Ashley Bohrer

Assistant Professor of Gender and Peace Studies

Ashley  Bohrer

337 Hesburgh Center for International Studies
University of Notre Dame
Notre Dame, IN 46556

(574) 631-7558
abohrer2@nd.edu

Ashley Bohrer

Assistant Professor of Gender and Peace Studies

On leave for 2022-23 academic year

Expertise

Intersectionality; capitalism studies; decolonial and postcolonial feminisms; social movements; feminist and queer theory; Marxism; critical prison studies

At the Keough School

Ashley J. Bohrer, assistant professor of gender and peace studies, is a core faculty member of the Keough School’s Kroc Institute for International Peace Studies.

Courses

  • Introduction to Peace Studies (required course for undergraduate major or minor in peace studies)

Biography

Bohrer is a concurrent faculty member in Notre Dame’s Gender Studies program. A philosopher by training, she earned her PhD in 2016 from DePaul University’s Department of Philosophy. She recently held a multi-year postdoctoral fellowship in public philosophy at Hamilton College. She has studied and taught around the world, including in France, Germany, Lebanon, China, South Africa, and Sweden.

Research and Publications

The question that motivates much of Bohrer’s research is: how can we think about the multiple relationships between oppression and exploitation? Her most recent exploration of this question is her book Marxism and Intersectionality: Race, Gender, Class, and Sexuality under Contemporary Capitalism. The book argues that it is only by considering all of the dimensions of race, gender, sexuality, and class within the structures of capitalism and imperialism that we can understand contemporary power relations. It moreover argues that the relationship between oppression and exploitation is both more complex than often supposed, but also more crucial for interrogating that often acknowledged.

In addition to this monograph, Bohrer’s scholarly work has appeared in many peer-reviewed journals including Race & Class, Philosophy Today, Interventions: A Journal of Postcolonial Studies, and philoSOPHIA: A Journal of Continental Feminism. Her work also has been translated into Mandarin and Portuguese. As a speaker of French, Spanish, German, Hebrew, and Arabic, Bohrer incorporates translation into her own scholarly practice. She is currently translating Françoise Verges’ Towards a Decolonial Feminism into English (Pluto Press, 2021).

In the Media

In addition to academic work, Bohrer is a public intellectual. Her work has been published by Al Jazeera, Truthout, InTheseTimes, and other media outlets.