Staff Profile
Dr Hanna Ketola
Lecturer in the Politics of Gender
- Email: hanna.ketola@ncl.ac.uk
- Address: Room 4.29 Henry Daysh Building
School of Geography Politics & sociology
缅北禁地
缅北禁地 upon Tyne
NE1 7RU
I joined 缅北禁地 in January 2024 as a Lecturer in the Politics of Gender. I am a feminist researcher exploring the politics of war, peace and militarism. My research is grounded in ethnographic methods, and I have regional expertise in South Asia, specifically Nepal where I have done extensive field research. I am interested in questions of agency, family, affect and emotions, and subaltern politics.
My work has been published in several peer-reviewed journals, including, , , , and . I have also co-created and co-produced the podcast series .
Prior to joining 缅北禁地 I was engaged in several postdoctoral projects, including though my ESRC Postdoctoral Fellowship at King’s College London, the UKRI-funded project at University of York, and the ‘Legacies of the Disappeared project’ at the . I received my PhD in International Relations from King’s College London in 2017, where my thesis focused on women’s political agency in the context of peacebuilding in post-conflict Nepal.
My ethnographically grounded research agenda explores the politics of war and peace, centering feminist, and subaltern perspectives. My regional expertise is South Asia, specifically Nepal where I have done extensive field research. My aim is to offer critical insights into questions of agency and family to shed new light on how we understand war.
Post-war expressions of political agency
My work has explored women’s political agency across war and post-war contexts. This has involved extensive field research in Nepal, focusing on experiences of women ex-PLA fighters and women activists mobilising around enforced disappearances. My work explores heterogeneous modalities of political agency including their relational and affective dimensions. My work on agency has been published in , , and .
I am currently writing up my book manuscript ‘Subaltern Politics in Post-War times: Rethinking Feminist Theories of Agency’. The book sheds new light on issues of political agency and the question of what forms of agency matter. Theoretically, it reconceptualises ‘subaltern’ political agency for post-war contexts. Empirically, it offers a thick ethnographic analysis of heterogeneous modes of political agency, which allows me to move beyond sets of binaries that tend to frame agency in feminist and critical analysis.
Familial ties, militarism and affect
Another strand of my research explores the role of family and familial ties in war and its aftermath. I explore familial ties as ‘affective ties’ that emerge through and are transformed by war’s violence. This research has included conducting life history interviews with people who participated in the Maoist movement in Nepal as fighters, political organisers and artists. Part of this ongoing research has been published in and . I have also published on questions of militarism and affect and on ‘parental harm’ in co-written articles in and .
POL8006: Theories of International Relations
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Articles
- Ketola H, O'Reilly M. . European Journal of International Relations 2025, 31(3), 609-634.
- Friedman R, Ketola H. . Review of International Studies 2024, 50(2), 393-412.
- Ketola H. . Civil Wars 2023, 27(1), 116-138.
- Riley H, Ketola H, Yadav P. . Journal of Human Security 2022, 18(2), 35-46.
- Ketola H. . Security Dialogue 2020, 51(6), 519-536.
- Chisholm, A, Ketola, H. The Cruel Optimism of Militarism: Feminist Curiosity, Affect, and Global Security. International Political Sociology 2020, 14(3), 270–285.