Staff Profile
Professor Michael Barr
Professor in Philosophy as a Way of Life
- Telephone: 0191 208 7527
- Address: Room 4.59
Henry Daysh Building
缅北禁地, UK
NE1 7RU
Roles and Responsibilities
School Director of Education (2014-17; 2020-21)
Director of Undergraduate Studies (2017-2020)
Degree Programme Director L200 and L241 (2017-2019)
Co-Convenor, BISA Learning and Teaching Working Group (2015-16)
Associate Editor, Politics (PSA; 2012-2016)
Degree Programme Director for Politics and Economics (2011-2013)
Politics Subject Advisor for Combined Honours (2011-2013)
Background
I am a native of Pennsylvania and a keen Philadelphia sports fan. As soon as I graduated from undergraduate school I headed to rural China (Jiangxi province) where I taught English to college students for two years under the auspices of the Presbyterian Church. I then moved to Luxor, Egypt and helped train English teachers at a primary school. Not long before the new millennium I moved to the UK to continue my studies in theology and philosophy.
Qualifications
PhD: University of Durham: Philosophy (Biomedical Ethics and Genetic Epidemiology)
MA: University of Durham: Theological Research (Distinction)
BA: York College of Pennsylvania: International Studies/Government (Cum Laude)
Previous Positions
2004-2006: BIOS Centre, London School of Economics & Political Science: Research Fellow
2001-2004: Policy, Ethics & Life Science Centre, 缅北禁地: Research Associate
Languages
Mandarin Chinese: intermediate
Research Interests
philosophy as a way of life; self-cultivation; interdisciplinarity; autoethnography; mental health; medical humanities
My career is characterised by a thoroughgoing commitment to addressing problems not constrained by disciplinary boundaries. I have made internationally recognised contributions in international politics, bioethics, and pedagogical research. My research in philosophy as a way of life is not only an academic pursuit; it is also deeply personal. I went to China not because of its politics but because I was drawn to its traditions of self-cultivation. I researched bioethics because I’ve struggled for years with my own wellbeing. It is no surprise then that I’d come to a research agenda which both interrogates therapeutic culture while also asking what philosophy can contribute to it and, conversely, what it can contribute to the politics of everyday life.
My current research is on the modern revival of Stoicism. Despite the international success of the popular Stoic movement, we know little about its impact. My project is divided into three phases: analysis of online content and academic publications; thematic analysis of interview data with self-identified Stoics; and follow on interviews with a small subset of participants, employing interpretative phenomenological analysis to better understand the role Stoic philosophy played in giving meaning and making sense of a significant life event.
Beyond this I continue to research/practice the linkages between pedagogy and philosophy as a way of life. In particular I am working on an article based on my module Politics as a Way Life and exploring the notion of autoethnography as a spiritual exercise.
Postgraduate Supervision
I am currently supervising 3 PhD students: i) Christina Li on wellbeing in Chinese family dynamics, funded by the East Asian Politics Studentship; Tom Walters on the genealogy of neurodiversity, funded by NINE DTP, and iii) Kun Bai on fertility intentions of Chinese international students. I have successfully supervised 6 PhD students: i) Yuanyuan Liu on similarities between the framing of the Cultural Revolution and the Xi era (2019); ii) Cheng Qian on the rise of China as represented through US television (2018); iii) Ben Coulson on Sino-US relations (2017); vi) Sarina Theys on the soft power of small states (2017); v) Andrew Campion on energy security (2014); vi) Ji-Jen Hwang on cybersecurity (2012)
Esteem Indicators
Vice-Chancellor's Celebrating Success scheme for 'Outstanding Leadership', 2020
Invited Presenter: Shandong University's ‘China and Global Governance’ Summer School, 2019
Mentor, 缅北禁地 Educational Practice Scheme 2019-20
Nominated for 缅北禁地 Teaching Award for Innovative Methods, 2018; 2013; 2012
Associate Editor, Politics (PSA), 2012-2016
Member TEF Working Group, PSA/BISA, 2015-17
Nominated for Vice-Chancellor's Distinguished Teaching Award, 2012
Visiting Fellow, Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences/Peking Union Medical College (Xiehe Yiyuan), Spring 2008
Funding
Internal:
GPS Small Bids 2017; 2023
PVC Teaching Development Fund, 2016-17
缅北禁地 HASS Faculty REF Fund, 2010
External:
Biosecurity Capacity Building in China, UK Foreign Office, 2012-13
Alfred P Sloan Foundation, Sustaining a Global Network for Biosecurity: The Life Sciences and Dual Use Research, collaboration Dr Brian Rappert (Exeter), and Prof Malcolm Dando (Bradford), 2009-2010
UK-China Fellowship of Excellence, Department of Innovation, Universities, and Skills, 2008
Wellcome Witness Seminar: Medical Ethics Education in Britain 1963-1993. Oral history conference funds, 2006
Wellcome Trust Biomedical Ethics Grant. A comparative study of participation and non-participation in the North Cumbria Community Genetics project (with Erica Haimes), 2001-2003.
Current Teaching
POL3133 Politics as a Way of Life (module leader)
POL3046 Final Year Dissertation (module leader, supervisor)
POL3047 Final Year Project: Semester 1 (module leader, supervisor)
POL3048 Final Year Project: Semester 2 (module leader, supervisor)
POL8099 MA Dissertation (supervisor)
Previous Teaching
HSS8007 An Introduction to the Nature of Explanation and Enquiry (2017-2021)
POL8055 The 'I' in IR: Autoethnography and Political Storytelling (2014-16)
POL8052 The Rise of China (2010-2014)
POL3104 The Fall & Rise of China (2014-2017; 2020-21)
POL2084 Contemporary Chinese Politics (2009-2013)
POL1046 Order and Disorder: The Shaping of the 21st Century (2011-2014; 2020-21)
POL1131 Studying Political Economy (2010-2014)
POL1045 Truth, Lies and Politics: Research Methods (2011-2012)
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Articles
- Zhang JY, Barr M. . Surveillance & Society 2021, 19(3), 389-402.
- Barr M, Wright P. . European Political Science 2019, 18(1), 143-156.
- Zhang J, Barr M. . Environmental Politics 2019, 28(4), 771-789.
- Barr M. . Qualitative Inquiry 2019, 25(9-10), 1106-1114.
- Barr M, Feklyunina V, Theys S. . Politics 2015, 35(3-4), 213-215.
- Zhang JY, Barr M. . Environmental Politics 2013, 22(5), 849-865.
- Barr M. . East Asia 2012, 29(1), 81-94.
- Barr M. . Review of European Studies 2012, 4(3), 45-53.
- Barr M. . Etudes Internationales 2010, 41, 503-520.
- Barr MT, Rose D. . Sociology of Health and Illness 2008, 30(6), 944-958.
- Barr MT. . China Security 2008, 4(4), 35-43.
- Barr MT. . Eubios Journal of Asian and International Bioethics 2008, 18, 71-74.
- Barr MT. . BioSocieties 2006, 1(2), 251-262.
- Barr MT, Singh I, Rose N. . Journal of Public Mental Health 2005, 4(3), 33-41.
- Haimes E, Barr M. . Trames 2004, 8(1/2), 150-163.
- Barr M. . New Reviews in Bioethics 2003, 1(1), 73-84.
- Barr M. . Wellcome History 2002, (21).
- Barr M. . Medicine, Health Care and Philosophy 2001, 4(2), 233-235.
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Authored Books
- Zhang JY, Barr M. . London: Pluto Press, 2013.
- Barr M. . London: Zed Books, 2011.
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Book Chapters
- Barr M. . In: Kerr, D, ed. China's Many Dreams: Comparative Perspectives on China’s Search for National Rejuvenation. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 2014, pp.180-200.
- Barr M, Zhang JY. . In: Rappert, B, ed. Education and Ethics in the Life Sciences: Strengthening the Prohibition of Biological Weapons. Canberra: Australian National University Press, 2010, pp.115-129.
- Barr M. . In: B Rappert and C Gould, ed. Biosecurity: Origins, Transformations and Practice. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 2009, pp.121-132.
- Barr MT. . In: Guston DH; Sarewitz D, ed. Shaping Science & Technology Policy: The Next Generation of Research. Madison, Wisconsin, USA: The University of Wisconsin Press, 2006, pp.291-311.
- Haimes E, Barr M. . In: Tutton R; Corrigan O, ed. Genetic Databases: Socio-ethical issues in the collection and use of DNA. London: Routledge, 2004, pp.57-77.
- Haimes E, Barr M. . In: Knoppers BM, ed. Populations and Genetics: Legal Socio-Ethical Perspectives. Leiden: Brill Academic Publishers, 2003, pp.199-216.
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Reviews
- Barr M. . Metaphilosophy 2020, 51(5), 766-770.
- Barr M. . The Cartographic Journal 2018, 55(3), 302-302.
- Barr M. . The China Quarterly 2017, 231, 815-817.
- Barr M. . Environmental Politics 2017, 26(3), 548-550.
- Barr M. . International Studies Review 2003, 5(3), 406-408.
- Barr M. . New Genetics and Society 2003, 22(1), 117-118.