Liesbet Hooghe
Quick Facts
Biography
Liesbet Hooghe (born December 1, 1962, in Oudenaarde, Belgium) is a political scientist, the W. R. Kenan Jr. Professor of Political Science at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. She also holds a research professorship in multilevel governance at the VU University Amsterdam. Liesbet Hooghe is the spouse of Gary Marks.
Education
She graduated summa cum laude from Katholieke Universiteit Leuven with a Licentiate in Political Sciences in 1984, and received her Ph.D. in Political Science from KU Leuven in 1989. She was a Fulbright Postdoctoral Fellow at Cornell University in 1989-90, and a postdoctoral fellow at Nuffield College, Oxford (1991–94).
Academic appointments and honors
Hooghe was appointed Assistant Professor at the University of Toronto in 1994, obtaining tenure in 1999. In 2000 she moved to the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. She was promoted to full professor in 2004, and appointed W.R. Kenan Jr. Distinguished Professor in 2011. Since 2004 she has also been a chaired professor at the VU University of Amsterdam.
She has held fellowships at the European University Institute, Florence, the Wissenschaftszentrum at Berlin, the Hanse Wissenschaftskolleg in Delmenhorst, the Freie Universität Berlin, and visiting professorships at Sciences Po, Pompeu Fabra, and the Vienna IHS. In 2012, she was inducted as a Foreign Member into the Royal Flemish Academy of Belgium for Science and the Arts.
Publications and leadership
Hooghe has published six scholarly books, several special journal issues, and many articles in the leading journals of political science,
She served as Chair of the European Union Studies Association (2007–09), and was Chair of the European Politics & Society Section of the American Political Science Association (2003–06). She has received the Alexander von Humboldt Research Fellowship (2002-3), Jean Monnet Fellowships (1996-7; 2002-3 declined), a Fellowship at the Hanse Institute for Advanced Study (2007–08), and a Fellowship at the Research Center of the Free University of Berlin (2010–11).
Recent research
Her academic reputation rests primarily on her conception of “multilevel governance”—how government is organized from the local to the global level. She has written extensively on the European Union and on sub-national government and her publications have been translated in French, German, Spanish, Italian, Romanian, Swedish, and Chinese.
Over the past fifteen years, Liesbet Hooghe, with her spouse Gary Marks, has sought to theorize the conditions of multilevel governance while striving to gain better information. Much of her research and publications can be categorized under five broad topics: regional authority and multilevel governance; international authority and multilevel governance; party politics and public opinion on European integration; political elites and the European Commission; measurement and data collection. In May 2010, Professors Hooghe and Marks received a five-year European Research Grant to conduct research on the causes and consequences of multilevel governance.
Books
2010. The European Commission of the Twenty-First Century
2010. The Rise of Regional Authority: A Comparative Study of 42 Democracies
2002. The European Commission and The Integration of Europe: Images of Governance
2001. Multi-Level Governance and European Integration
1996. Cohesion Policy and European Integration. Building Multilevel Governance
1989. Separatisme: Conflict Tussen Twee Projecten voor Natievorming