Cecilia María Coronado Angulo

Cecilia María Coronado Angulo

ccoronado@up.edu.mx

She holds a Ph.D. in Philosophy from the University of Navarra, Spain, and is a Level 1 member of the National System of Researchers of the National Council for Science and Technology (CONACYT) in Mexico; she is also a member of the Philosophical Association of Mexico (AFM). She earned a Master’s degree in Governance and Organizational Culture from the University of Navarra, Spain, and holds a Bachelor’s degree in Philosophy from the Universidad Panamericana, Mexico. During her studies in Spain, she completed a research fellowship at the University of Halle, Germany, with Professor Robert Schnepf. Her research interests include social philosophy, critical theory, social institutions, and migration.

Since August 2014, she has been a professor and researcher at the Institute of Humanities at the Universidad Panamericana Mexico), where she teaches courses on Social Philosophy and Man and the Contemporary World. She also teaches Social Philosophy in the School of Philosophy. She co-directed (along with Dr. Luis Xavier López Farjeat) the research project titled “Migration, Territory, and Identities” from 2017 to 2019 and currently directs the project “Identity and Plurality in the University: A Critical Perspective.” Both projects are funded by the UP Research Promotion Fund. She has served as a reviewer for the journals Tópicos, Civitas, and Perseitas, among many others, as well as for the publishers Aliosventos and NUN. Her most recent publications are: “Group Asylum, Sovereignty, and the Ethics of Care” (Social Sciences, 2020, Vol. 9, No. 8), “Instrumental Reason, Society, and Institutions: A Profile of Max Weber and the Frankfurt School” (2019, EUNSA, Pamplona), and “Freedom as a Condition of Justice in Axel Honneth” (Open Insight, 2018, Vol. 9, No. 15). She has been a member of the board of directors of the Institute of Humanities since August 2016, served as academic director of Contemporary Man and the World and Social Philosophy for over five years, and currently serves as deputy director of the Institute of Humanities.