Professor Anne Phillips FBA

Feminist political theorist working on inequality, democracy, and political representation.
Portrait image of Professor Anne Phillips FBA
Fellow type
UK Fellow
Year elected
2003
Subjects
Politics

Current post

London School of Economics and Political Science Graham Wallas Professor of Political Science

Past appointments

Gender Institute and Department of Government, London School of Economics and Political Science Professor of Political and Gender Theory

2004 -

Gender Istitute, London School of Economics and Political Science Professor of Gender Theory; Director

1999 - 2004

Guildhall School of Music and Drama Professor of Politics

1990 - 1999

Publications

The Politics of the Human

Anne Phillips - Published in 2015 by Cambridge University Press

Our Bodies, Whose Property?

Anne Phillips - Published in 2013 by Princeton University Press

Gender and Culture

Anne Phillips - Published in 2010 by Polity

Multiculturalism without Culture

Anne Phillips - Published in 2009 by Princeton University Press

The Politics of Presence: the Political Representation of Gender, Ethnicity and Race

Anne Phillips - Published in 1998 by Oxford University Press

Engendering Democracy

Anne Phillips - Published in 1991 by Polity

Other Fellows of the British Academy

Professor Adrian Favell FBA

International migration and mobilities; comparative citizenship, multiculturalism and immigration politics; sociology of the EU, particularly free movement and cosmopolitanism; urban studies; political demography; post-growth cultures; Japanese contemporary art and architecture

Adrian-Favell-FBA

Professor Kathryn Sikkink FBA

International relations with attention to international norms and institutions, transnational advocacy networks, the impact of human rights law and policies and transitional justice

Kathryn-Sikkink-FBA.jpg

Sign up to our email newsletters

Join our mailing list to explore the ideas and impact of the British Academy. Get updates on research, funding, policy, international collaborations, and events that bring the humanities and social sciences to life.