Dag Herbjørnsrud (born 1971) is a historian of ideas, author, a former editor-in-chief, and a founder of Center for Global and Comparative History of Ideas (Senter for global og komparativ idéhistorie, SGOKI) in Oslo. His writings have been published by Aeon, the American Philosophical Association (APA), Dialogue and Universalism, Cosmopolis, etc., and he was formerly a columnist for Al Jazeera English. Herbjørnsrud was the guest editor of a special issue of the bilingual journal Cosmopolis (Brussels), on "Decolonizing the Academy";[1][2] one of his contributors was the author and Professor Ngũgĩ wa Thiong'o.[3] He sits on the Editorial Review Board of the book series Global Epistemics at Rowman & Littlefield.[4]
In May 2019, the paper "Beyond decolonizing: global intellectual history and reconstruction of a comparative method" was published online by the journal Global Intellectual History. Here, Herbjørnsrud proposed a global comparative method for the discipline, based on the three concepts of "context, connection, and comparison."[19] The article became the most read article in the journal, and it is "[i]n the top 5% of all research outputs scored by Altmetric."[20] In the Winter 2021 issue of The Review of Higher Education (Johns Hopkins University Press), the Texas State University scholars Z. W. Taylor and Richard J. Reddick cited the paper, and they wrote: "As higher education has rapidly globalized in the past few decades (Altbach, 2016), institutional leaders of higher education could have their theory of intellectual reconstruction informed by Herbjørnsrud’s (2019) argument for an interconnected, global perspective of cultures, people, and their histories. (...) Extending and synthesizing the work of Crozier (1901), Dewey (1920), W.E.B. Du Bois and Gates Jr. (2010), Hann and Hart (2011) and Herbjørnsrud (2019), the following section will forward a theory of intellectual reconstruction specifically for institutional leaders of higher education and their many educational stakeholders. (...) At the center of the theory is Herbjørnsrud’s (2019) emphasis on adopting a global comparative perspective (...)"[21][22]
"Preface", in: The Hatata Inquiries: Two Texts of Seventeenth-Century African Philosophy from Ethiopia about Reason, the Creator, and Our Ethical Responsibilities (Transl./Eds. Ralph Lee , Mehari Worku , Wendy Laura Belcher, and Jeremy R. Brown) (De Gruyter, 2023)
"The Quest for a Global Age of Reason. Part I: Asia, Africa, the Greeks, and the Enlightenment Roots" and "The Quest for a Global Age of Reason. Part II: Cultural Appropriation and Racism in the Name of Enlightenment" (Dialogue and Universalism, 3/2021): https://philpapers.org/rec/HERTQF-2
"Beyond decolonizing: global intellectual history and reconstruction of a comparative method", Global Intellectual History (Vol. 6, Issue 5, 2021, pp 614–640. Online since May 10, 2019). DOI: https://doi.org/10.1080/23801883.2019.1616310
Gå inn i din tid. Thomas Hylland Eriksen i samtale med Dag Herbjørnsrud (Res Publica, 2019) ("Engaging with the World: Thomas Hylland Eriksen in Conversation with Dag Herbjørnsrud")
^Dåstøl, Astrid (1 February 2008). "Ny redaktør i Ny Tid" [New editor-in-chief in Ny Tid]. Vårt Land (in Norwegian). Archived from the original on 18 September 2012. Retrieved 24 January 2011.