Madeleine Louise Lynch Dungy
About
Madeleine Dungy is a historian of international organizations. She has researched international trade regulation in collaboration with the Fate of Nations Research Group on the Global History and Political Economy of Natural Resources. She is leading an ERC Starting Grant, Internal Fortress: Regulating European Freedom of Movement within the Nation- State, 1950-1980.
Dungy studied history at the University of Wisconsin, the University of Oxford, and Harvard University. She held post-doctoral positions at the European University Institute, the New Europe College, the École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne, and the Basel Institute for European Global Studies.
Publications
Order and Rivalry: Rewriting the Rules of International Trade after the First World War (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2023), link.
“Keynes and International Trade Politics after the First World War,” Keynes’s Economic Consequences of the Peace after 100 Years: Polemics and Policy, eds. Patricia Clavin, Giancarlo Corsetti, Maurice Obstfeld and Adam Tooze (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, forthcoming 2023).
“International Commerce in the Wake of Empire: Central European Economic Integration between National and Imperial Sovereignty,” in Remaking Central Europe: The League of Nations and the Former Habsburg Lands, eds. Peter Becker and Natasha Wheatley (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2021), 213-240, link.
“Writing Multilateral Trade Rules in the League of Nations,” Contemporary European History 30, no. 1 (February 2021): 60-75, link.
(with Patricia Clavin) “Trade, Law, and the Global Order of 1919,” Diplomatic History 44, no. 4 (September 2020), 554-579, link.
“The Economic and Social Impact of the LoN and the ILO: Economic and Monetary Achievements,” in 100 Years of Multilateralism in Geneva from the LoN to the UN, eds. Bernard Lescaze and Olga Hidalgo-Weber (Geneva: Suzanne Hurter Editions, 2020): 283-297, link.
“The Global Agricultural Crisis and British Diplomacy in the League of Nations in 1931,” in “International organisations, transnational networks, and agriculture, 1905-1945,” eds. Niccolò Mignemi and Juan Pan-Montojo, special section, Agricultural History Review 65, no. 2 (December 2017): 297-319, link.
2023
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Dungy, Madeleine.
(2023)
Economic Migration in the Early League of Nations.
New Europe College Yearbook
Academic article
-
Dungy, Madeleine.
(2023)
Order and Rivalry: Rewriting the Rules of International Trade after the First World War.
Cambridge University Press
Cambridge University Press
Academic monograph
2021
-
Dungy, Madeleine.
(2021)
Writing Multilateral Trade Rules in the League of Nations.
Contemporary European History
Academic article
-
Dungy, Madeleine.
(2021)
International Commerce in the Wake of Empire: Central European Economic Integration between National and Imperial Sovereignty.
Oxford University Press
Chapter
2020
-
Clavin, Patricia Meria;
Dungy, Madeleine.
(2020)
Trade, Law, and the Global Order of 1919.
Diplomatic History
Academic article
2017
-
Dungy, Madeleine.
(2017)
The Global Agricultural Crisis and British Diplomacy in the League of Nations in 1931.
Agricultural History Review
Academic article
Journal publications
-
Dungy, Madeleine.
(2023)
Economic Migration in the Early League of Nations.
New Europe College Yearbook
Academic article
-
Dungy, Madeleine.
(2021)
Writing Multilateral Trade Rules in the League of Nations.
Contemporary European History
Academic article
-
Clavin, Patricia Meria;
Dungy, Madeleine.
(2020)
Trade, Law, and the Global Order of 1919.
Diplomatic History
Academic article
-
Dungy, Madeleine.
(2017)
The Global Agricultural Crisis and British Diplomacy in the League of Nations in 1931.
Agricultural History Review
Academic article
Books
-
Dungy, Madeleine.
(2023)
Order and Rivalry: Rewriting the Rules of International Trade after the First World War.
Cambridge University Press
Cambridge University Press
Academic monograph
Part of book/report
-
Dungy, Madeleine.
(2021)
International Commerce in the Wake of Empire: Central European Economic Integration between National and Imperial Sovereignty.
Oxford University Press
Chapter