Glenny was born in
Kensington, London, the son of Juliet Mary Crum and
Michael Glenny, a
Russian studies academic and translator.[3] His parents separated when he was 13. Glenny described his ancestry as "three-quarters Anglo-Celtic and a quarter
Jewish".[4]He is
multilingual, speaking English, German, Serbo-Croat, Czech and Portuguese.[5][6]
Career
He became
Central Europe correspondent for The Guardian and later the
BBC. He specialised in reporting on the
Yugoslav Wars in the early 1990s that followed the
breakup of Yugoslavia. While at the BBC, Glenny won Sony special award in 1993's
Radio Academy Awards for his "outstanding contribution to broadcasting".[7]
In McMafia (2008), he wrote that international
organised crime could account for 15% of the world's
GDP.[8] Glenny advised the US and some European governments on policy issues and for three years ran an NGO helping with the reconstruction of
Serbia,
Macedonia and
Kosovo. Glenny appeared in the documentary film, Raw Opium: Pain, Pleasure, Profits (2011).[9]
Glenny's later books continue an interest in international crime.[10]DarkMarket (2011) concerns cybercrime and the activities of hackers involved in phishing and other activities.[11]Nemesis: One Man and the Battle for Rio (2015) about the leading Brazilian drug trafficker
Antônio Francisco Bonfim Lopes (known as "Nem") in
Rocinha ("Little farm"), a
favela (slum).[12][13]
From January 2012, Glenny was visiting professor at
Columbia University's
Harriman Institute,[14] teaching a course on "crime in transition". In an interview in October 2011, he also spoke about his book, DarkMarket; assessing cybercriminals with
Simon Baron-Cohen at Cambridge; the
Stuxnet cyberattack which resulted in "gloves off" attention from governments; and other more recent cyberattacks.[15]
Glenny was an executive producer of the
BBC One eight-part
drama series, McMafia, inspired by his non-fiction book of the same name (2008).[16]
Glenny is a producer and the writer of the
BBC Radio 4 series, How to Invent a Country, [17] also made available as a podcast. An audio book of the same name was published by
Penguin Random House in January 2021, consisting of the series' first 28 episodes broadcast October 2011–March 2019.[18]
In 2019, Glenny presented a podcast on the life of
Vladimir Putin titled Putin: Prisoner of Power.[19]
In 2022, Glenny presented a five-part series, The Scramble forRare Earths, on BBC Radio 4. In the programmes he says, “In this series I’m finding out why the battle for a small group of metals and critical raw materials is central to rising geopolitical tensions around the world.” [20]
Personal life
Glenny is married to British journalist and broadcaster
Kirsty Lang and has three children, two by his first wife (their daughter
took her own life in 2014)[10] and one by Lang.[3]
Publications
The Rebirth Of History: Eastern Europe in the Age of Democracy (1991)
ISBN978-0-14014-394-2
The Fall of Yugoslavia: The Third Balkan War (1992; revised in 1996)
ISBN978-0-14025-771-7
The Balkans: Nationalism, War and the Great Powers, 1804–1999 (1999; revised 2012)
ISBN978-1-77089-273-6
McMafia: A Journey Through the Global Criminal Underworld (2008)
ISBN978-0-09948-125-6
^"The Scramble for Rare Earths". BBC Radio 4. 26 September 2022. Retrieved 6 January 2023. This link leads to the first episode in the series, and links to the subsequent episodes can be followed from there. Depending on one's computer settings, one episode may automatically run on to the next. Note that the BBC sometimes allows a programme to be listened to only once by a given IP address, and that subsequent attempts to listen to it again may be "autoblocked".