Patricia Clavin

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Born
Patricia Meria Clavin

(1964-01-06) 6 January 1964 (age 62)
TitleProfessor of Modern History
Awards
Patricia Clavin
Born
Patricia Meria Clavin

(1964-01-06) 6 January 1964 (age 62)
TitleProfessor of Modern History
Awards
Academic background
Alma materKing's College London
Academic work
DisciplineHistory
Sub-disciplineInternational relations
20th century history
Institutions

Patricia Meria Clavin, FRHistS, FBA (born 6 January 1964) is a British-Irish historian and academic, who specialises in international relations, economic crises, and twentieth-century history. She is Professor of Modern History at the University of Oxford and a Professorial Fellow of Worcester College.[1]

Clavin was born in England to Irish parents and holds dual Irish and British nationalities. Clavin was raised in Germany where her Irish father was serving in the British army. She studied Modern History at King's College London, graduating with a Bachelor of Arts (BA) degree and a Doctor of Philosophy (PhD) degree.[2]

Academic career

Before moving to Oxford, Clavin was Reader in Modern History at Keele University.[2] In October 2003, she was elected a Fellow of Jesus College, Oxford and appointed a university lecturer in modern history at the University of Oxford.[3] In 2011, she was granted a Title of Distinction as Professor of International History.[4]

In October 2021 Clavin was appointed to the Professorship of Modern History at Worcester College, succeeding Robert Gildea and becoming the first woman to ever hold the chair.[5]

She is a member of the Editorial Board for Past & Present.[6]

Media work

In November 2021, Clavin gave a public lecture at Gresham College on European security after the First World War.[7]

In September 2023, Clavin appeared as a panelist on an episode of the BBC Radio 4 discussion series In Our Time focused on John Maynard Keynes's Economic Consequences of the Peace (1919). Keynes's book was the subject of a collection of essays Clavin co-edited, also published in 2023. Clavin's fellow panelists were Michael Cox and Margaret MacMillan.[8]

Political life

In May 2016, Clavin was one of 300 prominent historians, including Simon Schama and Niall Ferguson, who were signatories to a letter to The Guardian, telling voters that if they chose to leave the European Union on 23 June, they would be condemning Britain to irrelevance.[9][10]

Honours

In 2015, Clavin was awarded the British Academy Medal for her book, Securing The World Economy: The Reinvention of the League of Nations 1920-1946; the medals are awarded each year to up to three people "for landmark academic achievement in any of the humanities and social science disciplines supported by the Academy".[11] In July 2016, she was elected a Fellow of the British Academy (FBA), the UK's national academy for the humanities and the social sciences.[12][13] She is also a Fellow of the Royal Historical Society (FRHistS),[14] and a Foreign Member of the Norwegian Academy of Science and Letters.[15]

Selected works

See also

References

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