ÐÓ°ÉÂÛ̳

Dr Joseph Spooner

Dr Joseph Spooner

Associate Professor of Law

ÐÓ°ÉÂÛ̳ Law School

Telephone
020-7106-1174
Room No
Cheng Kin Ku Building 6.32
Languages
English
Key Expertise
Law

About me

Dr Joseph Spooner is an Associate Professor at ÐÓ°ÉÂÛ̳ Law School. He researches issues of law, policy, and politics relating to household debt, over-indebtedness, and financialisation. He also takes particular interest in issues of dispute resolution and access to justice, with a focus on how law serves low-income groups. Joseph has published articles on the law and politics of bankruptcy in leading journals including the Journal of Law and Society and the Modern Law Review, and is the author of Bankruptcy: the Case for Relief in an Economy of Debt. This book explores the unsustainable nature of our contemporary debt-dependent economy, and argues that bankruptcy law is uniquely situated to offer public policy benefits as a mechanism of social insurance against the risks inherent in this economic order.

Administrative support: Law.Reception@lse.ac.uk

Research interests

Dr Joseph Spooner is an Associate Professor at ÐÓ°ÉÂÛ̳ Law School. He researches issues of law, policy, and politics relating to household debt, over-indebtedness, and financialisation. He also takes particular interest in issues of dispute resolution and access to justice, with a focus on how law serves low-income groups. Joseph has published articles on the law and politics of bankruptcy in leading journals including the Journal of Law and Society and the Modern Law Review, and is the author of Bankruptcy: the Case for Relief in an Economy of Debt. This book explores the unsustainable nature of our contemporary debt-dependent economy, and argues that bankruptcy law is uniquely situated to offer public policy benefits as a mechanism of social insurance against the risks inherent in this economic order.

Joe researches in the Law-and-Society tradition, while incorporating contemporary elements of Modern Legal Realism and Law and Political Economy. He aims to explore law in its social context, and incorporates empirical approaches alongside theoretical perspectives and doctrinal critique. uses qualitative methods including process tracing and content analysis to explore the political economy of bankruptcy law reform, and particularly the influence of interest groups in shaping legislation. Another project deploys quantitative methods to study aggressive debt collection techniques used by English local authorities to pursue local tax debts, finding that the most intensive debt recovery activities occur in the most deprived local authority areas.

A further way in which Joe’s work links research to the real world is in its policy impact. Joe has obtained policy experience through participation in various law reform projects. He has worked as a technical lead on World Bank policy reform project, and contributed to the Bank’s (2013). Joe contributed expertise to the UK Insolvency Service , providing research content and leading a stakeholder consultation group. Joe also worked on the Law Reform Commission of Ireland’s (2010-2012), which developed important policy responses to the Global Financial Crisis.

External activities

Dr Spooner’s work links research to the world through its policy impact. His research has been cited in major policy documents published by UK , the , and the .

Recognition of Dr Spooner’s research has led him to contribute significantly to UK government policymaking exercises, including the Insolvency Service’s .

Dr Spooner has also provided technical expertise to the World Bank in relation to a number of national law reform projects. He contributed to the World Bank’s .

You can find out more about Dr Spooner’s research through ÐÓ°ÉÂÛ̳ and .

Teaching

Books

Bankruptcy: The Case for Relief in an Economy of Debt (Cambridge University Press, 2019)

Articles and book chapters

  •  (2024) Oxford Journal of Legal Studies (online advance)
  • 'Bankruptcy, Housing, ‘Have Nots’, and the Limits of Legal Landmarks: Places for People Homes Ltd v Sharples', in Prof Jodi Gardner and Prof. Iain Ramsay (eds.), (Hart Publishing, 2024) 315-332
  • 'The Local Austere Creditor' in Saul Schwartz (ed.), (Routledge 2022)
  • ‘Austerity and financial safety nets: bankruptcy abuse prevention and bank protection in Irish post-crisis policy?’ in Jodi Gardner, Mia Gray, and Katharina Moser (eds.), (Elgar 2020)
  • 'Bankruptcy Policy in a Dematerialised Insolvency Law: Glimpses of a Hidden System' (2019) 32 (1) Insolvency Intelligence, 30-37
  • (2018) 81 (5) Modern Law Review 790-824 
  • (2017)  Journal of Law and Society 44 (3) pp. 374–405
  • in Burdette et al., Nottingham Insolvency and Business Law eJournal Special Edition Festschrift in Honour of Professor Ian Fletcher QC, 537
  • Book Review: 'Comparative Perspectives of Consumer Over‐Indebtedness – A View from the UK, Germany, Greece, and Italy' (Federico Feretti, 2016) (2016) 25 (3) International Insolvency Review 241-244
  •   (2013) 21 (3) European Review of Private Law 747-794
  • 'Sympathy for the Debtor? The Modernisation of Irish Personal Insolvency Law' (20120 26 (7) Insolvency Intelligence 1
  • (2012) 86(2) American Bankruptcy Law Journal 243-304
  • 'Enforcement of Court Orders (Amendment) Act 2009' in Clark (ed.) Irish Current Law Statutes Annotated 2009 (Thomson Round Hall, 2010)

Policy reports