Tine Hanrieder is a political scientist doing research on global health, labour, and migration. She is the author of a monograph on the history of the WHO International Organization in Time and of articles spanning the areas of global governance, the sociology of knowledge, and political economy. She currently conducts research on the intersection of health and labour struggles and on post-neoliberal health reform attempts.
Tine has received a Freigeist (Free Spirit) Fellowship for interdisciplinary research by the Volkswagen Foundation to rethink South-North learning in global health. Before joining LSE in 2020, she held academic appointments at LMU Munich and the WZB Berlin Social Science Center, and received her PhD from the University of Bremen. Tine also was a visiting scholar at the University of Sydney, the Centre de recherche médecine, sciences, santé, santé mentale, société/Cermes3, Northwestern University, and UC Berkeley.
She is an elected member of the Executive Council of the Society for the Advancement of Socio-Economics and serves on the LSE Global Health Initiative’s steering committee. She is also the Doctoral Programme Director in the Department of International Development.
You can see a full list of Dr Tine Hanrieder’s publications here.
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Hanrieder, T., & Janauschek, L. (2025). The ‘ethical recruitment’ of international nurses: Germany’s liberal health worker extractivism. Review of International Political Economy 32(4), 1164–1188
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Hanrieder, Tine 2025: Repair work in raced welfare capitalism: Community health workers in the United States. New Political Economy online first.
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Eckl, Julian and Hanrieder, Tine 2023: The political economy of consulting firms in reform processes: the case of the World Health Organization. Review of the International Political Economy 30(6), 2309-2332
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Hanrieder, Tine 2019: How Do Professions Globalize? Lessons from the Global South in US Medical Education, International Political Sociology 13:3, 296-314.
- Hanrieder, Tine 2015: International Organization in Time: Fragmentation and Reform. Oxford University Press.