About Maps, Power and Marginalisation. The Significance of International Political Sociology in the Czech Research on Foreign and Security Policy
Abstract
About Maps, Power and Marginalisation. The Significance of International Political Sociology in the Czech Research on Foreign and Security Policy.
Author Biography
Jan Daniel
Jan Daniel, born in 1987, he is a researcher at the Institute of International Relations
and a PhD candidate at the Department of International Relations of the
Institute of Political Studies of the Faculty of Social Sciences of Charles
University in Prague. He completed a master's degree in International
Relations at the Faculty of Social Studies at Masaryk University in Brno and
a bachelor’s degree in International Relations and Security Studies, also at
Masaryk University. Academically he focuses on armed non-state actors,
hybrid security regimes, the Middle East, international political sociology
and critical theory of security. During his studies, he completed internships
and study abroad programmes in Berlin, Beirut and Bologna.
Dagmar Rychnovská
Dagmar Rychnovská, born in 1987, she is a PhD candidate in International Relations at the Institute of Political Studies at Charles University in Prague. She completed
graduate programs in Comparative and International Studies (ETH Zurich)
and Law and Politics of International Security (VU University Amsterdam). In
her research she focuses on innovations in the safety regulation of science
that are associated with the regime of prohibition of biological weapons.
Other areas of her research interest include critical security studies and
security and technology.