My research focuses on the intersection between politics and economics at the turn of the seventeenth century in Britain. In particular, my research interests lie in the role played by economic issues in popular political culture. My first book, Bloodsuckers of the Commonwealth, examines the practice of anti-monopoly petitioning activity in early modern England between 1590-1625. It explores the ways in which the rise of patents of monopoly and corporate charters triggered petitioning action by a range of subjects below the level of the elite, with a particular focus on the activity of London's livery companies. Aspects of this research have been published in the Historical Journal, Parliamentary History, and The London Journal.
Research Interests
My current research focuses on the impacts of new economic institutions and agents of the state on non-elite subjects, exploring the ways participation in these processes and encounters with economic agents contributed to broader processes of politicisation. I am conducting new research exploring the importance of charters and corporations in the expansion of the early Stuart state across the Atlantic. I am especially interested in the ways through which disputes over trade and resources shaped political culture in these colonies, and in particular, the materiality of petitions which were penned in response and which crossed global boundaries.
I am also conducting research into the economic debates surrounding James's proposed Union with Scotland (1603-1605). Utilising the archival records of the Scottish burghs, I am exploring mechanisms through which Scottish merchants utilised the Union issue as a lobbying moment, and the consultative processes through which merchants were brought into Parliament and crown commissions.
My research interests also include parliamentary lobbying and popular perceptions of Parliament and the ways these developed across the early Stuart period.