currently a Visiting Scholar at FDDI, Fudan University
讲座内容/ Abstract:
This lecture explores the place of oil in the world economy from the Second World War to the present. Moving beyond accounts that treat oil simply as a source of energy, the lecture examines its wider role in shaping capitalist development, military power, and everyday life. It focuses in particular on oil’s central place in the making of the global financial architecture, from the rise of the US dollar and the circulation of petrodollars to the growing importance of oil revenues in international banking and investment. By locating oil within these broader economic and political transformations, the lecture shows how hydrocarbons have helped shape the modern world economy in ways that reach far beyond fuel markets alone. It concludes by reflecting on the continuing significance of oil in contemporary geopolitical rivalries, energy security, and the shifting balance of power in an era of intensifying global uncertainty.