Alison M. Jaggar | |
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Born | Alison Mary Hayes September 23, 1942 Sheffield, England, United Kingdom |
Era | Contemporary philosophy |
Region | Western philosophy |
School | Feminist philosophy,Feminist studies |
Institutions | University of Colorado, Boulder,University of Oslo,SUNY Buffalo,Miami University, theUniversity of Cincinnati, theUniversity of Illinois at Chicago, theUniversity of California, Los Angeles,Rutgers University,Victoria University of Wellington |
Main interests | Social philosophy,moral philosophy,political philosophy |
Alison Mary Jaggar (born September 23, 1942)[1] is an Americanfeminist philosopher born in England. She is College Professor of Distinction in the Philosophy and Women and Gender Studies departments at theUniversity of Colorado, Boulder[2] and Distinguished Research Professor at theUniversity of Birmingham in the United Kingdom. She was one of the first people to introduce feminist concerns in to philosophy.[3]
Born inSheffield, England,[1] Jaggar earned a bachelor's degree in philosophy atBedford College, University of London in 1964[4] and a master's degree in philosophy from theUniversity of Edinburgh in 1967. She completed her doctorate in philosophy from theState University of New York (SUNY), Buffalo in 1970.[4]
During her career, Jaggar has held appointments at SUNY Buffalo,Miami University, theUniversity of Cincinnati, theUniversity of Illinois at Chicago, theUniversity of California, Los Angeles,Rutgers University,Victoria University of Wellington, theUniversity of Oslo, and theUniversity of Birmingham.[4][5] From 1994 to 1997, she was director of the Women's Studies department at the University of Colorado at Boulder. She later served as Graduate Director and Associate Chair of the Philosophy department at the university from 2004 to 2008.[4] From 2007 to 2014, she worked as a Research Coordinator at the Centre for the Study of Mind in Nature at theUniversity of Oslo in Norway.[2][4]
A founding member of theSociety for Women in Philosophy, she was instrumental in the creation of the field of feminist studies, and taught what she believes to have been the first feminist philosophy course ever offered.[3] A co-founder ofHypatia: A Journal of Feminist Philosophy,[6] Jaggar was a member of the editorial board from 1983 to 2009 and Associate Editor from 2006 to 2008.[7] She chaired theAmerican Philosophical Association (APA) Committee on the Status of Women from 1986 to 1991[4] and served as co-president of theNorth American Society for Social Philosophy from 1995 to 1997.[4]
Jaggar has been awarded research fellowships from theNational Endowment for the Humanities, theRockefeller Foundation,American Association of University Women (AAUW), theUniversity of Edinburgh, theNorwegian Research Council and theAustralian Research Council.[8] She has served on the editorial boards ofAgainst the Current,Hypatia: A Journal of Feminist Philosophy,Radical Philosophy Review,Asian Journal of Women's Studies,Journal of Social Philosophy,Studies in Feminist Philosophy,International Journal of Feminist Bioethics, andJournal of International Critical Thought.[4]
Jaggar was elected a Fellow of theAmerican Academy of Arts and Sciences in 2017.[9]
Jaggar studies gender andglobalization usingnormative,methodological, andepistemological perspectives. She has published several articles identifying "how global institutions and policies interact with local practices to create gendered cycles of vulnerability and exploitation" and its influence on policy. She has helped develop a new poverty measure that evaluates how gender influences and is impacted by poverty.[5]
Her work has been hugely influential,[10] withRosemarie Tong and Nancy Williams suggesting in theStanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy that "If ethics is about human beings' liberation, then Alison Jaggar's summary of the fourfold function of feminist ethics cannot be improved upon in any significant way"[11] and Jaggar's texts being considered classics.[12]
Jaggar has authored a large number of widely cited papers, most notably "Love and knowledge: Emotion in feminist epistemology", published in 1989. Jaggar has also acted as co-editor for the first issue ofTelos, and was a co-founder and associate editor ofHypatia: A Journal of Feminist Philosophy from 2006 to 2008.[4]
Jaggar has written one book, edited seven books, and co-authored two: