Patricia Owens (academic)

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Patricia Owens is a British-Irish academic, author and professor. She is a Tutorial Fellow at Somerville College, Oxford and a professor of International Relations at University of Oxford.[1][2] She is best known for her work on the history and theory of counterinsurgency warfare, women and the history of international thought, the history of social and political thought, and for her earlier work on war and international relations in the thought of the German-American political theorist Hannah Arendt.[3]

Owens' book, Economy of Force: Counterinsurgency and the Historical Rise of the Social won the 2016 Susan Strange Prize for the Best Book in international studies and the 2016 International Studies Association Theory Section Best Book Award.[4]

Owens was born in London to Irish immigrant parents in 1975.[3] After completing a degree in Politics from Bristol University, she received her MPhil in International Relations from the University of Cambridge in 1998. Subsequently, she became the Jane Eliza Proctor Research Fellow in Politics department at the Princeton University before completing her PhD at Aberystwyth University in 2003.[5] During her PhD, she was a visiting scholar at UC Berkeley on an Social Science Research Council (SSRC) research fellowship. Owens was a pre-doctoral research fellow at Princeton University and a post-doctoral research fellow at the University of Southern California.[6][7]

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