Fellow

Derek Andrews

Postdoctoral Fellow, Dalhousie University – Halifax, Canada

Duration of stay: October 2025 to July 2026

In cooperation with Prof. Dr. Rainer Forst

Global Health Justice Postdoctoral Programme funded by Höppsche Stiftung gGmbH, Villmar

Derek Andrews recently completed his Ph.D. at Dalhousie University, in Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada. His research interests lie at the intersection of metaphysics, ethics, and the philosophy of medicine/psychiatry. His dissertation, entitled, “Psychiatric Natural Kinds: Implications for Nosology, Practice, and Policymaking”, consists of a novel account of the metaphysics of mental disorders and a critical examination of the application of inductive inferences made on the basis of natural kind membership in health care policymaking.
Andrews’ current project aims to investigate the role of disease concepts in the formulation of health care policy and the injustices that may arise as a result of conflicts between disease concepts employed within and across institutional contexts. His research seeks to determine whether and to what extent these concepts align, in order to answer questions such as: In light of what narratives or norms are particular disease concepts employed? How does this vary across contexts and institutions? And how can this go wrong, what injustices does this create, and how ought these be addressed? Andrews contends that
resolving at least some issues of injustice in health care will require recognizing that there is no single concept of disease that can serve legitimate strategic aims across contexts, applying the concept of disease only in those contexts in which it serves legitimate strategic aims, and ensuring that the concept of disease employed in policy tracks the relevant legitimate strategic aims of stakeholders.

Research project: Disease Concepts, Institutional Norms, and Legitimate Strategic Goals: Tensions in the Formulation of Just (Mental) Health Policy

The concept of disease is foundational to questions of health and justice, as the distinction between what is and is not a disease – minimally, an appropriate target of medical intervention that entitles the bearer to certain kinds of care or accommodation – tracks what are and are not appropriate targets of health care-related policy. Furthermore, there may be conflicts in what is considered a disease across institutions, based on the implicit concept of disease employed in their policies. This problem is exacerbated by the lack of a single unified concept of disease upon which could be relied to address these issues. Debate on this topic is longstanding and has produced a range of proposals, but even the basic claim that having a disease is bad and harmful, with which these proposals generally agree, does not track across the full range of entities medicine is concerned with. It seems that whatever concept of disease we employ, we leave out conditions that should be treated as diseases, or gloss over important features of others, leaving their disease status unclear. This may introduce tensions between concepts of disease employed by different institutions, potentially resulting in the unjust treatment of individuals with these conditions.
In this project, I seek to investigate the intersection of institutional (moral, epistemic, etc.) norms, individual and institutional strategic goals, and disease concepts employed in the construction of health care policy. I do so with the aim of elucidating the relation between implicit norms in policy formation and the injustices that can arise as a result of conflicts between the norms implicit in the policies of different institutions involved in the provision of health care or related activities, such as health insurance companies or government disability benefit programs. As this project is designed to be completed within the ten month period of this postdoctoral fellowship, I will limit my analysis to the German context.
I contend that this project will reveal that resolving at least some issues of injustice in health care will require: (1) recognizing that there is no single concept of disease that can perform the work it is employed to do across contexts, and failing to do so may lead to injustices in health care access, provision, etc.; (2) applying the concept of disease only in those contexts in which it serves legitimate strategic aims; (3) assessing and identifying legitimate strategic aims, which may be context- and stakeholder-sensitive; and (4) ensuring that the concept of disease employed in policy tracks the relevant legitimate strategic aims of stakeholders, and that this is consistent across contexts and institutions whose aims justifiably align. Furthermore, I argue my proposed project will reveal that a broad, context-insensitive application of a single disease concept to different policymaking contexts is inappropriate, given differences between disease concepts, stakeholders, and legitimate aims across contexts.

  • Publikationen

    Andrews, D. (2016). The gendered body and the medical-scientific gaze: Foucauldian theory and feminist epistemologies of neuroscience. Dialogue: Journal of Phi Sigma Tau International Honor Society for Philosophy, 58(2-3), 89-97.

News from the research center

Event
08.07.2026 | Frankfurt am Main

Krisenhafter Wandel der Gegenwart. Einige soziologische Beobachtungen

Lecture

Der Vortrag von Prof. Dr. Steffen Mau beschäftigt sich mit den Krisensymptomen des liberalen Gesellschaftmodells. Krisenhafter sozialer Wandel ist dadurch zu charakterisieren, dass er nicht allmählich, sondern abrupt vor sich geht und zur Destabilisierung bestehender Institutionen, Ordnungen und Normen führt. Zugleich sollte er von den Menschen auch als krisenhaft erlebt werden und mit Orientierungslosigkeit, Vertrauensverlust und erhöhten Spannungen einhergehen. Der Vortrag findet im Rahmen der Kantorowicz Lectures in Political Language statt.

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Event
18.04.2026 | Frankfurt am Main

Das Prinzip Donald Trump und die Verrohung der Welt

Panel Discussion, Lecture

Ein neuer Politikstil macht international Karriere. Er ist gekennzeichnet von Vulgarität, Verrohung und erklärter Rechtsfeindschaft. Machtinteressen werden nicht mehr juristisch bemäntelt. Stattdessen wird das angebliche Recht des Stärkeren zur Staatsdoktrin gemacht – innenpolitisch wie außenpolitisch. Treibende Kraft hinter dieser Verrohung der politischen Sitten ist ein US-Präsident, der nicht nur die amerikanische Gesellschaft und Kultur, sondern auch die globale Ordnung nach seinen Vorstellungen und Interessen umgestaltet. Die Römerberggespräche wollen diesen Politikstil verstehen.

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Event
29.04.2026 | Frankfurt am Main

Kulturindustrie heute?

Panel Discussion

Das Gespräch „Kulturindustrie heute?“ widmet sich der Aktualität und Tragfähigkeit eines zentralen Begriffs der Kritischen Theorie. Die Filmwissenschaftlerin Gertrud Koch diskutiert im Rahmen der Gesprächsreihe "Frankfurter Schule" mit dem Filmkritiker Bert Rebhandl die gegenwärtigen Formen kultureller Produktion und Verbreitung vor dem Hintergrund von Digitalisierung, Plattformen und globalen Medienmärkten.

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Event
20.03.2026 | Frankfurt am Main

40 Jahre Schengen-Raum

Colloquium

Der 1984 geschlossene Schengen-Vertrag schuf einen heute 29 Staaten umfassenden Raum ohne Binnengrenzen, doch Migration über die Außengrenzen führte zuletzt zur Wiedereinführung von Kontrollen, auch durch die Bundesregierung ab 8. Mai 2025. Das Walter Hallstein-Kolloquium diskutiert die rechtliche Zulässigkeit, wirtschaftliche Folgen insbesondere für Arbeitsmigration und Arbeitsmarkt sowie die Zukunft des Schengen-Raums.

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News
12.02.2026

Satanist politics and the decline of reason in liberal democracies

For the last time in the winter semester 2025/26, the Research Center hosted the lecture series "Am Scheidepunkt. On the crisis of democracy". At the end, philosopher Michael Rosen from Harvard University presented his concept of "satanic politics" as a variant of the political interpretation of the world.

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News
09.02.2026

On the topicality of the concept of violence based on Camus and Derrida

Prof. Dr. Christine Abbt from the University of St. Gallen gave a lecture on democracies and the concept of violence as part of the lecture series "At the crossroads? On the crisis of democracy", she gave a lecture on democracies and the concept of violence. Under the title "Defending democracies. On the topicality of the concept of violence in Camus and Derrida", the philosopher discussed forms of violence and revolt and categorized them with regard to a democratic setting.

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Publication
04.02.2026 | Journal article

New Perspectives on Trust in International Conflicts

Wille, Tobias; Simon, Hendrik; Daase, Christopher; Deitelhoff, Nicole; Wheeler, Nicholas J.; Holmes, Marcus; Rathbun, Brian C.; Acharya, Amitav; Mitzen, Jennifer (2026): „New Perspectives on Trust in International Conflicts“. In: International Studies Review 28 (1), viaf027.

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News
02.02.2026

States competing for people - David Owen on civil geopolitics

As part of the lecture series "At the Crossroads - The Future of Democracy", David Owen from the University of Southampton presented his concept of civil geopolitics.

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News
20.01.2026

Christine Hentschel on reorientation in catastrophic times

As part of the lecture series "At the crossroads? On the crisis of democracy", the sociologist spoke about living in and dealing with catastrophic times. Against the backdrop of the destruction of living conditions, wars, permanent crises and threats to democracy, Hentschel addressed the infiltration of the catastrophic into everyday social life and a changing activist and literary approach to the future.

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