School of Social and Political Science

Dr Nathan Coombs

Job Title

SPS Director of Undergraduate Programmes, Senior Lecturer in Economic Sociology

Photo
Nathan Coombs photo

Room number

6.20

Building (Address)

Chrystal Macmillan Building

Street (Address)

15a George Square

City (Address)

Edinburgh

Country (Address)

UK

Post code (Address)

EH8 9LD

Research interests

Research interests

Research grants and consultancies

Background

Who I am

I am an economic sociologist working at the intersection of political economy, science and technology studies, and social theory. Utilising qualitative and historical methods, my research addresses the implications of scientized knowledge and expertise for public accountability and democracy. My focus nowadays is on central banking but I also research regulation, shadow banking, and financial governance broadly construed.

My research history, grants, and contribution to field

After receiving a PhD in Political Theory, published as History and Event (2015) by Edinburgh University Press, I was awarded a research grant from the Leverhulme Trust (2014-17) to investigate the regulation of financial trading algorithms. Drawing on these bodies of research, I have published 14 peer-reviewed articles in journals such as Economy and Society, The British Journal of Sociology, Theory & Event, The European LegacyJournal of Political Ideologies, and International Review of Economics Education, among others. In 2015, I co-founded Finance and Society, which is today a leading journal in the interdisciplinary field of finance studies published by Cambridge University Press. In 2023, I became a Director of Finance and Society Network Limited, which oversees the journal as well as the Network's annual conferences. With Matthias Thiemann, I guest edited a special issue of Economy and Society in 2022 titled 'Recentering central banks', which breaks new ground by exploring how the governance techniques of central banks shape the state-economy boundary. I was co-director of the Centre for Science, Knowledge and Policy (SKAPE) from 2022-25 and co-principal investigator on the project Scoping Impact: Mapping, Evaluating and Learning from Contemporary Trends in Research Impact Definition (2023) commissioned by the ESRC to advise on its conceptualisation of research impact. In 2024, I received a grant development by the School for a study of UK science advisory committees during the pandemic utilising topic modelling. In 2025, Columbia University's Centre for Political Economy awarded a grant to Matthias Thiemann and I to support an archival research project about the origins of shadow banking in the United States.

Teaching, management roles, and PhD supervision

I am the course organiser for Sociology of Freedom and am part of the lecturing team for the course Economic Sociology. I am the School of Social and Political Science's Director of Undergraduate Programmes (2024-7) and Sociology's Director of Students. I have supervised 3 PhD students through to their awards and currently supervise 3 PhD students working on topics as varied as platformisation, macroeconomic expertise networks, and truth construction in judicial processes.

Positions

  • Senior Lecturer in Economic Sociology, School of Social and Political Science, University of Edinburgh (2023-present)
  • Lecturer in Economic Sociology, School of Social and Political Science, University of Edinburgh (2017 - 2023)
  • Leverhulme Early Career Research Fellow, School of Social and Political Science, University of Edinburgh (2014 - 2017)
  • Postdoctoral Research Fellow, Institute for Advanced Studies in the Humanities, University of Edinburgh (2013 -2014)
  • Doctoral Researcher with Reid Studentship, Department of Politics and International Relations, Royal Holloway, University of London (2009 - 2013)

Selected Publications

(see full list on Google Scholar)

Book
Edited collection
Articles, reports, chapters and review essays

PhDs supervised to award

Current PhD students

  • Wen, S. (4th year) Governmentality, platformisation and governance in urban China : A case study of “taxi village” in Shenzhen (supervised with Donald MacKenzie)
  • Gaillardou, F. (3rd year) Varieties of “left turn”: the relationship between the government and the Economics profession in Argentina and Brazil, 2003-2016 (Supervised with Tod Van Gunten)
  • Choi, Y. (2nd year) How can truth-claims become truth in criminal courts? (Supervised with Stephen Kemp and Rebecca Hewer)

Works within

Staff Hours and Guidance

By appointment, Wednesday 3-5pm (during term time)

Nathan Coombs's Research Explorer profile