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Lorenzo Fioramonti

Lorenzo Fioramonti

Lorenzo Fioramonti is full professor of political economy at the University of Pretoria (South Africa), where he directs the Centre for the Study of Gover- nance Innovation (www.governanceinnovation.org). He is also senior fellow at the Centre for Social Investment of the University of Heidelberg and at the Hertie School of Governance (Germany) and associate fellow at the United Nations University. Lorenzo is the first and only Jean Monnet Chair in Africa, a prestigious recognition awarded by the European Commission to distinguished academics. He also holds the UNESCO-UNU Chair in Regional Integration, Migration and Free Movement of People. In 2012, he received the UP Excep- tional Young Researcher Award and in 2014 he became the first president of the European Union Studies Association of Sub-Saharan Africa. He is the author of over fifty scientific articles and eight books. His most recent books are How Numbers Rule the World: The Use and Abuse of Statistics in Global Politics (Zed Books 2014, http://zedbooks.co.uk/node/13242)and Gross Domestic Problem: The Politics Behind the World’s Most Powerful Number (Zed Books 2013, http:// zedbooks.co.uk/node/12010). Both books deal with the political interests behind economic statistics and the GDP ideology. Lorenzo’s research interests range from alternative economic paradigms to the governance of the commons, global political innovations, and new forms of supranational regionalism. His opinion pieces have been published by The New York Times, The Guardian, Foreign Pol- icy, Harvard Business Review, TruthOut, Die Presse, Das Parlament, Der Freitag, The Mail&Guardian, and www.opendemocracy.net, amongst others. He has a monthly column in Business Day, South Africa’s foremost daily financial news- paper. He is the author of two film documentaries, The Age of Adaptation (http:// globalreboot.org/videos/) and Presi per il PIL (in Italian, http://www.presiperil- pil.org/ilfilm.html). Lorenzo is the founder of the Action Research Network for a Wellbeing Economy in Africa (WE-Africa, www.we-africa.org) and blogs at www.globalreboot.org.