32193
post-template-default,single,single-post,postid-32193,single-format-gallery,qode-social-login-1.1.3,qode-restaurant-1.1.1,stockholm-core-2.3,select-child-theme-ver-1.1,select-theme-ver-8.9,ajax_fade,page_not_loaded,paspartu_enabled,menu-animation-underline,fs-menu-animation-underline,header_top_hide_on_mobile,,qode_grid_1300,qode_menu_center,qode-mobile-logo-set,wpb-js-composer js-comp-ver-6.6.0,vc_responsive

Ann-Sophie Schoepfel

Ann-Sophie Schoepfel’s intellectual background covers history, art history, anthropology, international relations, international law and legal history along with stops in Paris, Heidelberg, Tokyo, Hanoi and Harvard. Her research on the colonialist implications of war-crimes trials in Asia as well as on Vietnamese migration in the context of the Cold War has earned her numerous awards and academic honors.

 

After the French Empire. The invisible history of decolonization, de-imperialization and de-cold war

Ann-Sophie’s research at global dis:connect centred Afro-Asian voices — jurists, writers, and anticolonial revolutionaries — from across the French former colonial empire, as they struggled to reimagine state sovereignty and international law in the Cold War crucible.

 

Find out more about the workshop Ann-Sophie organized during her fellowship.

 

Contact

Click HERE to mail Ann-Sophie and HERE for a list of her publications.