Forschung
Die Forschungsschwerpunkte der Juniorprofessur für internationale Politik und Konfliktforschung liegen im Bereich der internationalen Sicherheits- und Konfliktforschung, insbesondere auf der Forschung zu Geheimdiensten, Flucht/Migration und den internationalen Beziehungen Westasiens ('Naher Osten'). Zielt ist es, auf der Basis qualitativer, empirischer Forschung innovative Erklärungen von internationaler Politik zu entwickeln. Im Bereich Methoden liegt der Schwerpunkt vor allem in der Archivforschung im In- und Ausland, der ethnographischen Langzeitforschung, sowie verschiedenen Formen von Interviews und Oral History.
Sophia Hoffmann ist Principal Investigator in den Drittmittelprojekten KnowPro Wissensproduktion in der deutschen Außenpolitik und Learning Intelligence. Außerdem ist sie als professorales Mitglied in den Nachwuchskollegs Center for Political Practices and Orders undEffective and Innovative Policymaking in Contested Contexts tätig.
Informationen zu diesen und weiteren Projekten finden Sie auf der Seite Projekte.
Im Folgenden finden Sie einen Überblick über Forschungsthemen und -projekte von Prof. Sophia Hoffmann. Eine vollständige Publikationsliste finden Sie auf dieser Seite.
Forschungsschwerpunkte
Internationale Sicherheitspolitik
Die Rolle von Sicherheitsapparaten in der internationalen Politik, insbesondere Nachrichtendienste.
Internationale Spionage und Überwachung.
Sicherheit und Humanitäre Hilfe.
Nachrichtendienste
Nachrichtendienste und Geoökonomie.
Internationale Zusammenarbeit von Nachrichtendiensten.
Nachrichtendienste und Forschungsmethoden.
Flucht und Migration
Flüchtlinge und Handlungsmacht.
Internationale Flüchtlingspolitik.
Irakische Migranten und Flüchtlinge in Syrien.
Regionalforschung Westasien ('Naher Osten')
Vergleichende Regionalforschung.
Internationale humanitäre Intervention in Westasien.
Nichtregierungsorganisationen in Westasien.
Internationale Humanitäre Hilfe
Humanitäre Hilfe und Flüchtlingslager.
Humanitäre Hilfe und internationale Politik.
Humanitäre Hilfe im Nahen Osten.
Forschungsprojekte
Knowledge production in German foreign politics (KNOWPRO)
Funded by: German Ministry for Education and Research.
Funding sum: EUR 1,5 million.
This joint-research project, carried out with partners at the University of Bremen and the University of Kiel, investigates how the knowledge, upon which German foreign politics are based, is produced.
Press release (in German) here: https://www.uni-erfurt.de/universitaet/aktuelles/news/news-detail/bmbf-foerdert-neues-forschungsprojekt-knowpro-mit-15-millionen-euro
Learning Intelligence: The Exchange of Secret Service Knowledge between Germany and the Arab Middle East 1960 - 2010
Funded by: Volkswagen Foundation
Funding sum: EUR 780 000
The research group Learning Intelligence investigates and analyses the exchange of secret service knowledge between German and Arab intelligence agencies between 1960 and 2010.
Methodological framework: International political sociology; sociology of organizations; surveillance studies; intelligence studies.
Research Methods: Archival research; interviews.
Research Aims:
- Develop a theory about intelligence as a transnational practice.
- Develop an argument about the influence of intelligence practice on contemporary world affairs.
My aim is to develop a theory about intelligence as a transnational practice of knowledge circulation, which has a significant impact on world affairs. My empirical focus lies on German (East and West) and Arab (Egypt, Syria and Iraq, primarily) intelligence agencies. Firstly, I compare these agencies according to parameters such as bureaucracy, ideology, language and specific operational activities, and secondly, I analyse how knowledge circulated between these agencies.
Given that intelligence research is necessarily historical, my research method for this project consists primarily of wide-ranging archival research (public archives in Germany, the United States and the UK, private archives in Germany, and wide-ranging documentary and literature excavation). In addition, I carry out interviews with former intelligence practitioners, diplomats and selected experts.
In this project, intelligence knowledge is conceptualised as modus operandi, as the knowledge about how to organise and run an agency, and as the practices, technologies, norms and beliefs that are applied in an agencies’ day-to-day work. Further, knowledge is conceptualised as the self-understanding of intelligence agencies and its officers, in the sense of how their purpose is presented and infuses their activities. Here, the project wishes to address the question of how intelligence agencies themselves understand their work, and on what kind of concepts they draw on to explain the importance of the knowledge they create and mobilise. We proceed from the hypothesis that secret service knowledge is closely entwined with the theory of raison d’etat, and of how raison d‘etat has evolved since its inception during the renaissance.
Humanitarian Action and Security in the Middle East
Methodological framework: Normative governance; critical security studies; migration studies.
Research methods: Ethnographic observation; expert interviews.
Research aim:
- What impact are humanitarian security concepts and practices having on local environments in the Levant region?
With this project I addressed a gap in theories about humanitarian governance. Further, I investigated the under-researched question of how humanitarian actors address multiple security challenges, especially security threats to themselves and their projects. The project combined cross-disciplinary academic debates about the governance function of humanitarian action and innovatively applied critical security studies to a Middle Eastern region. Further, I produced empirical insights into issues of high political relevance at the time, especially regarding the condition in Jordan‘s newly built refugee camps for Syrias.
Empirical research proceeded in two phases. The first phase applied media research and expert interviews with humanitarian security managers to understand the concepts and knowledge through which humanitarian actors approach security in the Middle East. The second phase consisted of ethnographic fieldwork in and around the Al-Zaatari and the Al-Azraq refugee camps in Jordan, to observe how security practices were carried out by different actors. Analysis focused on the connection between transnational, humanitarian knowledge and local, humanitarian practice.
Disciplining Movement: State Sovereignty in the Context of Iraqi Migration to Syria (PhD Project)
Methodological framework: Anthropology of the state; theories of sovereignty; migration studies.
Research methods: Ethnography; participant observation; oral history interviews; expert interviews.
Research aims:
- Contribute to theories about state sovereignty as practice.
- Provide insights into how the Syrian state exercises sovereignty.
- Compare liberal and illiberal sovereign practices in the migration management of Iraqi migrants in Damascus.
In this project, I researched and analized the management of Iraqi migrants in Damascus through state and humanitarian institutions. I showed the daily-life bureaucratic and violent practices through which state sovereignty became a reality in the lives of Iraqi migrants. The analysis emphasized that state sovereignty existed on the one hand as an imagined ideal and as a normative framework, as reflected in international law and theory. On the other hand, sovereignty existed as a context-dependent, lived reality of practice. The differences between the way that liberal, humanitarian agencies considered Iraqi migrants through the lens of the normative ideal of sovereignty, and the way that the illiberal Syrian state governed Iraqi migrants according to very concrete practices, which contradicted the liberal norm, highlighted this argument.