Johanna Jauernig

Visiting Faculty Fellow, Center for Ethics

The Murphy Institute
Center for Ethics
Office Address
1326 Audubon Street
Johanna Jauernig profile photo

Biography

Johanna Jauernig is a 2024-2025 Faculty Fellow at the Center for Ethics and has a background in philosophy, experimental economics, and moral psychology. Her research is rooted in the idea that understanding both the incentive structures and the cognitive mechanisms behind moral attitudes is crucial for the ethical analysis of societal problems. With this approach, she addresses topics such as market skepticism, moral narratives in housing and land-use discourse, and the societal impacts of disruptive technologies. 

After graduating with a degree in philosophy and psychology from the University of Munich, she obtained her doctorate degree at the Technical University of Munich, TUM School of Management. Her dissertation, which received the Max-Weber-Prize for Business Ethics, consists of experiments on competition and anti-social behavior and a reflection on the use of economic experiments in ethics. Her articles have appeared in journals like Public Choice, Journal of Economic Behavior and Organization, Journal of Economic Psychology, and Philosophy and Technology. In her current research projects, she investigates the psychological mechanisms that drive people’s perception of markets and explores the concept of moral dysfunction in policy discourse. . 

 

Publications

Jauernig, J., Uhl, M., Pies, I. (2024), When Goliath sells to David. Explaining price gouging perceptions through power, Public Choice, 1-17. 

Jauernig, J., Uhl, M., Waldhof, G. (2023), Moral absolutism and genetically engineered foods: A representative study from Germany, Science and Engineering Ethics, 29(5), 34. 

Jauernig, J., Brosig, S., & Hüttel, S. (2023). Profession and residency matter: Farmers' preferences for farmland price regulation in Germany. Journal of Agricultural Economics. 

Jauernig, J., Uhl, M., & Walkowitz, G. (2022). People prefer moral discretion to algorithms: Algorithm aversion beyond intransparency. Philosophy & Technology, 35(1), 2. 

Jauernig, J., Uhl, M., & Valentinov, V. (2021). The ethics of corporate hypocrisy: An experimental approach. Futures, 131, 102757. 

Education & Affiliations

  • Ph.D TUM School of Management, Technical University of Munich
  • Postdoctoral Research Associate, University of Arizona’s Center for the Philosophy of Freedom