Fellow

Romina Rekers

Photo: private
Photo: private

Postdoctoral researcher – University of Graz, Austria

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

Romina Rekers is a postdoctoral researcher at the Institute of Philosophy at the University of Graz, where she led the FWF-funded project “A Political Conception of Transitional Justice.” She is an associate member of the Climate Change Field of Excellence at the University of Graz and the principal investigator of the projects “Climate-Health Adaptation Strategies in South America” and “Women’s Participation in Climate-Sensitive Infectious Disease Policy in Paraguay,” supported by the Oxford–Johns Hopkins Global Infectious Disease Ethics Collaborative (GLIDE). She also directed the WHO-funded project “A Case of Co-Production of Climate-Health Research Ethical Rules with Members of Grassroots Women’s Organizations in South America,” implemented by the University of Graz. Her doctoral and postdoctoral research has been supported by grants from the Argentine National Council for Scientific and Technological Research (CONICET) and the Austrian Academy of Sciences (ÖAW).

Research project: The human right to health in the face of infectious diseases

In addressing the challenges posed by infectious diseases (IDs) to the human right to health, there are two aspects to consider: its content and its justification. This project address the question on how the transnational and intergenerational nature of IDs should reshape the content of the human right to health.
Identifying the content of the human right to health requires determining what is the protected interest and what is the threat(s), what are the threats against which it protects us, or what are the thresholds to be reached in order to protect these interests. This task also involves questions about the concrete rights and duties, the duty to protect/guarantee, negative and positive duties, and the level of protection required.
In this project, I will (provisionally) take as starting point the conception of human rights as a political practice (Beitz 2009). This practice encompasses moral, legal (international, regional, national), social/political (litigation, advocacy) and ethical dimensions.
In this 10-month project, I will focus on the duties of governments to protect the human right to health. The duty to protect can be correlated with the right not to have one’s health seriously threatened by others. And the duty to ensure the right to health correlates with the right to the highest/attainable standard of physical and mental health. The principle of progressivity and non-regressivity can help to specify the content of these specific duties and the level of protection and guarantee required.

This project will explore the hypothesis that some particular circumstances related to IDs may require to review the content of the duty to protect/guarantee the human right to health. Some of the circumstances to be explored are:

a. The communicable nature of IDs combined with porous borders for goods and people.

b. The evolving nature of the IDs.

c. The importance of other countries complying with IDs surveillance and containment regulations.

d. The importance of time and tipping points in the level of protection that policies/interventions can provide.

e. The risks of inequitable burden-sharing and the shifting of costs or vulnerabilities between countries.

f. The strong link with ecosystems.

This project aims to identify how the particular circumstances of IDs should shape the content of the duty to protect and guarantee the human right to health and the interpretation of the principles of progressivity and non-regressivity. To this end, it will cover three case studies:

1) Climate-sensitive infectious diseases

2) Pandemics

3) Antimicrobial resistance (AMR)

  • Publikationen

    Rekers, R., Gerbaldo, M. V., Yabar, C., Garat, C. R., & Rekers, L. (2025). Justice enablers of climate-health adaptation in South America. The Journal of Climate Change and Health, 23, 100459. Rekers, R., de Araujo, M., Daly, T., Fior, P., Gerbaldo, M. V., Jamrozik, E., Palmeiro Silva, Y., Yabar, C., & Luna, F. (Accepted, 2025). Defining research priorities on climate-sensitive infectious disease justice for South America. In Climate Change and Health – Perspectives from Developing Countries. Climate Change Management series, Springer Nature. Rekers, R., & Luna, F. (2023). Pandemic justice for and from Latin America. In F. Luna, R. Rekers, E. Jamrozik, & R. Gur-Arie (Eds.), Global Pandemic Justice. ethic@ - An International Journal for Moral Philosophy, 22(1). Rekers, R. (2022). Epistemic transitional justice: The recognition of testimonial injustice in the context of reproductive rights. Redescriptions: Political Thought, Conceptual History & Feminist Theory, 25(1).

News from the research center

News
19.06.2026

Internationales Symposium würdigt Lebenswerk von Jürgen Habermas

Am Freitag, den 19. Juni 2026, würdigte das Forschungszentrum Normative Orders gemeinsam mit dem Suhrkamp-Verlag den verstorbenen Jürgen Habermas mit einem internationalen Symposium an der Goethe-Universität Frankfurt.

more information ›
Event
23.06.2026 | Frankfurt am Main

AI Truth Regimes

Panel Discussion

Artificial intelligence is currently transforming the way knowledge and truth are produced and understood. With the advent of AI, people are progressively transitioning from being active subjects and producers of epistemic processes to becoming their mere objects. The of this discussion will be critical engagements towards these developments as well as opportunities for resistance. With Antonio Somaini, Júlia Nueno Guitart (Forensic Architecture) and Medico International.

more information ›
Event
23./24.06.2026 | Frankfurt am Main

The Legacy of Kant’s Political Philosophy

Workshop

A two-day workshop on Howard Williams‘ new book about Immanuel Kant‘s political philosophy.

more information ›
Event
23.06.2026 | Frankfurt am Main

Wehrhafte Demokratie: Chancen und Grenzen des Parteiverbots

Panel Discussion

Im Mittelpunkt des Abends steht die Frage, ob und unter welchen verfassungsrechtlichen, politischen und gesellschaftlichen Voraussetzungen ein Verbot einer demokratisch gewählten, rechtsnational ausgerichteten Partei als legitimes Mittel in Betracht gezogen werden kann oder nicht. Ausgehend von den normativen Grundlagen des Parteienverbots im Grundgesetz, möchten wir die hohen rechtlichen Hürden und demokratietheoretischen Spannungsfelder dieser Maßnahme erörtern – zwischen Pluralismus und Selbstverteidigung, zwischen Meinungsfreiheit und Schutz der freiheitlichen demokratischen Grundordnung.

more information ›
Event
22.06.2026 | Frankfurt am Main

Rechtsextremismus und Polizei - Erscheinungsformen, Umgangsweisen, Perspektiven

Panel Discussion

Die Diskussion knüpft an den Sammelband „Rechtsextremismus als Herausforderung für Polizei und Gesellschaft“ an, der aktuelle Perspektiven aus Wissenschaft, Praxis und Zivilgesellschaft zusammenführt.

more information ›
News
18.05.2026

Videopodcast-Reihe „Our Planet, Our Health“ gestartet

Mit „Our Planet, Our Health“ startet eine neue Videopodcast-Reihe zu Fragen globaler Gesundheitsgerechtigkeit. Die Reihe, gehostet von Dr. Romina Rekers, ist eine Initiative des Global Health Justice Postdoctoral Programme (GHJ), gefördert von der Höppschen Stiftung.

more information ›
Publication
12.05.2026 | Online article

Disinhibited Informalization: Talk Radio, Bro Podcasts and the Aesthetics of Populism

This essay by Johannes Völz is a revised and updated translation of “Enthemmte Informalisierung: Talk Radio, Bro-Podcasts und die Ästhetik des Populismus,” WestEnd: Neue Zeitschrift für Sozialforschung 22.2 (2025): 3–24. It is published here as part of the b2o Review’s “Stop the Right” dossier.

more information ›
Event
25./26.06.2026 | Frankfurt

DGTF Conference 2026: Shifting Regimes, Changing Orders

Conference

Conference as part of WDC 2026 in collaboration with Deutsche Gesellschaft für Designtheorie und -forschung (DGTF), Kunstgewerbemuseum/Design Campus SKD and Design and Democracy

more information ›