Driessen, Michael
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Institutional profile
Michael Driessen is Professor of Political Science and International Affairs and the inaugural Director of the MA program in International Affairs at John Cabot University. Michael received his doctorate from the University of Notre Dame and has been a post-doctoral fellow at Georgetown University's School of Foreign Service in Doha, Qatar as well as a Jean Monnet Fellow at the European University Institute in Florence. He has taught at John Hopkins University’s School of Advanced International Studies in Bologna and holds a research affiliation with Cambridge University’s Von Hügel Institute. He also serves as an advisor for the Adyan Foundation in Lebanon.
Professor Driessen also directs the Rome Summer Seminars on Religion and Global Politics, an annual writing workshop and policy dialogue supported by a consortium of institutions and scholars working at the crossroads of religion and international relations and held under the patronage of the Italian Ministry of Foreign Affairs.
Professor Driessen's research focuses on the role of public religions in Catholic and Muslim societies, and he teaches courses on Religion and Global Politics, the politics of the Middle East and Mediterranean, and War, Peace and Conflict Resolution. His main interests include the relationship between religion and democratization processes in the Mediterranean region; Interreligious Engagement and Peacebuilding; political Islam and political Catholicism; and theories of religious humanism. He is also a longtime member of the communities of L’Arche and is working on the Disability and Knowledge research project co-sponsored by the Von Hügel Institute.