Hanns W. Maull

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Hanns W. Maull

Hanns Walter Maull (born October 5, 1947 in Augsburg ) is a German political scientist , author and university professor.

Life

After graduating from the Ludwigsgymnasium in Munich , he was accepted into the Maximilianeum Foundation in 1967 and studied political science, modern history and newspaper studies. In 1974 he was at the University of Munich with a thesis on the role of Egypt, Syria and Jordan in the conflict with Israel doctorate . He completed research stays at the International Institute for Strategic Studies (1973/74) and the European Research Center of the University of Sussex (1975/76). From 1976 to 1979 he worked for the Trilateral Commission . From 1979 to 1982 he worked as a journalist for Bayerischer Rundfunk , then as a research assistant at the University of Munich, where he qualified as a professor in 1986 . From 1987 to 1991 he was a professor at the University of Eichstätt . He was visiting professor at the Bologna Center at Johns Hopkins University from 1986 to 1992 and 1997/98 . Since winter semester 2010 he has been a Senior Fellow at the Transatlantic Academy (TAA) in Washington, DC. From 1991 until his retirement in March 2013 he held the chair for international relations and foreign policy at the University of Trier . There he was also a member of the Interdisciplinary Center for East Asia-Pacific Studies .

His research areas include the foreign policy of Germany and Japan, energy policy (especially the strategic importance of raw materials such as crude oil and natural gas for the security of western industrialized countries), interregionalism (especially the relations between Europe and East Asia) and the history and politics of Korea .

He is one of the editors of the magazine Jahrbuch Internationale Politik, published by the German Society for Foreign Policy .

In 2006/07 he was in charge of Siegfried Schieder's dissertation on German foreign and European policy.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Maximilianeer from the year 1967
  2. Archived copy ( Memento from May 9, 2018 in the Internet Archive )
  3. ^ Center for East Asia-Pacific Studies