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Seyla
Benhabib is the Eugene Meyer Professor of
Political Science and Philosophy at Yale University
and Director of its Program in Ethics, Politics and
Economics. Professor Benhabib is the President of
the Eastern Division of the American Philosophical
Association in 2006-07.
She
is the author of Critique, Norm and Utopia. A Study
of the Normative Foundations of Critical Theory (1986);
Situating the Self. Gender, Community and Postmodernism
in Contemporary Ethics (1992; winner of the National
Educational Association’s best book of the year
award) ; together with Judith Butler, Drucilla Cornell
and Nancy Fraser, Feminism as Critique (1994); The
Reluctant Modernism of Hannah Arendt (1996; reissued
in 2002); The Claims of Culture. Equality and Diversity
in the Global Era, (2002) and most recently, The Rights
of Others. Aliens, Citizens and Residents (2004),
which won the Ralph Bunche award of the American Political
Science Association (2005) and the North American
Society for Social Philosophy award (2004). A new
book, Another Cosmopolitanism: Hospitality, Sovereignty
and Democratic Iterations, with responses by Jeremy
Waldron, Bonnie Honig and Will Kymlicka is forthcoming
from Oxford University Press in 2006.
Her
work has been translated into German, Spanish, French,
Italian, Turkish, Swedish, Russian, Serbo-Croatian,
Hebrew, Japanese and Chinese.
She has been a member of the American Academy of Arts
and Science since 1996 and has held the Gauss Lectures
(Princeton, 1998); the Spinoza chair for distinguished
visitors (Amsterdam, 2001); the John Seeley Memorial
Lectures (Cambridge, 2002), the Tanner Lectures (Berkeley,
2004) and was the Catedra Ferrater Mora Distinguished
Professor in Girona, Spain (Summer 2005). She received
an Honorary degree from the Humanistic University
in Utrecht in 2004.
Professor
Benhabib is the president of the Eastern Division
of the American Philosophical Association in 2006.
Campus address: 31 Hillhouse Avenue
Phone: 203.432.5246
Email: seyla.benhabib@yale.edu.
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