DEPARTMENT: Economics, International Relations and International Business

FACULTY: Faculty of Economics, Business and Communication

Research group: Public Policy, International Security and Global Governance

Email: josecarlos.aranguez@universidadeuropea.es

Personal web: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-1175-5471

Address: Facultad de Ciencias Económicas, Empresariales y de la Comunicación. C/Tajo, s/n. Edificio E (Villaviciosa de Odón, Madrid (28670))

Doctor by the Universidad Complutense de Madrid with the thesis España y Francia frente al desafío del nacionalismo en el protectorado de Marruecos (1930-1956) tensiones internacionales y conflictos internos 2019. Supervised by Dr. Juan Carlos Pereira Castañares.

José Carlos Aránguez holds a PhD in Contemporary History from the Complutense University of Madrid (UCM). He also holds a Master's Degree in Compulsory Secondary Education and Baccalaureate Teaching from the Pontifical University of Comillas in Madrid (UPC), a Master's Degree in Contemporary History (UCM), and a Bachelor's Degree in History (UCM). Accredited as a Contracted Doctor and Private University Professor by ANECA, he has six years of research experience. As part of his teaching experience, he has been hired as a pre-doctoral researcher in University Teacher Training (FPU) at the UCM, a professor in the Master's Degree in International Relations and Communication at the Camilo José Cela University (UCJC), and a professor at the University for Seniors at the Rey Juan Carlos University (URJC). In 2017, he completed a short research stay at L'École des Hautes Études en Sciences Sociales (EHESS) in Paris. He currently works as a professor and coordinator of the Bachelor's Degree in International Relations at the European University of Madrid (UEM), where he has taught courses on Spanish Foreign Policy; United States Foreign Policy; Concept of International Relations: Actors and Factors; Current Affairs Observatory; and International Public Opinion. In terms of his research career, he has been a member of the Research Group on the History of International Relations (GHistRI) since 2014 and has participated in five R&D&I research projects to date. He is the author of several book chapters and articles on the history of international relations, with a special interest in the field of African (post)colonial studies. Within this field, his main line of research focuses on the actions of Spain and France in Morocco during the Protectorate period (1912-1956) and their relationship with Moroccan nationalism (1930-1956).