Cooper holds a PhD from the Université Paris 8 Vincennes-Saint-Denis. She is currently a professor of sociology at the Australian National University, and editorial advisor to the Phenomenal World book series, edited by Chicago University Press.[2]
She has worked extensively on biopolitics and bioeconomy. Life as Surplus (2008) traced the links between the history of biotechnology and the rise of neoliberalism, looking at scientific, economic, political, and cultural elements.[3] Clinical Labor (2014), published with Australian sociologist Catherine Waldby, focused on the embodied labor of those working as donors and research subjects in the field of assisted reproduction and experimental drug trials. It suggested that this form of labor posed important challenges to traditional conceptions of labor.[4]
Her book Family Values (2017) argued that family is central to the development of neoliberal policies such as free market and cuts in public spending.[5][6] In particular, she states that the neoliberal project entailed shifting the responsibility for deficit spending from the state to the household, in what she sees as an actualization of American poverty laws.[7][8] The importance of the family as the responsible for this structural role would have facilitated the alliance between seemingly incompatible neoliberal and neoconservative political actors.[9][1]
In 2024 Cooper published Counterrevolution: Extravagance and Austerity in Public Finance, named a New Statesman Best Book of the Academic Presses.[10]