
Käte Hamburger Kolleg / Centre for Global Cooperation Research
Schifferstraße 44
47059 Duisburg
Deutschland
Vita
since 04/2016 | Helmut Schmidt University / University of the Federal Armed Forces Hamburg Department of Economics and Social Sciences, Institute of International Politics Full Professor of International Security and Conflict Studies |
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05/2019 - 06/2019 | Queen’s University in Kingston/Canada Centre for International and Defense Policy Visiting Researcher |
02/2019 - 04/2019 | WZB Berlin Social Science Center Research Department 'Global Governance' Visiting Research Professor |
09/2018 - 10/2018 | Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam Department of Political Science and Public Administration Guest Researcher |
10/2010 - 03/2011 | Ludwig Maximilians University Munich Geschwister Scholl Institute Visiting Professor |
10/2009 - 03/2012 | Goethe University Frankfurt am Main Cluster of Excellence “The Formation of Normative Orders”; working group “International Organization Senior Research Fellow |
10/2008 - 03/2009 | Goethe University Frankfurt am Main Department of Political Science; denomination: External Relations of Western European States Visiting Professor |
10/2007 - 02/2008 | Goethe University Frankfurt am Main Department of Political Science; denomination: International Relations Visiting Professor |
08/2002 - 09/2009 | Peace Research Institute Frankfurt am Main (PRIF) Postdoctoral Research Fellow |
05/1999 - 05/2002 | Universität Hamburg Department of Political Science; Political Theory and History of Ideas Research Associate |
Teaching Responsibilities
Helmut Schmidt University / University of the Federal Armed Forces Hamburg
BA Lectures and BA/MA seminars on:
- Foreign Policy Analysis
- Introduction to Peace and Conflict Studies
- Europe in the World: Theoretical approaches and empirical cases
- World Order Politics and World Order Problems
- Conflicts, Wars, and Peace Processes
- Research Design
Universität Hamburg
- Seminar: Transitional Justice as a Global Norm?
Expertise and Consulting Work
- Since 2021: Member of the Scientific Council of the Institute for Theology and Peace Hamburg
- Since 2021: Member of the Editorial Advisory Board of the journal “German Politics” (Taylor & Francis)
- 2020-2023: Elected member of the Review Board (Fachkollegium), Section Social Sciences, of the German Research Foundation (DFG)
- Since 2020: Member of the Steering Group “Peace and Conflict Studies” of the Hamburg Behörde für Wissenschaft, Forschung und Gleichstellung (BWFG)
- Since 2020: Deputy Chair of the Foundation Council of the German Foundation for Peace Research (DSF) (Member since 2019)
- Since 2018: Member of the Editorial Board of the German Social Science Journal ‘Leviathan’
- Since 2017: Member of the Academic Board of the German Institute for International and Security Affairs (SWP), Berlin
- Since 2016: Chair of the Academic Board of the Institute for Peace Research and Security Policy (IFSH), Hamburg
- 2013-2018: Member of the Academic Board of the German Foundation for Peace Research (DSF)
- Reviewer for national and international journals, publishing houses, and foundations
Research Project at the Centre
20 Years of the US “War on Terror” in Afghanistan. A Critical Review of Interventionist Practices and their Justification
In summer 2021, the withdrawal of Western troops from Afghanistan, the rapid takeover of Afghanistan by the Taliban, horrifying images from Kabul airport, and the enduring humanitarian plight have brought central questions concerning Western military interventions back to the political agenda again. No less than 20 years of military and civilian engagement in Afghanistan require a self-critical review and evaluation of the engagement.
Afghanistan has been one of the most enduring intervention theatres for Western troops since the military intervention started as major part of the US-led “global war on terror” in 2001. Analysing interventionist practices of Western states, including their justifications, is key to understanding liberal ordering practices The West and the “International Community” have dedicated considerable material and immaterial resources to Afghanistan, exerted “hard” and “soft” power: troops, civilian staff, time, money, diplomatic efforts, trust and reputation. In light of the current situation, many critics evaluate this engagement today as disaster or failure.
Taking the escalation in 2021 into consideration (which can lead to retrospective new evaluations of prior processes), this project seeks to analyse three variations of US political actors’ “politics of legitimacy” regarding the military engagement and the diplomatic attempts to promote a sustainable peace:
(a) the US peace negotiations with the Taliban (2018-2020), from which the elected Afghan government was excluded (de facto recognition of an armed non-state actor as legitimate);
(b) the US administration’s renewed resistance against the International Criminal Court (ICC) under President Trump in reaction to the ICC’s investigations of war crimes in Afghanistan (enhanced expressions of non-recognition of a central institution of the liberal world order);
(c) critical reviews of the Afghanistan engagement/ ”lessons learned” in the US/ NATO (accountability vis-à-vis domestic audiences and NATO partners).
Current Projects
20 Years of the US “War on Terror” in Afghanistan. A Critical Review of Interventionist Practices and their Justification
Recasting the role of citizens in foreign and security policy? Democratic innovations and changing patterns of interaction between European executives and publics
Armed non-state actors and the politics of recognition
Democratising Security in Turbulent Times
Seminars and Conferences
Workshop: “African Agency in the Transforming Field of Security Governance: Norms, Organizations and Futures”, Helmut Schmidt University/University of the Federal Armed Forces Hamburg, November 2020 (organized with Louise Wiuff Moe, Stephanie Jänsch, Christian Opitz)
Workshop: “(Non-)Recognition of Armed Non-State Actors: Risks and Opportunities for Conflict Transformation”, Helmut Schmidt University/University of the Federal Armed Forces Hamburg, Juni 2018 (organized with Maéva Clément and Hanna Pfeifer; funded by German Foundation for Peace Research).
4. Open Section Conference of the German Political Science Association/ Section International Relations (organized as speaker of the section, with Hanna Pfeifer and Gabi Schlag), Otto von Guericke University Magdeburg, September 2014.
Workshop: “Visual Culture and the Legitimacy of Military Interventions: Images, Media and War“, Otto von Guericke University Magdeburg, August 2014 (organized with Gabi Schlag; funded by Fritz Thyssen Foundation).
Workshop: “Recognition in Global Politics”, Cluster of Excellence “Normative Orders“, Goethe University Frankfurt, June 2012 (organized with Caroline Fehl, Christopher Daase and Georgios Kolliarakis).
Workshop: “Evil in International Politics“, Peace Research Institute Frankfurt, May 2012 (organized with Christopher Hobson and Piki Ish-Shalom).
Publications (Selection)
Clément, Maéva, Geis, Anna and Pfeifer, Hanna (eds.) (2021). ‘Armed non-state actors and the politics of recognition’. Manchester: Manchester University Press. |
Geis, Anna (2021). 'The ambivalence of (not) being in a “war” – the “civilian power” Germany and the “stabilization operation” in Afghanistan', in: Piki Ish-Shalom (ed.): Concepts at Work: On the Linguistic Infrastructure of World Politics, Michigan: Michigan University Press, 65-90. |
Geis, Anna and Wagner, Wolfgang (2021). '“What We Are fighting For”: Democracies’ Justifications of Using Armed Force since the End of the Cold War', in: Lothar Brock/Hendrik Simon (eds.): The Justification of War and International Order. From Past to Present, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 293-310. |
Wiuff Moe, Louise and Geis, Anna (eds.) (2020). 'Hybridity and Friction in Organizational Politics: New Perspectives on the African Security Regime Complex', Special Issue of Journal of Intervention and Statebuilding, 14: 2. |
Wiuff Moe, Louise and Geis, Anna (2020). 'From Liberal Interventionism to Stabilization: Towards a New Consensus on Norm-Downsizing in Interventions in Africa', in: Global Constitutionalism, 9:2, 387-412 (Special Issue “After Fragmentation”, guest-edited by Christian Kreuder-Sonnen/Michael Zürn). |
Pfeifer, Hanna, Opitz, Christian & Geis, Anna (2020). ‘Deliberating Foreign Policy: Perceptions and Effects of Citizen Participation in German Foreign Policy’, in German Politics, online first. |
Geis, Anna and Schlag, Gabi (eds.) (2017). Visualizing violence: aesthetics and ethics in international politics. Special Issue of Global Discourse, 7: 2-3. |
Daase, Christopher, Fehl, Caroline, Geis, Anna & Kolliarakis, Georgios (eds.) (2015). Recognition in International Relations: Rethinking a Political Concept in a Global Context, London: Palgrave Macmillan. |
Geis, Anna and Hobson, Christopher (eds.) (2014). 'The Existence and Use of “Evil” in International Politics', Special Issue of International Politics, 51: 4. |
Geis, Anna, Müller, Harald and Schörnig, Niklas (eds.) (2013). 'The Militant Face of Democracy: Liberal Forces for Good', Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. |
Geis, Anna and Wagner, Wolfgang (2011). 'How far is it from Königsberg to Kandahar? Democratic Peace and Democratic Violence', in International Relations, in Review of International Studies, 37: 4, 1555-1577. |
Geis, Anna (2005). 'Regieren mit Mediation: Das Beteiligungsverfahren zur zukünftigen Entwicklung des Frankfurter Flughafens', Wiesbaden: VS Verlag (Studien zur politischen Gesellschaft, Vol. 6). |