Jaeger, Hans-Martin
Critical international relations theory, international political theory and sociology; Global governance, international organizations; Postfoundational political thought
- Dipl. Publ. Admin. (Konstanz) MA (Rutgers) PhD (Columbia)
- Email Jaeger, Hans-Martin
Associate Professor & Department Chair
Hans-Martin Jaeger is Associate Professor of Political Science. He studied at the University of Konstanz, the Institut d鈥橢tudes Politiques de Grenoble, Rutgers and Columbia University. Prior to joining 杏吧原创 he taught at the University of Central Florida. He has also been teaching as a visiting professor at the University of Lucerne for almost ten years. Hans-Martin鈥檚 research interests are in international political theory and sociology, global governance and international organizations, and postfoundational political and international thought. He has published on these subjects in International Theory, European Journal of International Relations, International Political Sociology, Review of International Studies, Journal of International Relations and Development, and Zeitschrift f眉r Internationale Beziehungen. Hans-Martin is currently working on a book project on concepts of world order (nomos, governmentality, pluriversality) as 鈥減ostfoundational鈥 theoretical responses to the seeming ubiquity of global crisis (from liberal international order to the recent global pandemic).
Selected Publications
鈥楥risis, Post-Neoliberal Global Governmentality, and BRICS鈥 Deconstructive Signature of Power鈥, in Jan Busse (ed.) (2021) The Globality of Governmentality: Governing an Entangled World (New York: Routledge), 165-185.
鈥Political Ontology and International Relations: Politics, Self-estrangement, and Void Universalism鈥 in Mark Jackson (ed.) (2018) Coloniality, Ontology, and the Question of the Posthuman (New York: Routledge), 227-245.
鈥楴either Cosmopolitanism nor Multipolarity: The Political beyond Global Governmentality鈥, in Japhy Wilson and Erik Swyngedouw (eds.) The Post-Political and Its Discontents: Spaces of Depoliticization, Spectres of Radical Politics (Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 2014), 208-228.
鈥, Journal of International Relations and Development 16: 1 (January 2013), 25-54.
鈥楿N Reform, Biopolitics, and Global Governmentality鈥, International Theory 2: 1 (March 2010), 50-86.
, International Political Sociology 1: 3 (September 2007), 257-277.
, Review of International Studies 28: 3 (July 2002), 497-517.