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Princeton University Department of Politics SELECTED INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS SCHOLARS AT PRINCETON INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS FACULTY IN THE POLITICS DEPARTMENT Gary Bass Associate Professor of Politics and International Affairs [email protected] www.princeton.edu/~gjbass/ Bass’s research interests include international security, ethics in international relations, American foreign policy, war crimes tribunals, and human rights. He is the author of Stay the Hand of Vengeance: The Politics of War Crimes Tribunals, as well as articles and book chapters on international justice. He is completing a book manuscript on the politics of humanitarian intervention and the origins of the modern human rights movement. He has won the Stanley Kelley teaching prize in the Politics Department, and has held fellowships from the Carr Center for Human Rights Policy at Harvard, the MacArthur Foundation, and the Krupp Foundation. Before coming to Princeton, he was a reporter for The Economist. He has also written for The New York Times, The New Yorker, and other publications. Ph.D., Harvard. Thomas J. Christensen Professor of Politics [email protected]

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Princeton University Department of Politics

SELECTED INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS SCHOLARS AT PRINCETON

INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS FACULTY IN THE POLITICS DEPARTMENT

Gary BassAssociate Professor of Politics and International [email protected]/~gjbass/

Bass’s research interests include international security, ethics in international relations, American foreign policy, war crimes tribunals, and human rights. He is the author of Stay the Hand of Vengeance: The Politics of War Crimes Tribunals, as well as articles and book chapters on international justice. He is completing a book manuscript on the politics of humanitarian intervention and the origins of the modern human rights movement. He has won the Stanley Kelley teaching prize in the Politics Department, and has held fellowships from the Carr Center for Human Rights Policy at Harvard, the MacArthur Foundation, and the Krupp Foundation. Before coming to Princeton, he was a reporter for The Economist. He has also written for The New York Times, The New Yorker, and other publications.  Ph.D., Harvard.

Thomas J. ChristensenProfessor of Politics [email protected]

Christensen researches international relations, international security policy, Chinese foreign policy and the international relations of East Asia. He is author of Useful Adversaries: Grand Strategy, Domestic Mobilization and Sino-American Relations, 1947-1958, as well as a number of important articles on alliance politics, grand strategy, and Chinese foreign policy. He participates widely in policy discussions. He has served as research director for the National Bureau of Asian Research and in 2002 he received a distinguished service award from the Department of State. He is currently serving as Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for East Asia Affairs with responsibility for China, Taiwan and Mongolia. Until 2003, he taught at MIT. PhD. Columbia.

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Christina L. DavisAssistant Professor of Politics and International [email protected]/~cldavis/

Davis specializes in international political economy and Japanese politics. Her teaching and research interests include international relations, international political economy, the politics of Japan and the EU, and the study of international organizations. She is author of Food Fights Over Free Trade: How International Institutions Promote Agricultural Trade Liberalization (2003). She is a recipient of fellowships from the Harvard University Program on U.S.-Japan Relations and the MacArthur Foundation, and she was a Fulbright scholar in Japan. She is a term member of the Council on Foreign Relations and is an associated faculty member of the East Asian Studies Department. PhD, Harvard

Aaron L. FriedbergProfessor of [email protected]

Friedberg’s areas of interest include international security studies and U.S. foreign and defense policies, with particular focus on East Asia, problems of national ascendancy and decline, and the political economy of national security. He is the author of two books, The Weary Titan: Britain and the Experience of Relative Decline, 1895–1905 (which received the Edgar Furniss National Security Book Award), and In the Shadow of the Garrison State: America’s Anti-Statism and Its Cold War Grand Strategy. Friedberg has been a fellow at the Smithsonian Institution’s Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars, the Norwegian Nobel Institute, and Harvard University’s Center for International Affairs, and has served as a consultant to several agencies of the U.S. government. In 2001-2002 he was the first holder of the Henry Alfred Kissinger Chair in Foreign Policy and International Relations at the Library of Congress. In 2003-2005, he has served on the staff of Vice President Richard Cheney. Ph.D. Harvard.

Joanne GowaProfessor of [email protected]

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Joanne Gowa’s interests include international relations, international political economy, and the relationship between democracies and international disputes. She is the author of Closing the Gold Window: Domestic Politics and the End of Bretton Woods; Allies, Adversaries, and International Trade and Ballots and Bullets: The Elusive Democratic Peace, as well as numerous articles on political economy, trade and monetary policy, and democracy and disputes. She is a member of the editorial boards of World Politics and International Organization and is a trustee of Tufts University. She has been a recipient of grants from the MacArthur Foundation and the National Science Foundation. PhD, Princeton.

Emilie Hafner-BurtonAssistant Professor of Politics and International [email protected]/~ehafner/

Hafner-Burton writes and teaches on international organization, international political economy, the global governance of gender, social network analysis, design and selection of international regimes, international human rights law and policy, war and economic sanctions, non-proliferation policy, and quantitative and qualitative research design. Her dissertation, Globalizing Human Rights? How Preferential Trade Agreements Shape Government Repression, 1972-2000, won the American Political Science Association Helen Dwight Reid Award for Best Dissertation in International Relations, Law and Politics for 2004-2005, as well as the Best Dissertation in Human Rights Prize for 2003-2004. Her articles are published or forthcoming in International Organization, American Journal of Sociology, Journal of Conflict Resolution, Feminist Legal Studies, European Journal of International Relations, Journal of European Public Policy, and Journal of Peace Research. joined the Princeton faculty in 2005 from Oxford and Stanford University, where she was Postdoctoral Research Prize Fellow, Nuffield College, and Senior Associate, Global Economic Governance Programme, and an Associated Fellow of the Stanford University Center on Democracy, Development, and the Rule of Law. PhD. Wisconsin.

G. John IkenberryAlbert G. Milbank Professor of Politics and International Affairs [email protected]/~gji3/

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Ikenberry’s areas of specialization include international relations; American foreign policy; postwar settlements; international organizations; American foreign policy; international political economy; relations among the advanced industrial

societies; theories of the state. Ikenberry is currently writing a book about the politics of international rules and institutions in the era of American unipolarity. He is author of After Victory: Institutions, Strategic Restraint, and the Rebuilding of Order after Major Wars (2001), which won the APSA 2003 Jervis-Schroeder award for the best book in International Politics and History, as well as Reasons of State: Oil Politics and the Capacities of American Government (1988). He is the co-author of State Power and the World Economy (2002) and The State (1989). He is co-editor of and contributor to The State and American Foreign Economic Policy (1988). He co-edited New Thinking in International Relations (1997), U.S. Democracy Promotion: Impulses, Strategies, and Impacts (2000), and International Relations Theory and the Asia-Pacific (2003). He has recently edited a book entitled American Unrivaled: The Future of the Balance of Power (2002). He has published in all the major academic journals of international relations and written widely in policy journals. He is also the reviewer of books on political and legal affairs for Foreign Affairs. Among many activities, Ikenberry has served as a member of an advisory group at the State Department, chaired a study group on "Democracy and Discontent" at the Council on Foreign Relations, served as a senior staff member on the 1992 Carnegie Commission on the Reorganization of Government for the Conduct of Foreign Policy (the "Holbrooke Commission"). He co-authored a policy report entitled Atlantic Frontiers: A New Agenda for U.S.-EC Relations, (1993). He joined the Princeton faculty from Georgetown University in 2004. Ph.D., Chicago.

Robert O. KeohaneProfessor of International [email protected]/politics/people/cvs/rkeohane.pdf

Keohane is the author of After Hegemony: Cooperation and Discord in the World Political Economy (1984), for which he was awarded the second annual Grawemeyer Award in 1989 for Ideas Improving World Order, Power and Governance in a Partially Globalized World (2002), International Institutions and State Power: Essays in International Relations Theory (1989); co-author (with Joseph S. Nye, Jr.) of Power and Interdependence: World Politics in Transition (1977/2005), and (with Gary King and Sidney Verba) of Designing Social Inquiry: Scientific Inference in Qualitative Research (1994). He is editor or co-editor of, and contributor to, eleven other books—most recently, Humanitarian Intervention (2003, with J.L. Holzgrefe). He has been president of both the International Studies Association (1988-89) and the American Political Science Association (1999-2000), and he was editor of the journal International Organization (1974-1980). He is a fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and has held a Guggenheim Fellowship and fellowships at the Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences and the National Humanities Center. In 2005 he was awarded the Johan Skytte Prize for Political Science. Keohane teaches at Princeton and is involved in the effort to foster cooperation between with NYU Law School. He has taught at Swarthmore College, Stanford, Brandeis and Harvard Universities, and joined the Princeton faculty from Duke University in 2005. He PhD. Harvard.

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Jason LyallAssistant Professor of Politics and International [email protected]/~jlyall/

Lyall’s areas of research and teaching include international security, the origins of interstate conflict, the sources of grand strategy and military effectiveness, comparative democratization, and post-communist Russian politics and Russian foreign policy. He is particularly interested in the social construction of identities and ideas, as well as social network analysis. His dissertation, "Paths of Ruin: Why Revisionist States Arise and Die in World Politics," examines how collective identities shape, and often undermine, a state's grand strategy. Additional projects include a study of security dilemma dynamics in Central Asia, anti-Chechen War protest in post-communist Russia, and a collaborative study of ethnic separatism in post-communist Eurasia and Southeast Asia. He joined the department in 2004 from Cornell University. His PhD, Cornell.

Helen MilnerB. C. Forbes Professor of Politics and International AffairsDirector, Center for Globalization and [email protected]/hmilner/

Milner has written extensively on issues related to international trade, domestic politics and foreign policy, globalization and regionalism, and the relationship between democracy and trade policy. She authored Resisting Protectionism: Global Industries and the Politics of International Trade (1988) and Interests, Institutions and Information (1997), as well as dozens of scholarly articles. She is general editor of International Library of Writings on the New Global Economy, and co-edited Political Science: The State of the Discipline III (2002), Interests, Institutions and Information: Domestic Politics and International Relations (1997), The Political Economy of Economic Regionalism (1997), Internationalization and Domestic Politics (1996). She is currently working on the political economy of foreign aid, the global diffusion of the internet, the relationship between globalization and environmental policy, and related issues in the ethics of North-South relations. She also directs a joint research project on transatlantic relations with Prof. Michel Girard of the University of Paris, a joint colloquium and graduate training group on international political economy with Harvard University’s Department of Government, and various research projects. In 2004, Milner joined the Princeton faculty from Columbia University. PhD. Harvard.

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Andrew MoravcsikProfessor of [email protected]/~amoravcs/

Moravcsik writes on European integration, global human rights, negotiation analysis, international organization, international relations theory, US and West European foreign policy, transatlantic relations, and defense-industrial globalization. His analytical history of the European Union, The Choice for Europe: Social Purpose and State Power from Messina to Maastricht (1998), has been called “the most important work in the field.” (American Historical Review) He edited and contributed to Europe beyond Illusions (2005) and Between Centralization and Fragmentation (1998). He has published over 125 scholarly articles, chapters and reviews. Forthcoming books include a volume of essays, an analytical history of international human rights regimes, a study of the democratic legitimacy of international organizations, an analysis of the current state of European integration, and a reader on European politics. His policy commentary appears regularly in Newsweek and occasionally in other public affairs publications in 17 languages, including Foreign Affairs and Foreign Policy. He is a Senior Fellow of the Brookings Institution, and has served on various policy panels and commissions—most recently the Council on Foreign Relations Task Force on the Future of Transatlantic Relations (the “Kissinger-Summers Task Force”). He has received awards from the Fulbright Foundation, the German Marshall Fund, the Krupp Foundation and other institutions. Before entering academia, he served as trade negotiator for the US government, special assistant to the Deputy Prime Minister of the Republic of Korea, and editor of a foreign policy journal in Washington DC. He holds a public policy degree from the Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies. He writes occasionally on opera history and performance. Moravcsik joined the Princeton faculty in 2004 from Harvard University, where he taught for 12 years. PhD, Harvard.

Kristopher RamsayAssistant Professor of [email protected]/~kramsay/

Ramsay’s areas of specialization include international relations, political economy, bargaining theory, and statistical methods. His current work examines bargaining in international politics, and its relationship to international organization. Ramsay has won awards from the National Science Foundation, Midwest Political Science Association, International Studies Association (Carl Beck Award for best paper, 2003), and the University of Rochester. He is author of “Politics at the Water's Edge: Crisis Bargaining and Electoral Competition" Journal of Conflict Resolution (2004). He joined the Princeton faculty in 2004 from the University of Rochester. PhD, Rochester.

Anne E. SartoriAssistant Professor of Politics [email protected]/~asartori/ Sartori’s specialties include international security, as well as applied game theory and statistics. Her research interests include international conflict and cooperation and the empirical testing of game-theoretic models. She is the author of a book manuscript, Deterrence by Diplomacy, as well as articles on international conflict and statistical methodology. She has held Fellowships

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from the MacArthur Foundation and the Center for Basic Research in the Social Sciences. Sartori joined the Princeton faculty in 2001 from the University of Michigan. PhD, Michigan.

Jacob ShapiroAssistant Professor of [email protected]://cisac.stanford.edu/people/jacobnshapiro/

Shapiro’s research focuses on economic motivations and organizational challenges of terrorist organizations, using principal-agent analysis to understand how terrorist groups are constructed and how to combat them. He also specializes in the analysis of primary documentation relating to terrorist groups. His publications include co-authorship of Homeland Security: A New Strategic Paradigm? and Harmony and Disharmony: Exploiting al-Qa’ida’s Organizational Vulnerabilities, and a chapter in Terrorist Organizations’ Vulnerabilities and Inefficiencies: A Rational Choice Perspective. He has served as a fellow of the Center for International Security and Cooperation at Stanford. As a Naval Reserve Officer, to the Office of Naval Intelligence and the Naval Warfare Development Command. Shapiro will be joining the Princeton faculty in 2007-8 from Stanford University. PhD., Stanford University.

Anne-Marie SlaughterBert G. Kerstetter '66 University Professor of Politics and International Affairs Dean, Woodrow Wilson School of International and Public [email protected]/WWSDean/

Slaughter’s work lies at the juncture of political science and law, where she pioneered the current emphasis on cross-fertilization between international relations and international law. She has written over fifty scholarly articles and written or edited four books on subjects such as the effectiveness of international courts and tribunals, the legal dimensions of the war on terrorism, building global democracy, international law and international relations theory, and compliance with international rules. In her recent book, A New World Order, she identifies transnational networks of government officials as an important component of global governance. She also edited

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Legalization and World Politics (with Judith Goldstein, Miles Kahler, and Robert O. Keohane). Slaughter is former President of the American Society of

International Law and serves on the boards of a number of organizations, including the McDonalds Corporation, the Council on Foreign Relations, and the New America Foundation. She contributes frequently to national and international news media, as well as a regular lecturer to academic audiences and civic groups. She co-chairs the Princeton Project on National Security, a multi-year research project aimed at developing a new, bipartisan national security strategy for the United States. Until 2003, Slaughter was the J. Sinclair Armstrong Professor of International, Foreign and Comparative Law and Director of International Legal Studies at Harvard Law School. She has also taught at the University of Chicago Law School. JD Harvard Law School, D.Phil (International Relations) Oxford.

SELECTED POLITICS DEPARTMENT FACULTY IN OTHER SUB-DISCIPLINES RESEARCHING INTERNATIONAL POLITICS

Christopher H AchenProfessor of Politics [email protected]/~csdp/people/01-02/pdfs/achen.pdf

Chris Achen's research interest is Political Methodology, particularly in its application to empirical democratic theory, American Politics, and International Relations. He is the author of two books, Interpreting and Using Regression and The Statistical Analysis of Quasi-Experiments, and co-author of a third, Cross-Level Inference. His next two books, for which he is a co-editor and contributor, will be The European Union Decides, and Voter Turnout in Multi-Level Systems—both drawing on analyses of the European Union. He was the first president of the Political Methodology Section of the American Political Science Association, and is a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. He has received fellowships from the Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences, the National Science Foundation, and Princeton's Center for the Study of Democratic Politics. Achen joined the Princeton faculty in 2004 from Michigan, where he was recipient of an award for lifetime achievement in training graduate students. PhD, Yale.

Mark BeissingerProfessor of [email protected]/~mbeissin/

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Beissinger’s main fields of interest are nationalism, state-building, imperialism, and social movements, with special reference to the Soviet Union and the post-

Soviet states. Beissinger is author or editor of four books, including Nationalist Mobilization and the Collapse of the Soviet State (Cambridge University Press, 2002), which won the 2003 Woodrow Wilson Foundation Award, presented by the American Political Science Association for the best book published in the United States in any field of government, politics, or international affairs, and the 2003 Mattei Dogan Award, presented by the Society for Comparative Research for the best book published in the field of comparative research. From 1992 to 1998 he served as the founding director of Wisconsin’s Center for Russia, East Europe, and Central Asia and from 2001-2004 was Chair of Wisconsin's Department of Political Science. He currently serves as Vice-President/President-Elect of the American Association for the Advancement of Slavic Studies and is a member of the Board of Directors of the National Council for Eurasian and East European Research.  He is currently on leave at the Wissenschaftskolleg Berlin working on a book entitled Post-Imperial Empires: Imperialism and the Politics of Identity in a World of Nation-States.  PhD, Harvard.

Charles BeitzProfessor of Politics [email protected]/politics/people/bios/index.xml?netid=cbeitz

Beitz’s philosophical and teaching interests focus on international political theory, democratic theory, the theory of human rights and legal theory. His main works include Political Theory and International Relations and Political Equality: An Essay in Democratic Theory as well as articles on a variety of topics in political philosophy. He coedited International Ethics and Law, Economics, and Philosophy. His current work includes projects on the philosophy of human rights and the theory of intellectual property. Before coming to Princeton, Professor Beitz taught at Swarthmore College and Bowdoin College, where he was also Dean for Academic Affairs. He has received fellowship awards from the Guggenheim, Rockefeller and MacArthur Foundations, the American Council of Learned Societies and the American Council on Education. Professor Beitz is the Editor of Philosophy & Public Affairs. Beitz joined the department in 2001. PhD, Princeton.

Carles BoixProfessor of [email protected]/~cboix/

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Carles Boix teaches and researches political economy and comparative politics. His recent book, Democracy and Redistribution, models the causes of democracy as well as its impact on the distribution of wealth and the welfare of citizens. His current projects include: the comparative examination of the impact of constitutional design on democratic survival; the growth of mass media and civil societies since the 19th century; and the book The Birth of Party Democracy, which explores the political conditions that led to the emergence of various party systems and electoral institutions in advanced democracies at the turn of the 20th century. His is co-editor of the Oxford Handbook of Comparative Politics. PhD. Harvard.

Ken I. KerschAssistant Professor of Politics [email protected]/~kkersch

Kersch researches American political and constitutional development, American political thought, legal theory, and the politics of courts. Kersch also does work on the concept of sovereignty and the citation of foreign and international sources in American federal jurisprudence. He is the author of three books, Freedom of Speech: Rights and Liberty Under the Law (2003); Constructing Civil Liberties: Discontinuities in the Development of American Constitutional Law (2004), and The Supreme Court and American Political Development (with Ronald Kahn) (2006). He is the recipient of the Edward S. Corwin Prize from the American Political Science Association (2000), and has published scholarly articles and reviews in Political Science Quarterly, Studies in American Political Development, the Washington University Global Studies Law Review, and the University of Pennsylvania Journal of Constitutional Law, as well as public commentary in The Public Interest, Commentary, and the Washington Post. PhD. Cornell, J.D., Northwestern University.

Evan S. LiebermanAssistant Professor of [email protected]/~esl/

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Lieberman’s research interests focus mainly on questions about identity (racial/ethnic/national), state building, and the formation of public policy (HIV/AIDS and taxation) in developing countries, as well as comparative methods. He is currently working on a study of the international and domestic politics of AIDS around the world, as well as various projects concerned with comparative research methods. He is the author of Race and Regionalism in the Politics of Taxation in Brazil and South Africa (2003), and his work has appeared in Comparative Political Studies, Politics & Society, Studies in Comparative International Development, and Journal of Development Studies. Lieberman is recipient of the 2004 Mattei Dogan Prize for best book in Comparative Analysis; the 2002 Gabriel A. Almond award from the American Political Science Association for best dissertation in the field of comparative politics; and the 2002 Mary Parker Follett award given by the APSA Politics & History section for the best article or chapter. He was a Fulbright fellow in South Africa in 1997-8, a Robert Wood Johnson policy scholar at Yale University in 2000-2, and has received funding from the Social Science Research Council, the National Science Foundation, and the Macarthur Foundation. He is faculty director of the Princeton AIDS Initiative. PhD, University of California, Berkeley.

Jan-Werner MuellerAssistant Professor of [email protected]/~jmueller/

Mueller specializes in political theory, the history of modern Continental political thought, and the social theory of European politics and society. His current research focuses on the normative dimensions of European integration. He is the author of A Dangerous Mind: Carl Schmitt in Post-War European Thought (2003) and Another Country: German Intellectuals, Unification and National Identity (2000). He edited German Ideologies since 1945: Studies in the Political Thought and Culture of the Bonn Republic (2003) and Memory and Power in Post-War Europe: Studies in the Presence of the Past (2002). His research interests include the history of modern political thought, liberalism and its critics and nationalism. He has taught at Oxford University and in Berlin. D.Phil., Oxford.

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Sankar MuthuAssistant Professor of Politics [email protected]

Muthu’s interests include the international justice and global commerce; historic debates among political thinkers about conquest, just war, slavery, and imperialism; theories of universalism and pluralism in modern and contemporary political thought; and the history of modern and Enlightenment political theory. He is the author of Enlightenment against Empire and essays in journals such as Social Research, Political Theory, and Constellations. He edited Empire and Modern Political Thought. He has held fellowships from the Institute for Advanced Study, the National Endowment for the Humanities, the Mellon Foundation, and the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada. He is currently writing a book entitled Globalization in the Age of Enlightenment: Commerce, Communication, and Crossing Borders. Ph.D., Harvard.

Alan PattenAssociate Professor of Politics [email protected]

Alan Patten has research and teaching interests in both the history of political thought and contemporary political philosophy. He is currently writing a book about political theory and language politics that engages in both analytic, normative argument and historical excavation of the roots of contemporary thinking about conflicts over language and nationalism--with many examples taken from modern Europe. He is the author of Hegel's Idea of Freedom (1999), co-editor of Language Rights and Political Theory (2003), and author of a number of journal articles in journals such as History of Political Thought, Political Theory, Ethics, and Philosophy & Public Affairs. D. Phil. Oxford

Philip PettitWilliam Nelson Cromwell Professor of Politics [email protected]/~ppettit/

Pettit is a philosopher by discipline, but is in the habit of collaborating with scholars from other fields. His interests range throughout political theory, social theory, and foundational issues in philosophy. Recently he has written on both the extension of both Rawlsian theory and Republican theories of politics to the global system. His most recent books are: Reasons, Rules, and Norms: Selected Essays; The Economy of Esteem (with Geoffrey Brennan); and Mind, Morality, and Explanation: Selected Collaborations (with Frank Jackson and Michael Smith). He is also author of A Theory of Freedom: From the Psychology to the Politics of Agency, Republicanism: A Theory of Freedom and Government, Three Methods of Ethics (with M. Baron & M. Slote), The Common Mind: An Essay on Psychology, Society, and Politics, Not Just Deserts: A Republican Theory of Criminal Justice (with John Braithwaite), and other books. He has taught at University College Dublin, Cambridge University, University of Bradford, and the Australian National University. PhD. Queen's University, Belfast.

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Jennifer PittsProfessor of Politics [email protected]/~jpitts/

Pitts’ interests include empire, international law, international justice, and modern political and social thought, particularly British and French thought of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. She is author of A Turn to Empire: The Rise of Imperial Liberalism in Britain and France (2005), and editor and translator of Alexis de Tocqueville: Writings on Empire and Slavery (2001). She has published in journals such as Political Theory and Journal of Political Philosophy. Ph.D., Harvard.

Jonas Pontusson Professor of Politics [email protected]/politics/people/bios/index.xml?netid=jpontuss

Pontusson’s interests include the comparative political economy of OECD countries, with special focus on Western Europe; labor market institutions and welfare states; wage inequality, income distribution, redistributive policies, and party politics. His most recent book, Inequality and Prosperity: Social Europe versus Liberal America (Cornell University Press, 2005) explores the political economy of inequality, redistribution, and employment growth in the advanced industrial countries. Previous publications include The Limits of Social Democracy: Investment Politics in Sweden (1992), Unions, Employers and Central Banks: Macroeconomic Coordination and Institutional Change in Social Market Economies (2000) as well as a large number of articles on similar topics. He has held fellowships from the Social Science Research Council, the German Marshall Fund, the Swedish Collegium for Advanced Study in Social Sciences, the Century Foundation and, most recently, the Russell Sage Foundation. Pontusson taught at Cornell University before joining the Princeton faculty in 2005. PhD. University of California, Berkeley.

Ezra N. SuleimanProfessor of Politics and IBM Professor of International Studies

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Director, Program in European Politics and [email protected]

Suleiman's teaching and research interests are in the areas of comparative bureaucracy, policymaking, executive leadership, and U.S.and European foreign policy. He is currently conducting research on transnational bureaucratic organizations, focusing particularly on the European Union. He is the author or co-author of , among other works, Politics, Power and Bureaucracy in France; Industrial Policies in Western Europe; Elites in French Society: The Politics of Survival; Presidents and Prime Ministers; Bureaucrats and Policymaking: A Comparative Perspective; Parliament and Parliamentarians in Democratic Politics; The Politics of Public Sector Reform and Privatization; and most recently, Dismantling Democratic States. He contributes articles frequently in the media on U.S. and European affairs. He has been a Guggenheim Fellow, a Fulbright Senior Research Fellow, and has received awards from The German Marshall Fund, The American Council of Learned Societies, The Ford Foundation, the Institute for Advanced Study in Berlin, and The American Academy in Berlin. He has also taught and carried out research at numerous European universities, including the European University Institute in Florence, Nuffield College, Oxford, the Institut d'Etudes Politiques in Paris, Louvain-la-Neuve in Belgium. He sits on numerous boards and commissions. Ph.D. Columbia.

Lynn T. WhiteProfessor of Politics and International Affairs [email protected]/~lynn/

White’s interests include China, comparative revolutions and reforms, comparative organization, and the consequences of globalization. He is working on the effects of globalization in Taiwan, on U.S. perceptions of China’s reforms, and on a comparison of the development of local political networks in several East Asian countries. He is the author of Unstately Power: Local Causes of China’s Reforms, Policies of Chaos (winner of the 2000 Levenson Book Award), and Careers in Shanghai. He has published in the American Political Science Review, China Quarterly, Journal of Asian Studies, Modern China, and other journals. White has taught at the University of California, Berkeley. Ph.D. University of California, Berkeley.

OTHER WOODROW WILSON SCHOOL FACULTYCONDUCTING RESEARCH ON INTERNATIONAL POLITICS

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David BaldwinResearch AssociateWoodrow Wilson [email protected]

Baldwin’s interests include international political economy, American foreign policy, economics and national security, and fundamental international relations theory. He is particularly well-known for his classic work on the conceptualization of power in world politics. Among dozens of books and articles, he is author of Economic Statecraft: Paradoxes of Power, East-West Trade and the Atlantic Alliance, The Political Economy of National Security: An Annotated Bibliography, Key Concepts in International Political Economy, and Neorealism and Neoliberalism: The Contemporary Debate. For many years, he was professor of political science at Dartmouth College and joined the Princeton faculty in 2005 from Columbia University. PhD. Princeton.

Miguel Angel Centeno Professor of Sociology and International AffairsDirector of the Princeton Institute for International and Regional [email protected]/~cenmiga

Centeno is the author of Mexico in the 1990s (1991), Democracy within Reason: Technocratic Revolution in Mexico (2nd. 1997), Blood and Debt: War and Statemaking in Latin America (2002 ) and the editor of Toward a New Cuba (1997), The Politics of Expertise in Latin America (1997), The Other Mirror: Grand Theory and Latin America , (2000), and Mapping the Global Web (2001). He is currently working on two book projects: The Historical Atlas of Globalization and The Triumph and Dilemmas of Liberalism. Through the International Networks Archive (www.princeton.edu/~ina ) he is working on improving the quantitative scholarship available on globalization. He has also written and produced a 6 hour CD-ROM version of his course on “The Western Way of War”. He serves as an editor for several journals including World Politics He obtained his BA in History in 1980, his MBA in 1987 and his Ph.D. in Sociology in 1990, all from Yale University. He has received grants from the Harry Frank Guggenheim Foundation, the National Science Foundation, the National Endowment for the Humanities, and the Woodrow Wilson Foundation, and has been a Fulbright scholar in Russia and Mexico. In 1997 he was awarded the Presidential Teaching Prize at Princeton University. In 2000, he founded the Princeton University Preparatory Program, which provides intensive supplemental training for lower income students in three local high schools. For this work, he was recently awarded the Jefferson Award for Public Service and the Bonner Foundation Award. PhD. Yale.

Christopher F. Chyba Professor of Public PolicyWoodrow Wilson [email protected]

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www.stanford.edu/~chyba/

Chyba’s research in security studies focuses on nuclear proliferation, nuclear weapons policy and biological terrorism. His planetary science and astrobiology research focuses on the search for life elsewhere in the solar system. Until 2005, Chyba was co-director of Center for International Security and Arms Control CISAC, Stanford University, where he was an associate professor in the Department of Geological and Environmental Sciences. In October 2001, he was named a MacArthur Fellow for his work in astrobiology and international security. After holding a Marshall Scholarship at the University of Cambridge, Chyba served as a White House Fellow and a staff member of the National Security Council and the Office of Science and Technology Policy, earning a Presidential Early Career Award. He drafted the President's directive on responding to emerging infectious diseases, authored a report on preparing for biological terrorism, chaired the Science Definition Team for NASA's Europa Orbiter mission, and served on the executive committee of NASA's Space Science Advisory Committee. He currently serves on the National Academy of Sciences' Committee for International Security and Arms Control and many other such bodies. Chyba will join the faculty in Fall 2005. PhD., Cornell.

Wolfgang DanspeckgruberLecturer of Public and International AffairsFounding Director, Liechtenstein Institute on Self-DeterminationWoodrow Wilson [email protected]/~lisd/about_lisd/danspeckgruber.html

Danpeckgruber’s areas of interest include international relations with a special emphasis on foreign and security policy, international diplomacy, and issues of state and self-determination. His current research focuses on self-determination in global interdependence, security and secession problems in South Eastern Europe, the Caucasus and South Asia, and the conduct of related diplomacy. He has taught at Princeton since 1989, and is the founding director of the Liechtenstein Institute on Self-Determination at Princeton (http://www.princeton.edu/~lisd/). His books include Self-Determination of Peoples - Communities, Nations, and States in Global Interdependence; Self-Determination and Self-Administration: A Sourcebook (edited with Sir Arthur Watts); The Iraqi Aggression against Kuwait (edited with Charles R.H. Tripp); and Emerging Dimensions of European Security Policy. Danspeckgruber has been involved in informal diplomacy in the Balkans and the Caucasus. He has held research positions at Harvard and the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy. Ph.D. Geneva Graduate Institute of International Studies

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Harold A. FeivesonSenior Research Policy Scientist and Co-Principal InvestigatorProgram on Science & Global Security [email protected]/~globsec/people/feiveson.html

Dr. Feiveson's principal research interests lie in the fields of nuclear weapons and nuclear energy policy, as related also to terrorism His recent work has focused on the ways in which the nuclear arsenals of the U.S. and the former Soviet Union can be dismantled and "de-alerted", the strengthening of the nuclear non-proliferation regime (including a universal ban on the production of weapons-useable material and on nuclear weapons testing), and the strengthening of the separation between nuclear weapons and civilian nuclear energy activities. He has served in positions in the National Academy of Science, the Federation of American Scientists, and the American Association for the Advancement of Science. He has published articles in Scientific American, International Security, and other journals. His edited volume entitled The Nuclear Turning Point: A Blueprint for Deep Cuts and De-Alerting of Nuclear Weapons was published by the Brookings Institution in 1999. PhD. Princeton, 1972.

Martin FlahertyAdjunct Professor of Law and Public Policyhttp://www.martinflaherty.org/

Flaherty’s research focuses on constitutional law, foreign affairs, and international human rights. He has published widely in such journals as the Columbia Law Review, the Yale Law Journal, the Michigan Law Review, and the University of Chicago Law Review. With the Crowley Program and Human Rights First, he led fact-finding missions to Turkey, Hong Kong, Mexico, Malaysia, Kenya, and Northern Ireland. Flaherty is the Co-Director of the Crowley Program in International Human Rights at Fordham Law School. He clerked for Justice Byron R. White of the U.S. Supreme Court and Chief Judge John Gibbons of the Court of Appeals (3rd Circuit). M.Phil. Yale (History) and J.D. Columbia.

Gene Grossman Jacob Viner Professor of International Economics (also Woodrow Wilson School)Chair of the Department of EconomicsDirector, International Economic [email protected]/~grossman/

Grossman writes on international trade, focusing particularly on the determinants of international competitiveness in dynamic, research-intensive industries. With Elhanan Helpman, he wrote Innovation and Growth in the Global Economy, Special Interest Politics, and Interest Groups and Trade Policy. With colleague Alan Krueger, he has examined the environmental impact of the North American Free Trade Agreement, and U.S. and

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developing country trade policy. He is an associate of the National Bureau

of Economic Research and Center for Economic Policy Research, and serves on the editorial boards of the Journal of Economic Literature, Journal of Economic Growth, Review of International Economics, and other journals. He recently served a three-year term on the Executive Committee of the American Economic Association.  Ph.D., MIT

Frank N. von HippelProfessor of Public and International AffairsCo-Director, Program on Science and Global [email protected]/~globsec/people/fvhippel.html

Von Hippel has written extensively on the technical basis for nuclear nonproliferation and disarmament initiatives, the future of nuclear energy, improved automobile fuel economy, and checks and balances in policymaking for technology. A former assistant director for national security in the White House Office of Science and Technology, von Hippel’s areas of policy research include nuclear arms control and nonproliferation, energy. Prior to coming to Princeton, he worked for ten years in the field of elementary-particle theoretical physics. He won a 1993 MacArthur fellowship in recognition of his outstanding contributions to his fields of research. Ph.D. Oxford University.

Robert L. HutchingsStatesman-in-Residence, Woodrow Wilson [email protected]

Ambassador Hutchings completed his two-year tenure as chairman of the National Intelligence Council in early 2005 and returned to Princeton University to resume his position as Assistant Dean of the Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs. His combined academic and diplomatic career has included service as Director for European Affairs with the National Security Council, and Special Adviser to the Secretary of State, with the rank of ambassador. He also has served as deputy director of Radio Free Europe and on the faculty of the University of Virginia, and has held adjunct appointments at the Johns Hopkins University School of Advanced International Studies and the School of Foreign Service at Georgetown University. His most recent books are At the End of the American Century and American Diplomacy and the End of the Cold War, which was translated into German. He is a director of the Atlantic Council of the United States and of the Foundation for a Civil Society, serves on the editorial board of International Politics. Ph.D. Virginia.

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Harold JamesProfessor of History and International [email protected]://his.princeton.edu/people/e15/james/profile.html

James is the author of numerous books, include a study of the interwar depression in Germany, The German Slump (1986), an analysis of the changing character of national identity in Germany; A German Identity 1770-1990 (1989), and the first volume of the official institutional history of the International Monetary Fund, International Monetary Cooperation Since Bretton Woods (1996). He is also co-author of Deutsche Bank (1995), which won the Financial Times Global Business Book Award in 1996, and The Deutsche Bank and the Nazi Economic War Against the Jews (2001). His most recent works are The End of Globalization: Lessons from the Great Depression (2001, available also in Chinese, German, Greek, Japanese, Korean and Spanish), and Europe Reborn: A History 1914-2000 (2003). In 2004 he was awarded the Helmut Schmidt Prize for Economic History. He is Chairman of the Editorial Board of World Politics. PhD. Cambridge University.

Peter B. KenenWalker Professor of Economics and International Finance [email protected]/~pbkenen

Peter Kenen's research interests span international monetary economics and policy. He has written widely on European monetary integration and the monetary policy of Britain and other individual European countries. His current research focuses on transatlantic monetary relations, the relative status of the Euro and the dollar, international financial architecture, and theories of optimal currency areas. He has served as a visiting fellow at the Bank of England, Bank of New Zealand, and Bank of Australia, as well as many academic institutions, and on many government boards and commissions. He is a Senior Fellow in International Economics at the Council on Foreign Relations. He has received fellowships from the Ford, Guggenheim, German Marshall Foundations. PhD. Harvard University.

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Paul KrugmanProfessor of Economics and International [email protected]/~pkrugman/

Krugman has taught at Yale, Stanford, and MIT, where he was Ford International Professor of Economics. He is the author or editor of 20 books and more than 200 papers in professional journals and edited volumes. His professional reputation rests largely on work in international trade and finance; he is one of the founders of the "new trade theory," a major rethinking of the theory of international trade. In recognition of that work, in 1991 the American Economic Association awarded him its John Bates Clark medal, a prize given every two years to "that economist under forty who is adjudged to have made a significant contribution to economic knowledge." His current academic research is focused on economic and currency crises. At the same time, he has written extensively for a broader public audience. Some of his recent articles on economic issues, originally published in Foreign Affairs, Harvard Business Review, Scientific American and other journals, are reprinted in his collections Pop Internationalism and The Accidental Theorist. Ph.D., MIT.

Daniel C. KurtzerLecturer and S. Daniel Abraham Professor in Middle Eastern Policy Studies609-258-9859 [email protected]://webdb.princeton.edu/dbtoolbox/query.asp?qname=facultydetail&ID=dkurtzer

Daniel C. Kurtzer retired from the U.S. Foreign Service with the rank of Career-Minister. From 2001-2005 he served as the United States Ambassador to Israel and from 1997-2001 as the United States Ambassador to Egypt. He served as a political officer at the American embassies in Cairo and Tel Aviv, Deputy Director of the Office of Egyptian Affairs, speechwriter on the Policy Planning Staff, Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for Near Eastern Affairs, and Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for Intelligence and Research. Kurtzer was a member of the American delegation to the Israel-Palestinian autonomy negotiations (1979-1982), helped negotiate the creation of the Multinational Force and

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Observers (1981-1982), negotiated and oversaw the successful arbitration of the Taba border dispute between Israel and Egypt, crafted the 1988 peace initiative of

Secretary of State George P. Shultz, and in 1991 served as a member of the U.S. peace team that brought about the Madrid Peace Conference. Subsequently, he served as coordinator of the multilateral peace negotiations and as the U.S. Representative in the Multilateral Refugee Working Group. Kurtzer received several of the U.S. Government's most prestigious awards, including the President's Distinguished Service Award, the Department of State Distinguished Service Award, the National Intelligence Community's Award for Achievement, and the Director General of the Foreign Service Award for Political Reporting. Ph.D. Columbia University.

Douglas S. Massey Henry G. Bryant Professor of Sociology and Public [email protected]://sociology.princeton.edu/Faculty/Massey/

Massey’s research focuses on immigration, particularly in North America, as well as demography, ethnic relations, and Latin American studies—as well as policy work focuses on improving US immigration policy. His prize-winning books include Return to Aztlan, Worlds in Motion: Understanding International Migration at the End of the Millennium, Beyond Smoke and Mirrors: Mexican Immigration in an Age of Economic Integration, Return of the L-Word: A Liberal Vision for the New Century, Strangers in a Strange Land: Humans in an Urbanizing World, and American Apartheid: Segregation and the Making of the Underclass. A forthcoming book is entitled Chronicle of a Myth Foretold: The Washington Consensus in Latin America. He is president-elect of the American Academy of Political and Social Science. He has taught at the University of Chicago and came to Princeton from the University of Pennsylvania in 2003. PhD, Princeton.

Denise L. MauzerallAssistant Professor of Public and International Affairs [email protected]/~mauzeral/

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Mauzerall’s research focuses on global air pollution from both the science and policy perspectives. Her interests include quantifying the impact that fossil fuel combustion and biomass burning have on global air quality, and determining how global change science can best contribute to the formation of international environmental policy. She has held positions in the Global Change Division of the Environmental Protection Agency in Washington, D.C., where she worked to implement the Montreal Protocol, the international treaty protecting the stratospheric ozone layer, and at the National Center for Atmospheric Research in Boulder, Colorado, where she has used three-dimensional global chemical tracer models to examine the transformation and long-distance transport of air pollutants. Ph.D. Harvard University.

Sophie Meunier-AitsahaliaResearch Associate in Public and International Affairs (Permanent Appointment)Woodrow Wilson [email protected]/~smeunier/bio.htm

Meunier is the author of The French Challenge: Adapting to Globalization (with Philip Gordon, 2001), winner of the 2002 France-Ameriques book award. Her new book, Trading Voices: The European Union in International Commercial Negotiations, on the EU as an international trade negotiator, is forthcoming at Princeton University Press this year. Meunier has published mabny articles on the European Union, the politics of international trade, globalization, and French politics in journals such as International Organization, Foreign Affairs, and Foreign Policy. Her current research focuses on anti-Americanism in Europe, the complex links between Europeanization and globalization, and the nesting/overlapping of international institutions. She is currently writing a book manuscript on the politics of French anti-Americanism, and is a co-editor of the prestigious series, State of the European Union. She is a member of the Executive Committee of the European Union Studies Association (2003-2007), Term Member of the Council on Foreign Relations (2004-2009), and chair of the Council of European Studies' thematic network on globalization. She directs the seminar on "Globalization and Domestic Politics" at PIIRS. Meunier contributes frequently to the French media. She came to Princeton in 1998 from MIT and the University of Chicago. Ph.D. MIT.

Michael E. O'HanlonLecturer, Woodrow Wilson [email protected]/scholars/mohanlon.htm

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O’Hanlon is a Senior Fellow in Foreign Policy Studies at the Brookings Institution, where he specializes in U.S. defense strategy and budgeting, military technology, homeland security, Northeast Asian security, and humanitarian intervention. He recently published Defense Strategy for the post-Saddam Era (2005), The European Way of War (co-authored, 2004), Crisis on the Korean Peninsula: How to Deal with a Nuclear North Korea (with Mike Mochizuki, 2003), Protecting the American Homeland: A Preliminary Analysis (co-authored, 2002), Defense Policy Choices for the Bush Administration (2002), Defending America: The Case for National Missile Defense (with James Lindsey, 2001), Technological Change and the Future of Warfare (2000), Winning Ugly: NATO’s War to Save Kosovo (with Ivo Daalder, 2000). His policy analysis and public commentary appears regularly in many major journals, magazines, and newspapers, including Foreign Affairs, Policy Review, Survival, Financial Times, New York Times, and the Washington Post. He was previously Defense and Foreign Policy Analyst, National Security Division, Congressional Budget Office, and a Peace Corps Volunteer in the Congo. He has taught at Princeton since 2000. PhD. Princeton University.

Michael OppenheimerAlbert G. Milbank Professor of Geosciences and International Affairs Professor of Geosciences and International Affairs; and Director, Program in Science, Technology and Environmental [email protected] www.wws.princeton.edu/~step/people/oppenheimer.html

Oppenheimer joined the Princeton faculty after more than two decades with Environmental Defense, a non-governmental, environmental organization, where he served as chief scientist and manager of the Global and Regional Atmosphere Program. His interests include science and policy of the atmosphere, particularly climate change and its impacts. His research explores the potential effects of global warming, including the effects of warming on atmospheric chemistry; on ecosystems and the nitrogen cycle; on ocean circulation; and on the ice sheets in the context of defining "dangerous anthropogenic interference" with the climate system. He is the author of more than 75 articles published in professional journals and is co-author (with Robert H. Boyle) of a 1990 book, Dead Heat: The Race Against The Greenhouse Effect. He has served on many international commissions and panels. He serves as a lead author of the Fourth Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, was a lead author of the Third Assessment as well, and also participates on several university and institutional advisory boards. He and a handful of other scientists organized two workshops under the auspices of the United Nations that helped precipitate the negotiations that resulted in the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (signed at the 1992 Earth Summit) and the Kyoto Protocol. He is also a co-founder of the Climate Action Network. PhD. Chicago.

Deborah PearlsteinLecturer, Woodrow Wilson [email protected]://lapa.princeton.edu/peopledetail.php?ID=429

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An expert in U.S. constitutional law, Pearlstein focuses on the human rights impact of U.S. counterterrorism and national security policies, executive power, the role of the courts, and US Supreme Court jurisprudence—subjects she teaches and on which has published numerous popular and academic articles. She served as White House Senior Editor/Speechwriter for President Clinton, Articles Editor of the Harvard Law Review, Teaching Fellow at Harvard College and Harvard Law School, and Clerk for Federal Appeals Judge Michael Boudin (1st Circuit) and Justice John Paul Stevens of the U.S. Supreme Court. As an Associate for the firm of Munger, Tolles & Olson, she devoted a substantial time to pro bono litigation in immigration, privacy, and election law matters, and she has briefed and argued cases in trial and appellate courts, as well as writing briefs to the U.S. Supreme Court. In 2002, she shared the ACLU's Voting Rights Award for her work on election systems reform in California. She is a regular columnist for The American Prospect. She joined the Princeton faculty in 2007 from the international human rights NGO Human Rights First, where she was Director of the Law and Security Program, leading efforts in research, litigation and advocacy surrounding U.S. detention and interrogation operations. Her activities ranged from launching a series of off-the-record workshops between the human rights and national security communities to leading the first team of human rights trial monitors to observe and report on military commission proceedings at Guantanamo Bay. JD, Harvard Law School.

Hélène ReyAssistant Professor of Economics and International [email protected]/~hrey/

Rey is an international macroeconomist with interests in international finance. She is the author of numerous articles including “International Trade and Currency Exchange” in the Review of Economic Studies, “The Emergence of the Euro as an International Currency”, joint with Richard Portes, in Economic Policy, and “Financial Integration and Asset Returns,” joint with Philippe Martin, in the European Economic Review. She served as a consultant to the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development from 1995-1997 and was the recipient of several fellowships and scholarships from 1993-1997 including the European Commission Marie Curie Fellowship and the Centre de Recherche en Economie et Statistique (CREST) Scholarship. She has taught at the London School of Economics and has been a visitor at Harvard University and UC Berkeley. PhD. London School of Economics and Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales, Paris.

Kim Lane ScheppeleProfessor of Public Affairs and LawDirector, Program on Law and Public Affairs, Woodrow Wilson [email protected]://webdb.princeton.edu/dbtoolbox/query.asp?qname=facultydetail&ID=kimlane

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Scheppele has been a pioneer in the comparative socio-legal research and the study of comparative constitutionalism. Her current research involves comparative law in Europe, with particular attention to counter-terrorism, the diffusion of constitutional norms, and European Union law. Since the breakup of the Soviet bloc, she has been working in Eastern Europe, examining the ways in which new constitutional regimes have developed. Her book, Democracy by Judiciary, examines the Hungarian Constitutional Court. Since 9/11, she has examined counter-terrorism strategies in democratic systems. Her book, Legal Secrets: Equality and Efficiency in the Common Law (1988), won a major prize from the American Sociological Association. She has held positions in the Program on Gender and Culture at the University of Budapest. She has been professor of law at the University of Pennsylvania, associate professor of political science at the University of Michigan, and assistant professor of sociology at Bucknell University.

Julian ZelizerProfessor of History and Public Affairs [Under negotiation]

Zelizer’s research focuses on US policy history, with special attention to fiscal and tax policy and Congress. He is currently writing a book about the history of national security politics since the 1940s. His prize-winning books include Taxing America: Wilbur D. Mills, Congress, and the State, 1945-1975 (1998) and On Capitol Hill: The Struggle to Reform Congress and its Consequences, 1948-2000 (2004). His edited volumes on New Directions in American Political History (2005), The American Congress: The Building of Democracy (2004) and The Democratic Experiment: New Directions in American Political History (2003). He co-edits the “Politics and Society in Twentieth Century America” series of Princeton University Press, and is a frequent commentator in the international and national media on political history and contemporary politics. He is co-editing a volume about American politics in the 1970s, and a special issue of the Journal of Policy History on the Constitution and public policy in US History. Zelizer would join Princeton from Boston University in 2007-2008. PhD History, Johns Hopkins.

Mario ZucconiProfessor of Political Science, Universitá di UrbinoVisiting Professor, Woodrow Wilson [email protected] or [email protected]

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Zucconi’s research focuses on transatlantic relations, the international politics of the Balkans, and European relations with the Russia, Turkey and the developing world. He has written four books and numerous chapters and articles. He has taught regularly at the Woodrow Wilson School since 1987, as well as at the Johns Hopkins University, Columbia University, University of Maryland, the NATO Defense College, and numerous research institutes in Europe and the US—as well as the University of Urbino, where he holds a permanent position. He has directed projects on Italian-Russian relations, on Euro-Mediterranean relations, and on the Balkans and former Yugoslavia. His research has been funded by the Ford Foundation, the European Union, the Italian Ministry of Defense and other organizations. He writes regularly for policy journals.

SELECTED ADDITIONAL SCHOLARS IN INTERNATIONAL POLITICS

Jeremy AdelmanWalter Samuel Carpenter III Professor in Spanish Civilization and CultureDepartment of [email protected]://his.princeton.edu/people/e138/adelman/profile.html

Adelman studies the history of Argentina and Latin America, in particular the comparative development of the Americas, labor and legal history, state formation, and Latin America’s relationship to the Atlantic world. Adelman’s current project is an analysis of the decline and collapse of the Spanish and Portuguese Empires and the origins of the nation states and market economies of South America. His first book, Frontier Development: Land, Labour, and Capital on the Wheatlands of Argentina and Canada (1994), compares the agrarian systems of these two countries. His book Republic of Capital: Buenos Aires and the Legal Transformation of the New World (1999), which won the American Historical Association’s Atlantic History Prize, is a study of Argentina’s development from an outpost of the Spanish Empire to a modern republic. Professor Adelman is also the editor of three books and coauthor, with colleagues in the History Department, of Worlds Together, Worlds Apart (2002), a world history since 1300. He is writing a biography of the economist and political theorist Albert Hirschman. PhD. Oxford.

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Kwame Anthony AppiahLaurance S. Rockefeller University ProfessorPhilosophy and the University Center for Human [email protected]

Appiah has written 13 books and edited over a dozen more on topics ranging from semantics and philosophy, the political morality of race, Afro-American studies, and cosmopolitan ethics. His recent books include The Ethics of Identity and Cosmopolitanism: Ethics in a World of Strangers. He co-edited the Dictionary of Global Culture and the Encarta Africana CD-ROM encyclopedia, published by Microsoft, which became the Perseus Africana in print. He publishes widely in scholarly journals and journals of civic opinion and intellectual affairs. PhD. Cambridge.

Lakhdar BrahimiDirector’s Visiting ScholarInstitute for Advanced [email protected]

As Special Adviser to the Secretary-General of the United Nations in 2004-5, Ambassador Brahimi advised Kofi Annan on a wide range of issues, including the prevention and resolution of conflicts. Brahimi headed UN post-war transition teams in Afghanistan and Iraq. He presided over the UN Bonn Conference on Afghanistan (November-December 2001), which produced the peace agreement now referred to as the Bonn Process. Brahimi previously served as the Secretary-General's Special Envoy for Afghanistan (1997-99) and chaired an independent panel that authored the “Brahimi Report” on UN Peace Operations in 2000. He previously served as Foreign Minister of Algeria, and as Algerian ambassador to a number of major countries.

Michael DoranAssistant Professor of Near Eastern [email protected]

Doran teaches courses on political Islam, Middle Eastern nationalism, U.S.-Middle East relations, and the Arab-Israeli conflict. He is the author of a study of the first Arab-Israeli war, entitled Pan-Arabism Before Nasser: Egyptian Power Politics and the Palestine Question (1999), and is currently working on a book entitled The Trump Card: Israel in the Arab Civil War. He contributed to How Did This Happen: Terrorism and the New War (2001) and is currently writing An

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Introduction to the Modern Middle East for Oxford University Press. His influential article on Osama bin Laden in the January/February 2002 issue of Foreign Affairs, both government and business have frequently invited him to speak on Middle Eastern affairs. Previously he taught at history at the University of Central Florida. He is the recipient of various fellowships and prizes. PhD. Princeton.

Joschka FischerSchultz Professor of International Economic [email protected]

Fischer served as Germany’s Minister of Foreign Affairs from 1998 to 2005. He was the first German Green Party politician to assume a government post, as Hessian Minister of the Environment and Energy in 1985. From 1994 to1998 he was Parliamentary Spokesman for the Green party in the German Bundestag. Fischer earned international attention in 1998 when he urged that Germany should send troops to Kosovo during the NATO-led intervention there, and advised that German troops be sent to Afghanistan in 2002. The following year, Fischer advised against Germany supporting the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq. He remains one of the most popular politicians in Germany. He teaches undergraduate and graduate courses at Princeton.

Bernard HaykelProfessor of Middle Eastern and Islamic StudiesDirector, Institute on Contemporary Middle East, North Africa and Central Asiawww.princeton.edu/~transreg/

Haykel’s primary research interests center on Islamic political movements and legal thought, particularly on the Salafi movement. His book entitled Revival and Reform in Islam (2003) explores this strand of Islamic legal and political thought. He is presently writing a book on the religious politics of Saudi Arabia since the early 1950s. He came to Princeton from NYU in 2007. PhD. Oxford University

Stephen KotkinProfessor of History and Director, Program in Russian [email protected]://his.princeton.edu/people/e38/kotkin/profile.html

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Kotkin is the author of numerous books on modern Russia, including Armageddon Averted: The Soviet Collapse, 1970-2000. He is also co-author of Worlds Together, Worlds Apart: A History of the Modern World (1300 to the present). He is currently at work on an international history of Eurasia over centuries. He has published on empire, nation-building, political corruption, modernity and modernism. PhD. UC Berkeley.

David LehenyProfessor of East Asian Studies (To start 2007)[email protected]/users/leheny

David Leheny’s research focuses

on Japanese politics and its susceptibility to international norms. In particular, he seeks to use theories of norms to illuminate unconventional issues in Japanese politics – those that have generally fallen outside of the scope of most political accounts of the nation. His current project focuses on the role of domestic and transnational norms in explaining patterns of Japanese direct foreign assistance. He has written numerous articles and two books entitled The Rules of Play: National Identity and the Shaping of Japanese Leisure (2003), and Think Global, Fear Local: Sex, Violence, and Anxiety in Contemporary Japan (2006). He has lived and worked in Japanese academic positions and fellowships for five years. He has received numerous academic awards. He as served as a regional affairs officer in the Office of the Coordinator for Counterterrorism at the U.S. Department of State, focusing especially on Central, East, and Southeast Asia, and has held a Council on Foreign Relations International Affairs Fellowship. PhD Cornell.

Gilbert RozmanMusgrave Professor of [email protected]://sociology.princeton.edu/Faculty/Rozman/

Rozman specializes in comparisons and relations in Northeast Asia, including China, Japan, and Russia. More recently he has added Korea to this mix. He compares the historical development of these countries, their recent-day societies, their search for national identities, and their strategies for international relations. His most recent book, Northeast Asia's Stunted Regionalism: Bilateral Distrust in the Shadow of Globalization, examines the progress and prospects of Asian regional integration. Other books include: Japan and Russia: The Tortuous Path to Normalization and The Chinese Debate about Soviet Socialism. Recent articles have examined Japanese-Korean and Sino-Japanese relations as well as the great power divisions over the Korean peninsula. PhD. Princeton.

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Muhammad Qasim Zaman Robert Niehaus Professor of Near Eastern [email protected]

Zaman’s research interests include religious authority in classical, medieval, and modern Islam; Islamic law in the Near East and South Asia, Islamic education, Islamic political thought; and contemporary religious and political movements in the Muslim world. He is the author of The Ulama in Contemporary Islam, Religion and Politics under the Early Abbasids, and the co-editor (with Robert W. Hefner) of the forthcoming Schooling Islam: The Culture and Politics of Modern Muslim Education. Among his current projects is a book tentatively titled Internal Criticism and Religious Authority in Modern Islam.

POST-DOCTORAL AND PROFESSORIAL FELLOWS

Below are some Princeton fellowship programs hosting post-doctoral and professorial fellows.Center for Globalization and GovernancePrinceton Institute on International and Regional StudiesLiechtenstein Institute on Self-DeterminationPower Transitions, Inequality and Global Order ProgramProgram on Law and Public AffairsDemocracy and Development ProgramEuropean Union ProgramChina and the World ProgramDepartment of Near Eastern StudiesInternational Economics SectionProgram in Latin American StudiesInstitute on Contemporary Middle East, Central Asia and North AfricaProgram on Science, Technology and Environmental PolicyOffice of Population ResearchCenter for the Study of Democratic PoliticsResearch Program in Political EconomyUniversity Center on Human ValuesJames Madison ProgramWoodrow Wilson SchoolPrinceton Society of FellowsDepartment of HistoryDepartment of Economics

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