Wangari Maathai Visiting Professors

The international 'Visiting Professorship' of the newly founded Global Partnership Network (GPN) is named after a prominent activist from Kenya - Wangari Maathai.

Wangari Maathai stands symbolically for her commitment to justice, environmental and human rights.

Learn more about the programme

Below is the list of our visiting professors.

Wangari Maathai Portrait by the Beninois Artist Youss Atacora

Summer 2023: Fekadu Beyene Kenee

Prof. Dr. Fekadu Beyene Kenee

Fekadu Beyene Kenee is a full professor of Institutional and Resource Economics and an employee of Haramaya University, Ethiopia. He received BSc. in Agricultural Economics from Haramaya University, MSc. degree from Wageningen University, the Netherlands in 1997 in Management of Agricultural Knowledge Systems and PhD from Humboldt University of Berlin in Resource Economics, Germany in 2008.
He has been teaching different courses and conducted research on different issues including sustainable land management, customary pastoral land administration, food security and land use systems, climate change and pastoral adaptations, governance of river basins with a focus on institutional arrangements, and natural resource-based conflict.

Research Interests

His research interest is on property rights and collective action in natural resource management, institutions in environmental protection, project impact evaluation, and institutional and behavioural analysis.

Summer 2022: Ayalneh Bogale

Prof. Dr. Ayalneh Bogale

Prof. Dr. Ayalneh Bogale has joined the University of Kassel since April 01, 2022 as a Wangari Maathai Visiting Professor at the Global Partnership Network (GPN).

Ayalneh Bogale had served as Advisor in Climate Change, Agriculture and Food Security at the Department of Rural Economy and Agriculture of the African Union Commission (AUC) seconded by Deutsche Gesellschaft fuer Internationale Zusammenarbeit (GIZ) from November 2013 to June 2020.

Prof. Dr. Ayalneh Bogale: Learn more

Research Interests

His professional and research interests are adaptation and resilience to climate change, economics of resource degradation, poverty and food security, property rights to land and conflict.


Summer 2022: Praveen Jha

From June 2022: Prof. Praveen Jha

Praveen K. Jha, Professor of Economics at the Centre for Economic Studies and Planning (CESP) and Adjunct Professor at the Centre for Informal Sector and Labour Studies (CISLS), is with the School of Social Sciences, Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi, India.

He is now Wangari Maathai Guest Professor at the University of Kassel from June 2022.

From June 2022: Prof. Praveen Jha: Learn more

Corona Pandemic and the Visiting Professorship

The original invite for the Wangari Maathai visiting professor was from April to October 2021. Due to the Covid-19 pandemic, it was not possible to avail it for the entire duration and hence it was rescheduled for the summer term of 2022 (June to October). In 2021, the offer was accordingly curtailed to a shorter duration between September and October, and Praveen Jha was there for about three weeks. He did the online public talks as part of the visit, which are also on the website. Further, he taught two courses (online) during the 2021 Summer term

Research Interests

Labour Economics, Agricultural economics, Development economics, Public Finance, Economics of education, History of Economic Thought


Winter 2021/22: Devan Pillay

Prof. Devan Pillay

Prof. Devan Pillay is based in the Sociology department, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg (South Africa). A former political prisoner during the apartheid era, Devan went on to obtain his PhD at the University of Essex, England. He subsequently worked as a labour writer, magazine editor, trade unionist and government official, before settling into his current role as an academic.

Prof. Devan Pillay : Learn more

Research Interests

Working class politics; South African trade unionism and politics; Ecological Marxism; Happiness, wellbeing and holistic development

Course offered: POLITICAL ECONOMY OF NATURE AND DEVELOPMENT

This course takes as its starting point the inter-connections between economy and ecology, both of which have a common root in the ancient Greek word oikos. However, it goes further by considering the interconnections between ecology, economics and politics (which in its extended form includes all power relations in society). This stretched understanding of ecology, economy and society allows for a deeper exploration issues that can fall under the rubric of 'holistic development'.

This deep exploration goes back to the ancient thinking of the Axial Age over 2000 years ago, where religious and secular philosophers grappled with the problem of human suffering, in a context of brutal class formation and the emergence of debt. Compassion towards other humans, as well as non-human nature, became guiding principles.This is most evident in the thinking and teaching of the Buddha (although it can be found in a range of other belief systems, including the Native American concept of buen vivir (or sumak kawsay) and the African concept of ubuntu, amongst others).

Ancient thinking is linked to modern re-awakenings, as society today grapples with rising social inequality, alienation and what some have termed 'ecocide'. It in particular considers the emerging Ecological Marxist school of thinking, Social Ecology and eco-feminism. The course ends with considerations of more concrete thinking around Happiness and Wellbeing, and Ecosocialism, as well as case studies of ecosocialist working class politics and the liberated zone of Rojava in Kurdistan.

Talk by Devan Pillay

An­ci­ent Li­neages, Mo­dern Rea­wa­ke­nings- Marx, Bud­dha and Hap­pi­ness


Winter 2020/21: Juvaria Jafri

Prof. Dr. Juvaria Jafri

Prof. Dr. Juvaria Jafri is based at the City University of London where she is a Lecturer in International Political Economy. She received her PhD in 2019 for her doctoral research on shadow banking and inclusive finance in Pakistan. Her previous degrees are from SZABIST, in Karachi, Pakistan, and the University of Toronto in Canada. She also has several years of work experience working for investment banking and management consulting firms in Karachi, and Islamabad.

Prof. Dr. Juvaria Jafri: Learn more

GPN Working Paper No 1

Juvaria Jafri (2022) Fintech, Philanthropy and Development: Is KYC the core problem or solution for Digital Inclusion?

GPN Working Paper No 1 : Download PDF

Research Interests

Areas of Research/Specialization: The Political Economy of financial development in the Global South, particularly strategies for funding interventions, including inclusive finance, impact investing, and digital identification databases.

Course offered: The Global Political Economy of Finance (11/2020 - 03/2021)

The course interrogates structures around finance, money, and banking, to discuss how closely the two are related. The objective of this course is to give students familiarity and a critical perspective on topics of finance in the global economy. The theoretical focus will be on finance as power, especially how issues of coercion and inequality are legitimated and institutionalized in the global economy. The empirical focus will include — but not be restricted to — Global South countries and regions, which have been enriched by but also subordinated by international monetary and financial structures. Topics covered will include mainstream and heterodox approaches to finance, financial development and assistance, shifting models of banking, offshore finance, money creation, and financial crises and instability.

Pu­blic Talk by Prof. Dr. Ju­va­ria Jafri