Prof. Dr. Stephan Stetter
Doctoral and post-doctoral programmes
Stephan Stetter supervises doctoral and post-doctoral theses in the field of international relations, conflict research and Middle East research. He is also a liaison professor with the Friedrich Ebert Foundation scholarship program. If you are interested in receiving doctoral support and funding and can present proof of the specialist and social achievements required for such funding, please contact Prof. Stetter directly via email.
Prof. Stetter mainly supervises theses in the field of international relations (IR), conflict research, and Middle East research that – particularly in terms of theory – are closely related to the main research areas he pursues as part of his professorship, i.e. primarily historical sociological and/or socio-theoretical approaches (e.g. Foucault, Luhmann, Bourdieu, Meyer, etc.).
His supervision philosophy is based on two main pillars: Firstly, he is a central point of contact for content-related and organizational issues that may arise during the course of a doctorate, i.e. he does not only comment on individual chapters but can also be contacted with regard to the planning of specific stages of the thesis (e.g. field research). Secondly, he usually holds an annual PhD-colloquium. This event gives all his doctoral candidates the opportunity to meet once a year in Munich as a collective group. Prior to the event, the doctoral candidates send a current chapter from their thesis to all participants. During the colloquium, they discuss these texts together and Prof. Stetter provides suggestions and advice to the doctoral candidates in one-to-one talks.
If you are interested in having your doctoral thesis supervised by Prof. Stetter, please proceed as follows:
- Establish initial contact informally via email. Briefly introduce yourself and your intended topic. In which subject and on the basis of which research approach (theory) do you wish to obtain your doctorate? Include in your email your CV and an overview of the grades of your studies. Please also specify how you intend to “finance” your doctoral thesis: in theory, a doctorate is estimated to take 3 years, but in reality (in particular if you also have family and/or professional commitments), it can easily take longer. Therefore, it is important to know how you intend to support yourself financially during this period in order to be able to estimate whether it is feasible for you to complete a doctorate.
- If the topic is suitable and Prof. Stetter believes he can act as supervisor for you, he will ask you to write a detailed synopsis of your intended thesis. The synopsis should be approx. 4000 words long (approx. 10 pages) and organized as follows: the issue at hand, theoretical basis and empirical focus, current state of research on the intended topic and explanation of the research gap, methodical approach, possible chapter structure of the thesis, and bibliography. Send this synopsis to Prof. Stetter, who will then use it as a basis to decide whether he can consider supervising your work.
- In the event of a positive decision, your name will be entered into the doctorate list, subject to the authorization of the department council of the Department of Social Sciences and Public Affairs.
Ongoing theses:
Post-doctoral theses:
Dr. Jan Busse: Constructing Global Order: The Entanglement of Micro-Practices and Macro-Structures in the Post-Ottoman Space
Doctoral theses:
Marie-Kristin Thimm: Diskurs und Identität in Israel und Iran
Johannes Geist: Kritische Geopolitik und das sub-saharische Afrika: Konfliktdynamiken in Mali und ihre regionale und globale Einbettung
Katharina Konarek: Deutsche politische Stiftungen und ihre Auslandsarbeit: Nicht-staatliche Außenpolitik Deutschlands in Israel und Palästina?
Bastian Sendhardt: The Karta Polaka and Bordering Dynamis in Poland und Ukraine
Enrica Fei: The Shia in Iraq and its Relationship with Iran
Completed theses
Post-doctoral theses:
PD Dr. Eva Herschinger: Self and Other in International Relations (2018)
Doctoral theses:
Dr. Bettina Benzing (derzeit Manager Travel Risk & Security, adidas) „Gewalt in den Anden: Systemtheoretische Überlegungen zu Konfliktstrukturen in einer Postkonfliktgesellschaft am Beispiel Kolumbiens“ (2020)
Dr. Mitra Moussa Nabo (Nationales Zentrum Kriminalprävention, Bonn): Legitimierung externer Interventionen in Libanon (2015)
Dr. Jan Busse (derzeit wissenschaftlicher Mitarbeiter an meiner Professur): Global Governmentality in Palestine (2016)
Dr. Helena Burgrovà (derzeit Programmkoordinatorin Berlin): Securitization Dynamics and the Endless State of Emergency in Egypt under Mubarak (2017)
Dr. Lidia Averbukh: Parallele Gruppenrechte im „jüdischen und demokratischen“ Staat Israel: Kodifizierung palästinensischer und jüdischer Gruppen in ausgewählten Aspekten des israelischen Rechtssystems
Dr. Dorthe Siegmund: Die globale Norm der zivilen Konfliktbearbeitung und lokale Friedens-NGOs in Israel und Palästina: Das Spannungsfeld zwischen dem Globalen und dem Lokalen
Dr. Lisa Kammermeier: Agonistische und antagonistische Konfliktdynamiken in Kambodscha
Dr. Anna Reuß: Threat perception in the Arab Gulf States
Dr. Jochen Klingler: Durkheim and IR: A New Encounter