Anja Mihr (born 1969) is a German political scientist and human rights researcher. She works in the areas of Transitology, Transitional Justice, Cyber Justice, Climate Justice, Governance and Human Rights Regimes. She has taught in universities in Germany, the United States, Italy, China and the Netherlands and at the OSCE Academy in Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan. Her main work focuses on human rights, governance, and transitional justice, looking at the interlinkage between institutions, and organizations and the way human rights realization can be leveraged.
Mihr has served on international academic and NGO advisory committees on human rights. From 2002 to 2006 she was a member of the Executive Board of Amnesty International Germany.
Mihr is the founder and director of the Center on Governance through Human Rights at the Berlin Governance Platform.[1] From 2018-2023, Mihr was appointed DAAD Professor for Human Rights,[2] Democratization, Transitology, International Relations, Transitional Justice, at the OSCE Academy in Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan.
Her recent works include studies on Glocal Governance. She is a political consultant and advisor on Transitional Justice, Cyber Justice,[3] and Climate Justice,[4] and has held various professorships in this field. She has been Professor for Public Policy at the Willy Brandt School of Public Policy at Erfurt University in Germany, and Associate Professor at the Netherlands Institute of Human Rights (SIM) at Utrecht University in the Netherlands.[citation needed] She has been Head of Rule of Law at The Hague Institute for Global Justice.[citation needed]
In Mihr's 2017 (2019) book on 'Regime Consolidation and Transitional Justice', she develops a theory to explain the impact of Transitional Justice measures in the context of political regime consolidations. The core essence of this theory is to explain, how after a radical rupture or war, the new political system and its actors are able and willing to implement measures that allow political institutions and actors to democratically progress and increase their quality of democracy, or not.[citation needed]
In her works in glocal governance (Glocal Governance in the Anthropocene, 2022), Mihr develops an analytical framework to assess how local actors and institutions implement global and international norms in order to govern effectively, without the interference of state authorities or governments.
Publications
Amnesty International in der DDR, Der Einsatz für Menschenrechte im Visier der Stasi, Chrs. Links Verlag, Berlin, 2002.
The UN-Decade for Human Rights Education and the Inclusion of National Minorities, (together with Mahler/Toivanen) (eds.), Peter Lang Verlag, Frankfurt/ Berlin, 2009.
Human Rights Awareness, Education and Democratization: The challenge for the 21st Century, in: Journal of Human Rights, Volume 8, Issue 2, April 2009, Routledge, Francis & Taylor Group, London, pp. 177–189.
The Impact of Amnesty International's Policies and Campaigns During the Cold War – the Case Study of East Germany, in: Wilco de Jonge, Brianne McGonigle-Leyh, Anja Mihr and Lars van Troost (eds.), 50 Years of Amnesty International, Reflections and Perspectives, SIM Special 36, University of Utrecht, 2011, pp. 21–50.
Human Rights in the 21st Century; Continuity and Change since 9/11 (together with Goodhart) (eds.), Palgrave Macmillan, 2011
Mihr/Gibney: Handbook of Human Rights, 2 vol. SAGE Publication, London et al., 2014
The SAGE Handbook of Human Rights (2 Volumes) 2014