Pierre Hassner
Pierre Hassner was a Romanian-born French geopolitical scientist and philosopher.
He was director of research emeritus at Center for International Studies and Research and at the Paris Institute of Political Studies. He has also taught at the European Center at Johns Hopkins University in Bologna.
In 2003, he received the Alexis de Tocqueville award.
Biography
Hassner was born in Bucharest, Romania. He was of Romanian Jewish origin. Hassner moved to France in 1948 at the age of fifteen with his parents who were fleeing the communist regime. The same year, he read The Great Schism by Raymond Aron, a book that left a deep impression upon him. He joined the École normale supérieure, obtaining the agrégation in philosophy in 1955. He became one of the students of Raymond Aron and Leo Strauss.In his Memoirs published in 1983, Raymond Aron wrote: "In I do not know what circumstances, Pierre Hassner, who sometimes attended my classes, gave a brilliant, dizzying presentation on Thucydides... I told him that never, from a student or teacher, had I heard a speech of comparable quality." Under the direction of Aaron, he had begun a thesis,
that was never completed.
In 1957, he acquired French nationality.
From 1992, he assumed the presidency of the Kosovo Committee.
Hassner died in the 15th arrondissement of Paris.
Theories
Pierre Hassner devoted himself to the study of international relations and geopolitical problems, which he wished to shed light on with philosophy. In his numerous articles and books, he offered informed and original analyses of the evolution of international conflicts during the Cold War era, and after the fall of the Berlin Wall. He thus became involved in the political debate at the time of the war which divided the peoples of the former Yugoslavia between 1991 and 1995.His research focuses on war, violence and totalitarianism, international relations notably in the history of political thought and in Europe after the Cold War. In his theories on totalitarianism and post-Cold War] world political evolution, he analyzed Chinese and Russian political regimes and, to qualify them, coined the neologism of "democrature", to denote States which are no longer under totalitarian regime but are not yet democracies and therefore hide their authoritarian nature under a democratic facade.
In a famous article, Hassner shows that we have gone from the world of Locke, with openings on Kant and Marx. Thus he sees in the events of September 11 and the policies that followed.
Works
- Change and Security in Europe, Adelphi Papers 45 and 48, London, International Institute for Strategic Studies, 1968
- "Kant" and "Hegel", edited by Leo Strauss and Joseph Cropsey, History of Political Philosophy, Chicago, 1973.
- La Revanche des passions: Métamorphoses de la violence et crises du politique, Paris, Fayard, 2015
- Justifier la guerre? De l'humanitaire au contre-terrorisme, Paris, Presses de Sciences Po, 2005.
- La Terreur et l'Empire. La violence et la paix II, Paris, Le Seuil, 2003.
- Guerre et sociétés. États et violence après la guerre froide, Paris, Karthala, 2003.
- Washington et le Monde. Dilemmes d'une superpuissance, Paris, Autrement, 2003.
- La Violence et la Paix. De la bombe atomique au nettoyage ethnique, Paris, Le Seuil., 2000. Partial and augmented re-edition of four texts of the work published by Éditions Esprit in 1995.