PD Dr. Dorothea Heuschert-Laage

Investigator

Department of Mongolian and Tibetan Studies
Institute of Oriental and Asian Studies (IOA)
University of Bonn
Brühler Straße 7
53119 Bonn
Phone: +49 228 73 7465
dheusch@uni-bonn.de

Investigator_Dorothea Heuschert-Laage.JPG
© Dorothea Heuschert-Laage

Academic Profile

Dorothea Heuschert-Laage works on different forms of dependency in Mongolian societies and approaches this topic from a legal history perspective. Her current project, which is funded by the Gerda Henkel Foundation, is entitled "Law, Property, and Gender in Qing dynasty Mongolia (1636-1911) on the basis of court records from Qanggin-banner (Inner Mongolia, China)."

She is especially interested in the interlinking of the law of the Qing state (1636–1911) with practices and normative knowledge at the local level. How did the integration of Mongols into the Qing state transform or reinforce dependency relations and how was this reflected in the terminology? Dorothea Heuschert-Laage investigates these questions using indigenous Mongolian legal texts as well as records of legal cases from Qing dynasty Mongolian archives.

1 monograph, more than 20 articles

2021
Habilitation, University of Bonn, Venia legendi in Mongolian Studies

1993–1997
Ph.D. in Mongolian Studies, University of Bonn and Harvard University (USA)

1985–1993
M.A. in Sinology, Mongolian Studies and Medieval History, University of Bonn and Inner Mongolia University (China)

2014–2017
Research Assistant (SNF), Institute for the Science of Religion and Central Asian Studies, University of Bern, Switzerland

since 2021
TRA 5: Past Worlds and Modern Questions. Cultures Across Time and Space, University of Bonn

2014–2017
Research project (SNF): "Mongolian Perceptions of the World in Times of Emerging Global Networks: The Ordos Region in the Last Decades of the Qing Empire," Institute for the Science of Religion and Central Asian Studies, University of Bern, Switzerland

2011–13
Research project MPI: "Dealing with Nationalities in Eurasia. How Russian and Chinese Agencies Managed Ethnic Diversity in the late 19th and early 20th Centuries," Max Planck Institute for Social Anthropology in Halle/Saale

1997–1998
Cataloguing Manchu manuscripts and woodprints preserved at the University Library of the Catholic University of Leuven (Belgium), Ferdinand Verbiest Institute

1997–1998
Cataloguing Manchu manuscripts and woodprints preserved at the University Library of the Catholic University of Leuven (Belgium), Ferdinand Verbiest Institute

2022–2023
Research scholarship from the Gerda Henkel Foundation

1997
Research Award of the Societas Uralo-Altaica e.V.

1995–1996
Junior Scholar Grant, Chiang Ching-kuo Foundation for International Scholarly Exchange

1995
Graduate Scholarship of North Rhine-Westphalia

1993–1994
German Academic Exchange Service, one-year-grant for doctoral candidates

1987–1989
German Academic Exchange Service, two-year-grant for M.A. candidates1997
Research Award of the Societas Uralo-Altaica e.V.

1995–1996
Junior Scholar Grant, Chiang Ching-kuo Foundation for International Scholarly Exchange

1995
Graduate Scholarship of North Rhine-Westphalia

1993–1994
German Academic Exchange Service, one-year-grant for doctoral candidates

1987–1989
German Academic Exchange Service, two-year-grant for M.A. candidates

  • 2020. "Mobility and the Origins of Mongolian Ethnography: Lobsangčoidan’s Understanding Mongolian Customs (1918)." In Acta Mongolica. Special Issue: Mobility and Immobility in Mongolian Societies 19: 30–40.
  • 2017. "Globalisation or Isolation: Regulating Mobility of Mongols during the Qing Period (1636–1911)." In Mongolian Responses to Globalisation Processes, edited by I. Stolpe, J. Nordby, and U. Gonzales, 21–43. Bonner Asienstudien 13. Berlin: EBVerlag.
  • 2017. "Manchu-Mongolian Controversies over Judicial Competence and the Formation of the
    Lifanyuan." In Managing Frontiers in Qing China. The Lifanyuan and Libu Revisited, edited by D. Schorkowitz and Chia Ning, 224–253. Brill's Inner Asian Library 35. Leiden: Brill.
  • 2015/2016. "Negotiating Modalities of Succession: The Interplay between Different Legal Spheres in Eighteenth-Century Mongolia." In Buddhism, Law & Society 1: 165–194.
  • 2014. "From Personal Network to Institution Building: The Lifanyuan and the Formalization of Manchu-Mongol Relations." In History and Anthropology 25(5): 648–669.
  • 1998. Under the name Dorothea Heuschert. "Legal Pluralism in the Qing Empire: Manchu Legislation for the Mongols." In The International History Review 20(2): 310–324. 
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