SPOTLIGHTS
King-Meadows Promotion, Elected President of NCOBPS
Tyson D. King-Meadows was recently promoted to associate professor with tenure in the department of political science at the University of Maryland, Baltimore County. His research interests include Congress, African American political behavior and attitudes, representation, and public opinion. He is author of Devolution and Black State Legislators: Challenges and Choices in the Twenty-first Century (2006, with Thomas F. Schaller) and When the Letter Betrays the Spirit: Voting Rights Enforcement and African American Participation from Lyndon Johnson to Barack Obama (2011).
King-Meadows was elected president of the National Conference of Black Political Scientists this year. He is a recipient of numerous awards, including a Ford Foundation Postdoctoral Fellowship, a National Science Foundation grant to examine racial attitudes and the 2009 confirmation hearings on Sonia Sotomayor, a Fulbright to teach at the University of Ghana (he was subsequently appointed to the program's inaugural class of alumni ambassadors), and residencies at Harvard's W.E.B. Du Bois Institute, Princeton's Center for African-American Studies, and the Ghana Center for Democratic Development. A member of APSA since 1997, King-Meadows participates in a number of APSA's organized sections. He is treasurer of the Race, Ethnicity, and Politics section and served on its executive council.
Cizmar Joins Eastern Kentucky University
Anne Cizmar, a specialist in American politics and survey methods, was appointed assistant professor in the department of government at Eastern Kentucky University. She joined APSA in the last semester of her undergraduate career at the University of Akron. Cizmar recently received her doctorate from the University of Maryland and the professorship at EKU is her first full-time position. Her presentation at the 2011 annual meeting was “Framing Effects Experiment: The Impact of Conflicting Intra-Party Cues.”
Cizmar was a 2009 recipient of a Distinguished Teaching Assistant award and several other awards from the University of Maryland's department of government and politics. Geoff Layman, a former adviser, states, “Anne is that rare combination of a great scholar and a great person. Her dissertation really advances what we know about “easy issues” and American public opinion, but she also will be a wonderful asset to EKU as a teacher and colleague.”
Deardorff Appointment Announced
Michelle Deardorff was recently appointed full professor in the department of political science at Jackson State University. She joined APSA early in her graduate career at Miami University (Ohio) and has been a member for more than two decades. Deardorff has contributed several items to this journal and has played an active role in APSA's Teaching and Learning Conferences since the event's inception in 2004, when it was limited to 40 invited participants. Currently, she is a member of the program committee and is serving as chair of APSA's standing committee on Teaching and Learning for the next two years. In addition, she is a past chair of the Political Science Eduction organized section.
Deardorff has taught at Jackson State since 2003, when she left Millikin University after a stint as chair of the department of political science and acting dean of arts and sciences there. Her academic interests focus on the constitutional rights pertaining to race, gender, and religion. She has co-authored several books, including the Oxford University Press two-volume set, Constitutional Law in Contemporary America. She is a founding faculty member of the Fannie Lou Hamer Institute on Citizenship and Democracy that works with teachers to promote civic engagement and popular sovereignty through the study of the African American freedom struggle.
Braumoeller Promoted, Marks 20 Years of APSA Membership
Bear Braumoeller was recently promoted to associate professor in the department of political science at Ohio State University. The year 2011 marks his 20th year of APSA membership (he joined just after completing undergraduate studies at the University of Chicago). His research focuses on causal complexity in international relations, with an emphasis on relations among the great powers. His most recent publication (Journal of Conflict Resolution, with Austin Carson) offers a new solution to the longstanding problem of politically irrelevant dyads. He received his PhD from the University of Michigan, where his dissertation adviser was former APSA President Robert Axelrod.
Braumoeller (his first name is in honor of the legendary Alabama football coach), recently had his first book, The Great Powers and the International System: Systemic Politics in Empirical Perspective, accepted for publication (Cambridge University Press). He has previously published in this journal and in the American Political Science Review, among an array of volumes in the profession. Before arriving in Columbus, Braumoeller held positions at Harvard, the University of Illinois, and the University of Rochester. His first paper at an APSA annual meeting (1997) explored “Isolationism: the Phenomenon, its Importance, and its Relevance to your Research.” In addition to his political science interests, he is an active member of the Columbus Slow Food chapter.
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Stein Rokkran Prize Awarded to James W. McGuire
James W. McGuire, professor and chair, in the department of government, Wesleyan University, has won the 16th (2011) Stein Rokkan Prize for Comparative Social Science Research. The prize is for his recent book Wealth, Health, and Democracy in East Asia and Latin America (Cambridge University Press, 2010), which was also named a Choice Outstanding Academic Title 2010.
The Stein Rokkan Prize is awarded annually by the International Social Science Council (ISSC) in collaboration with the European Consortium for Political Research and the University of Bergen, Norway, where Professor Rokkan (1921–1979) taught. Supported by UNESCO, the ISSC is “the primary international body representing the social and behavioral sciences at a global level.” A four-member jury awards the prize to a submission “that is deemed a very substantial and original contribution to comparative social science research.” Professor McGuire will receive the prize at the ISSC Executive Council Meeting in Durban, South Africa, on November 25 and 26, 2011, at which time he will deliver a public lecture on the book. Visit http://www.worldsocialscience.org/?p=1813 for details.
Professor McGuire received his BA from Swarthmore and his PhD from the University of California, Berkeley. He specializes in comparative politics, with a topical focus on democracy and public health and a regional focus on Latin America and East Asia. He is the author of Peronism without Perón: Unions, Parties, and Democracy in Argentina (Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 1997). He has held fellowships at the Centro de Estudios de Estado y Sociedad, the Kellogg Institute for International Studies, the Pacific Council on International Policy, the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars, and the Harvard Center for Population and Development Studies. He is a recipient of Wesleyan's Binswanger Prize for Excellence in Teaching.
Charlton Retires from CSU
Sue Ellen Charlton retired from the department of political science at Colorado State University, where she had taught since 1967. She was a member of APSA for more than 40 years and a frequent contributor to several Association funds. Charlton primarily lectured on Western Europe, Asia, and women in development. Her Comparing Asian Politics (1997), a comparative examination of China, India, and Japan is a standard for undergraduate education in that field and is now in its third edition. Charlton's Women in Third World Development (1984) was one of the first general studies on that topic and is still regarded as a foundational work. Charlton began her career with a focus on French politics, with particular emphasis on policies toward European integration.
Charlton has been a resident scholar at Tokyo Women's University, the American Institute for Indian Studies in New Delhi, and led a Fulbright group project abroad in India. She chaired the political science department from 1987 to 1992 and the university-wide faculty council from 2000 to 2002. With the exception of visiting professorships with the University of Pittsburgh and Grenoble University (France), she spent her entire career at Colorado State, where she has made important contributions to programs in Asian Studies, Women's Studies, and International Development.Her colleague Robert Duffy, expressed his admiration for her work at Colorado State. “Sue Ellen was a tremdous colleague, and we miss her reliably good instincts and insights. It may sound like a cliche, but Sue Ellen was truly an exceptional faculty member sho excelled at all aspects of her job, and whose dedication to the university over the years was unrivalled.” Another colleague, John Straayer, praises her as “the kind of productive, balanced and mature faculty member on which fine universities are built.”
Gadarian Accepts New Appointment
Shana Gadarian was appointed assistant professor in the department of political science at Syracuse University. She will teach courses on American politics and the media and politics. Gadarian received her doctorate from Princeton University in 2008 and has already published in several journals in the profession, including Perspectives on Politics. Her dissertation was recognized by APSA's organized section on Experimental Research as the best in the field and was also nominated for APSA's E.E. Schattschneider Award.
Gadarian has received grants from the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, the National Science Foundation (several), and the University of Washington. She has lectured at Princeton, Swarthmore, and was a Robert Wood Johnson Health Policy Fellow at the University of California, Berkeley from 2009-2011. As a fellow at Berkeley, she has investigated how public anxiety concerning health crises affects the citizenry's trust in government. She received a graduate student travel grant to present a paper on Threat, Fear, and Foreign Policy Opinion at the 2005 APSA annual meeting.
Green Joins Columbia University
Donald P. Green joined the department of political science at Columbia University following 22 years at Yale, where he was a professor of political science and Director of the Institution for Social and Policy Studies. His research interests cover a broad spectrum ranging from voting behavior and campaign finance to hate crime. He has received numerous grants from several sources, including the Ford Foundation, Carnegie Corporation, and the National Science Foundation. Green is a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences.
Green joined APSA while pursuing doctoral studies at the University of California, Berkeley and has been a member of the Association for over a quarter of a century. He was a council member from 2005-07 and is an officer of the organized section on Experimental Research, of which he is the outgoing President. He was the 2010 recipient of the Heinz Eulau Award for the best essay in the American Political Science Review. Green's Deference, Dissent, and Dispute Resolution: An Experimental Intervention Using Mass Media to Change Norms and Behavior in Rwanda (with Elizabeth Levy Paluck), was praised by the award committee as a “masterful achievement” that “is truly impressive.”
Tulane Builds Strength in Race and Gender Politics through Newcomb College Institute and New Faculty
To build strength in race and gender politics, Tulane University welcomes two new professors. This fall, Melissa Harris-Perry joins Tulane University as a professor of political science and the founding director of the Anna Julia Cooper Project on Gender, Race, and Politics in the South. Her most recent book, Sister Citizen: Shame, Stereotypes and Black Women in America, is now available from Yale University Press. Beginning with the fall semester, Harris-Perry will teach an undergraduate course on women in politics, media and the contemporary United States and also envisages a new course on the role of first ladies. In her previous academic position, Harris-Perry taught politics and African American studies at Princeton University and has carved out a name for herself in the public sphere as a regular commentator on MSNBC programs such as The Rachel Maddow Show and The Last Word with Lawrence O'Donnell. New Orleans has long been the focus of Harris-Perry's research, and she looks forward to further using the location of the South as a position from which to analyze contemporary issues in American politics. The project takes an intersectional approach and hopes to initiate a visiting scholar program, a postdoctoral program, student media projects, an endowed lecture series, and to develop a journal.
Ambitious in scope, the project is sponsored by Tulane's Newcomb College Institute under the direction of Executive Director Sally J. Kenney, another recent addition to Tulane. Kenney took on her role at Newcomb College Institute in January 2010. She was previously a professor of public affairs and law and the director of the Center on Women and Public Policy at the Hubert H. Humphrey Institute of Public Affairs at the University of Minnesota where she ran a successful postdoctoral progam on race, gender, and public policy and operated a special graduate concentration in women and public policy. Kenney is completing a book on Gender and Judging (Routlede Press 2012) and looks forward to extending her international work on judges and her work on state court judges to Louisiana and the South (http://genderandjudging.com/2009/11/25/sally-j-kenney/). At Tulane, Kenney has pioneered a service learning course on domestic violence in which students do court monitoring of orders for protection cases and looks forward to developing more service learning courses on women, gender, and feminism.
Harris-Perry's project is a key component of Kenney's vision to involve undergraduate women in cutting-edge research that is politically engaged and leverages the strengths of the Newcomb archives and special collections of the Vorhoff Library. “Melissa's skill at bringing her social scientific expertise to bear on her work as a public intellectual distinguishes her from other successful pundits. Her ability to cross disciplines and subfields, combined with her deep and sophisticated engagement with real-world politics, when added to the existing faculty strengths, positions Tulane to be a leader in women and politics.”
Alter Awarded Guggenheim Fellowship
Karen J. Alter won a John Simon Guggenheim Fellowship in 2011, and the Berlin Prize from the American Academy of Berlin. Alter is Professor of Political Science, with a courtesy appointment in Law, at Northwestern University. She won the Guggenheim Fellowship in law for her interdisciplinary examination of how delegating authority to international courts is reshaping international relations and domestic politics.
Alter is author of Establishing the Supremacy of European Law (Oxford University Press, 2001), The European Court's Political Power (Oxford University Press, 2009) and co-editor of the forthcoming Oxford Handbook on International Adjudication. She also has completed more than 30 articles and book chapters on international regime complexity and on the theory and politics of international courts, focusing on international courts in Europe, Latin America, and, more recently, in Africa.
Alter will spend the fall semester of 2011 in residence at Northwestern Law School and spring 2012 in residence at the American Academy in Berlin. Both awards are to complete her book The New Terrain of International Law: International Courts in International Politics (Princeton University Press, forthcoming).
[Editor's note: In the July 2011 issue of PS we noted three other political scientists who were awarded 2011 Guggenheim Fellowships.]
Fisher Receives Walter Beach Pi Sigma Alpha Award
The National Capital-Area Political Science Association (NCAPSA) awarded the Walter Beach Pi Sigma Alpha Award to Louis Fisher, scholar in residence at the Constitution Project. He previously worked at the Library of Congress as senior specialist in the separation of powers (Congressional Research Service from 1970-2006) and specialist in constitutional law at the Law Library (from 2006–2010). He has testified before Congress 50 times on subjects including war powers, legislative vetoes, military tribunals, state secrets, and presidential inherent powers. During his service with CRS, he was research director of the House Iran-Contra Committee in 1987, writing major sections of the final report.
Fisher is the author of 20 books, including On Appreciating Congress: The People's Branch, Military Tribunals and Presidential Power: American Revolution to the War on Terrorism, Encyclopedia of the American Presidency, and his most recently published Defending Congress and the Constitution. Fisher's tremendously productive career epitomizes the nature and purpose of this award.
Over the past 30 years, this award, a continuing honor to the late Walter Beach, has recognized political scientists who have made a “substantial contribution to strengthen the relationship between political science and public service.” Past recipients have included Donna Shalala, Austin Ranney, Jeane Kirkpatrick, David Price, Bill Galston, Elaine Kamarck, Norman Ornstein, Tom Mann, and last year's award winner, Jim Thurber.
Khademian Named Director
Anne Khademian was named Director of the School of Public and International Affairs at Virginia Tech's College of Architecture and Urban Studies. Khademian was previously program director of the Center for Public Administration and Policy at Virginia Tech's Alexandria campus, where she has taught since 2004. She has prior affiliations with the Brookings Institution, the University of Wisconsin-Madison, the University of Michigan, and the University of Pennsylvania.
Khademian received her PhD from Washington University in St. Louis and has published on a variety of topics, including public management, democratic governance, and homeland security. Her recent research interests have focused on topics as varied as the Federalist Papers, financial regulation, and the US Coast Guard. She recently concluded a term as Co-editor of the Journal of Public Administration Research and Theory and is a Fellow of the National Academy of Public Administration. Khademian will split her time between Virginia Tech's Blacksburg and Alexandria campuses.
Roberts Named Interim Dean
Gary Roberts was named Interim Dean of the Robertson School of Government at Regent University. He received his PhD from the University of Pittsburgh, specializing in public administration. Roberts has been at Regent since 2003 and previously taught at Florida International University, Fairleigh Dickinson University, and the University of Memphis. He has published on a wide range of issues and journals within the public administration field. His current areas of interest include human resource management policy and spirituality in the workplace and he is working on several books in those fields. Roberts has public sector experience in Georgia (rural development planner) and Pennsylvania (department of public safety). He is an active member of the Hampton Roads Chapter of the American Society of Public Administration and was a book notes and book review editor for the Review of Public Personnel Administration.
Long Receives Fulbright Award
Kenneth J. Long, professor of history and political science and chair of the department of history and society at Saint Joseph College in West Hartford, Connecticut has been awarded a Fulbright Award to serve as Visiting Professor of Political Science at Johannes Kepler University in Linz, Austria, spring/summer semester 2012. He will teach a graduate course on Islamophobia and conduct research on European parties of the far left and far right. He is also author of the recent book The Trouble with America (Lexington Books, 2008) reviewed in the March 2011 issue of New Political Science.
Warnke Joins University of California, Riverside
Political philosopher Georgia Warnke has joined the department of political science at the University of California, Riverside, as Distinguished Professor. She joins assistant professor Farah Godrej, associate professors Bronwyn Leebaw and John Medearis, and professor John Christian Lauren in the department's political theory section. She is the author, most recently, of After Identity: Rethinking Race, Sex, and Gender (Cambridge University Press, 2007) and recent articles on Habermas, Rorty, and Geertz.
ADMINISTRATIVE APPOINTMENTS
Francis Adams, professor of political science and international studies, Old Dominion University, was appointed chair, department of political science and geography.
Hunter Bacot, associate professor of political science at Elon University, was appointed director of the Institute of Government, University of Arkansas at Little Rock.
MaryAnne Borrelli, professor of government at Connecticut College, was appointed chair, department of government and international relations.
Jie Chen, former Louis I. Jaffee Professor of Political Science and department chair at Old Dominion University, was named dean, College of Graduate Studies, University of Idaho.
Maurice Cunningham, assistant professor of political science, was appointed chair, department of political science, University of Massachusetts, Boston.
Kerstin Hamann, professor of political science was appointed chair of the department of political science, University of Central Florida.
Denise von Herrmann, dean, College of Arts and Letters, University of Southern Mississippi, was named Provost and Vice President for Academic Affairs of Oglethorpe University.
Kenneth Kato, archives specialist at the Center for Legislative Archives at the National Archives, has been appointed associate historian, Office of the Historian, U.S. House of Representatives.
Daniel R. Kempton, professor of political science at Northern Illinois University, was named Vice President for Academic Affairs at the Franciscan University of Steubenville.
Regina G. Lawrence, previously Kevin P. Reilly, Sr. Chair in Political Communication at Louisiana State University, was named the Jesse H. Jones Centennial Chair in the School of Journalism, University of Texas – Austin.
Katia Levintova, assistant professor of political science, was named chair of the department of public and environmental affairs, University of Wisconsin, Green Bay.
Linda Lopez, former program director for cross-directorate programs, division of social and behavioral and economic sciences at the National Science Foundation, has been appointed associate dean for diversity and strategic initiatives, Dornsfie College of Letters, Arts and Sciences, University of Southern California.
Richard K. Matthews, professor of political science, was appointed chair of the department of political science, Lehigh University.
Nolan McCarty, associate dean, Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs at Princeton University, was appointed chair of the department of politics, Princeton University.
Jeanette Mendez, associate professor of political science, was appointed Interim Department Head, department of political science, Oklahoma State University.
Andrea Simpson, associate professor of political science, was appointed chair of the department of political science, University of Richmond.
Melody Rose, professor and chair of the political science division of Hatfield School of Government, was named Vice Provost for Academic Programs and Instruction at Portland State University.
Robert W. Smith, associate professor of public administration, was appointed chair of the department of political science and international affairs, Kennesaw State University.
NEW APPOINTMENTS
Jerome Aguon, instructor, political science program, University of Guam
John Stephen Ahlquist, assistant professor, department of political science, University of Wisconsin, Madison
Osaore Aideyan, assistant professor, department of politics and government, Illinois State University
Robert W. Alexander, assistant professor, department of political science, James Madison University
Ihsan Alkhatib, assistant professor, department of political science, Murray State University
Todd L. Allee, assistant professor, department of government and politics, University of Maryland
Jennifer Anderson, assistant professor, department of sociology and political science, Tennessee Technological University
Celeste Arrington, assistant professor, department of political science, George Washington University
Madeline Baer, assistant professor, department of political science, San Diego State University
Anne Baker, assistant professor, department of political science, Miami University (OH)
Hyunhoe Bae, assistant professor, school of public and international affairs, North Carolina State University
Gregory Baldi, assistant professor, department of political science, Western Illinois University
Larry Bartels, professor, department of political science, Vanderbilt University
Andrea Benjamin, assistant professor, department of political science, University of North Carolina – Chapel Hill
RaJade Berry-James, associate professor, school of public and international affairs, North Carolina State University
Rikhil Bhavnani, assistant professor, department of political science, University of Wisconsin, Madison
Dallas Blaney, assistant professor, department of public and environmental affairs, University of Wisconsin, Green Bay
Adam Bonica, assistant professor, department of political science, Stanford University
Diana Boros, assistant professor, department of political science, St. Mary's College of Maryland
Jennifer Bowie, assistant professor, department of political science, University of Richmond
Regina Branton, assistant professor, department of political science, University of North Texas
Khalilah Brown-Dean, associate professor, department of philosophy and political science, Quinnipiac University
David Brule, assistant professor, department of political science, Purdue University
Zachary Callen, assistant professor, department of political science, Allegheny College
Patrick Campbell, assistant professor, department of history and political science, Ashland University
Cristian Cantir, assistant professor, department of political science, Oakland University
David Carter, assistant professor, department of politics, Princeton University
Christopher Chapp, assistant professor, department of political science, University of Wisconsin – Whitewater
Simon Chauchard, assistant professor, department of government, Dartmouth College
Soundarya Chidambaram, instructor, department of political science, University of Arkansas – Fayetteville
Seung-Whan Choi, assistant professor, department of political science, Northern Illinois University
Theo Christov, assistant professor, department of history, George Washington University
Christopher Cook, assistant professor, department of political science, University of Pittsburgh at Johnstown
David E. Cunningham, assistant professor, department of government and politics, University of Maryland
Kathleen Gallagher Cunningham, assistant professor, department of government and politics, University of Maryland
Delton Daigle, assistant professor, department of public and international affairs, George Mason University
Lauren Davenport, assistant professor, department of political science, Stanford University
Leniece Davis, assistant professor, department of political science, Jackson State University
Randall Davis, assistant professor, department of political science, Miami University (OH)
Chris Dawes, assistant professor, department of politics, New York University
Jonathan Day, assistant professor, department of political science, Western Illinois University
Jeff Dayton-Johnson, assistant professor, Global Trade and Development Program, Monterey Institute of International Studies
Maureen Donnelly, assistant professor, department of political science, Rutgers University – Camden
Colleen Driscoll, assistant professor, department of philosophy and political science, Quinnipiac University
Katya Drozdova, assistant professor, department of political science and geography, Seattle Pacific University
Adam Eckerd, assistant professor, school of public affairs and public administration, University of Kansas
Kara Lynn Ellerby, assistant professor, department of political science, University of Delaware
Jo Ann Ewalt, professor, department of political science, College of Charleston
Dalia Fahmy, assistant professor, department of political science/international studies, Long Island University
Lewis Faulk, assistant professor, department of public administration and policy, American University
Michael Feola, assistant professor, department of government and law, Lafayette College
Richard Fording, professor and chair, department of political science, University of Alabama
Michael Fortner, assistant professor, department of political science, Rutgers University – Camden
Matthew Fuhrmann, assistant professor, department of political science, Texas A&M University
Shana Gadarian, assistant professor, department of political science, Syracuse University
Gretchen Gee, lecturer, department of politics and international affairs, Northern Arizona University
Seth Gershenson, assistant professor, department of public administration and policy, American University
Kent Glenzer, professor, Public Administration Program, Monterey Institute of International Studies
David Glick, assistant professor, department of political science, Boston University
Jeffrey Grynaviski, associate professor, department of political science, Wayne State University
Joshua Gubler, assistant professor, department of political science, Brigham Young University
Jennifer Hadden, assistant professor, department of government and politics, University of Maryland
Alisa Von Hagel, assistant professor, department of political science, University of Wisconsin, Superior
Bradley Hardy, assistant professor, department of public administration and policy, American University
Bruce William Hardy, assistant professor, Manship School of Mass Communication and department of political science, Louisiana State University
Brett Heindl, assistant professor, department of political science, SUNY College at Oneonta
Eitan D. Hersh, assistant professor, department of political science, Yale University
Keisha Heywood, assistant professor, School of American and International Studies, Ramapo College
Cullen Hendrix, assistant professor, department of government, College of William and Mary
Aaron Hoffman, associate professor with tenure, department of political science, Purdue University
James Hollyer, assistant professor, department of political science, University of Minnesota.
Alison Howell, assistant professor, department of political science, Rutgers University – Newark
Courtney Jensen, assistant professor, department of political science, justice studies, and public administration, Georgia Southern University
Gyung-Ho Jeong, assistant professor, department of political science, University of British Columbia
Luis Jimenez, assistant professor, department of political science, University of Massachusetts – Boston
Jason Jividen, assistant professor, department of politics, Saint Vincent College
Steven Johnston, associate professor and chair, department of political science, University of Utah
Betcy Jose-Thota, assistant professor, department of political science, University of Colorado – Denver
Philip Joyce, professor, school of public policy, University of Maryland
Juliet Kaarbo, senior lecturer, school of social and political science, University of Edinburgh
Choong-Nam Kang, assistant professor, department of political science, Murray State University
David Karol, associate professor, department of government and politics, University of Maryland
Mark Kaswan, assistant professor, department of government, University of Texas – Brownsville
Luke Keele, assistant professor, department of political science, Pennsylvania State University
Chris Kelly, lecturer, department of political science, Miami University (OH)
Esen Kirdis, assistant professor, department of international studies, Rhodes College
Sarah Koon-Magnin, assistant professor, department of political science and criminal justice, University of South Alabama
Bethany Lacina, assistant professor, department of political science, University of Rochester
Thomas R. Laehn, assistant professor, department of social sciences, McNeese State University
Howard Lavine, Arleen C. Carlson Chair and associate professor, University of Minnesota
Michele Leiby, assistant professor, department of political science, College of Wooster
Paul Lenze, lecturer, department of politics and international affairs, Northern Arizona University
Yu Peng Lin, assistant professor, department of political science and legal administration, University of Detroit Mercy
Jennifer Lobasz, assistant professor, department of political science, University of Delaware
Cyanne E. Loyle, assistant professor, department of political science, West Virginia University
Paul MacDonald, assistant professor, department of political science, Wellesley College
Christie Maloyed, assistant professor, department of political science, University of Nebraska at Kearney
Daniela Mansbach, assistant professor, department of political science, University of Wisconsin, Superior
Melanie Marlowe, lecturer, department of political science, Miami University (OH)
Eric Matthews, assistant professor, department of history & political science, Notre Dame College
Pamela J. Clouser McCann, assistant professor, school of public affairs, University of Washington
Ernest B. McGowan, assistant professor, department of political science, University of Richmond
Robert McGrath, assistant professor, department of public and international affairs, George Mason University
Alison McQueen, assistant professor, department of political science, Stanford University
Erin Melton, assistant professor, department of public policy, University of Connecticut
Matthew Mendham, assistant professor, department of government, Christopher Newport University
Eduardo Moncada, assistant professor, department of political science, Rutgers University – Newark
Jonathan Monten, assistant professor, department of political science, University of Oklahoma
Taryn Morrisey, assistant professor, department of public administration and policy, American University
Quinn Mulroy, assistant professor, department of political science, Syracuse University
Thomas Mustillo, assistant professor, department of political science, Purdue University
Na'ama Nagar, assistant professor, department of political science and public affairs, Western Carolina University
Clayton Nall, assistant professor, department of political science, Stanford University
Steven Nawara, assistant professor, department of political science, Valdosta State University
Beth Neary, assistant professor, department of public policy, University of Connecticut
Cynthia Newton, assistant professor, department of political science, Wesley College
Brendan Nyhan, assistant professor, department of government, Dartmouth College
Kristi Olson, assistant professor, department of political science, Stanford University
Erica Owen, assistant professor, department of political science, Texas A&M University
Rene Paddags, assistant professor, department of history and political science, Ashland University
Mikael Pelz, assistant professor, department of political science, Calvin College
Margaret Peters, assistant professor, department of political science, University of Wisconsin – Madison
J. Mitchell Pickerill, associate professor, department of political science, Northern Illinois University
Deepa Prakash, assistant professor, department of political science, DePauw University
Jos Raadschelders, professor, school of public affairs, Ohio State University
Gary Reinbold, assistant professor, department of public administration, University of Illinois at Springfield
Maria Rendon, assistant professor, department of planning, policy, and design, University of California, Irvine
Kathy H. Rim, assistant professor, department of government, Wesleyan University
Melissa Rogers, assistant professor, school of politics and economics, Claremont Graduate University
Anoop Sadanandan, assistant professor, department of political science, Syracuse University
Cyrus Sammi, assistant professor, department of politics, New York University
Andrea Sarzynski, assistant professor, school of public policy and administration, University of Delaware
Anne M. Pitsch Santiago, assistant professor, department of political science, University of Portland
Mark Schafer, professor, department of political science, University of Central Florida
Davis Schlosberg, professor, department of government and international relations, University of Sydney
Jennifer Sciubba, assistant professor, department of international studies, Rhodes College
James Scott, professor and chair, department of political science, Texas Christian University
Ellen Seljan-Moule, assistant professor, department of political science, Lewis & Clark College
Megan Shannon, assistant professor, department of political science, Florida State University
Allyson Shortle, assistant professor, department of political science, University of Oklahoma
Stephanie Sillay, assistant professor, department of political science, Newberry College
Guilherme Silva, assistant professor, department of political science, Georgetown College
Erica Simmons, assistant professor, department of political science, University of Wisconsin – Madison
Jakeet Singh, assistant professor, department of politics and government, Illinois State University
Carie Steele, assistant professor, department of political science, Texas Tech University
John Stogner, assistant professor, department of political science, justice studies, and public administration, Georgia Southern University
J. Vincent Strickler, assistant professor, department of political science, Valdosta State University
Arun Swamy, assistant professor, political science program, University of Guam
Ora Szekely, assistant professor, department of political science, Clark University
Carl Taylor, assistant professor, department of social and behavioral sciences, Walsh University
Martha Thomas, assistant professor, department of political science, University of Vermont
Sarah Treul, instructor, department of political science, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
Ali Valenzuela, post-doctoral research associate, department of politics, Princeton University
Joseph Paul Vasquez, lecturer, department of political science, University of Central Florida
Nicole Velasco, assistant professor, department of history and political science, Lee University
Lisa Pace Vetter, assistant professor, department of political science, University of Maryland, Baltimore County
Andrea Vieux, assistant professor, department of political science, University of Central Florida
Craig Volden, professor, Frank Batten School of Leadership and Public Policy, University of Virginia
Leonard Wantchekon, professor, department of politics, Princeton University
Kevin Ward, assistant professor, department of political science, justice studies, and public administration, Georgia Southern University
George Warnke, distinguished professor, department of political science, University of California, Riverside
Suranjan Weeraratne, assistant professor, department of political science, Southern Illinois University Edwardsville
Jenifer Whitten-Woodring, assistant professor, department of political science, University of Massachusetts – Lowell
Kim Williams, associate professor, division of political science, Portland State University
Laron Williams, assistant professor, department of political science, University of Missouri, Columbia
Patrick Wohlfarth, assistant professor, department of government and politics, University of Maryland
Peter R. Yacobucci, assistant professor, department of political science, Buffalo State College
Robert Yehl, assistant professor, department of political science, Valdosta State University
Abdulkadir Yildirim, assistant professor, department of political science, Furman University
Jiso Yoon, assistant professor, department of political science, University of Kansas
Eric Zeemering, assistant professor, department of political science, University of Maryland, Baltimore County
Karen Zivi, assistant professor, department of political science, Grand Valley State University
PROMOTIONS
Julia Albarracin, associate professor with tenure, department of political science, Western Illinois University
Mahalley Allen, associate professor with tenure, department of political science, California State University, Chico
Marcus Allen, associate professor with tenure, department of politics and international relations, Wheaton College
Dana Lee Baker, associate professor with tenure, department of political science, Washington State University Vancouver
Ann Beck, associate professor with tenure, department of government, law, and international affairs, Murray State
Michael Bosia, associate professor with tenure, department of political science, St. Michael's College
Deborah Jordan Brooks, associate professor, department of government, Dartmouth College
Justin Buchler, associate professor with tenure, department of political science, Case Western Reserve University
Keith Bybee, professor, department of political science, Syracuse University
William Byrne, associate professor with tenure, department of government and politics, Saint John's University
Nathan Busch, associate professor with tenure, department of government, Christopher Newport University
James Brunet, associate professor with tenure, school of public and international affairs, North Carolina State University
Yu-Che Chen, associate professor, department of political science, Northern Illinois University
Tom Clark, associate professor, department of political science, Emory University
Elizabeth Cohen, associate professor with tenure, department of political science, Syracuse University
Renato Corbetta, associate professor with tenure, department of government, University of Alabama at Birmingham
Thomas Craemer, associate professor with tenure, department of public policy, University of Connecticut
Carrie Currier, associate professor with tenure, department of political science, Texas Christian University
Brett Curry, associate professor with tenure, department of political science, Georgia Southern University
Mohamed Daadaoui, associate professor, department of political science, Oklahoma City University
Brian Danoff, associate professor with tenure, department of political science, Miami University (OH)
Charles Dunn, distinguished professor, school of government, Regent University
Alec Ewald, associate professor with tenure, department of political science, University of Vermont
Sean Farhang, associate professor with tenure, school of public policy, University of California, Berkeley
Kathleen Ferraiolo, associate professor, department of political science, James Madison University
Andrew Flibbert, associate professor with tenure, department of political science, Trinity College
Carolyn Forestiere, associate professor with tenure, department of political science, University of Maryland, Baltimore County
V. Page Fortna, professor, department of political science, Columbia University
Amy Fried, professor, department of political science, University of Maine
Stephen Gent, associate professor with tenure, department of political science, University of North Carolina , Chapel Hill
Andra Gillespie, associate professor, department of political science, Emory University
Bruce Gilley, associate professor with tenure, division of political science, Portland State University
Marcia Godwin, associate professor, department of public and health administration, University of La Verne
Rick Griffin, associate professor with tenure, department of history and political science, Utah Valley University
Mary Alice Haddad, associate professor with tenure, department of government, Wesleyan University
Michael Hamner, associate professor, department of government and politics, University of Maryland
Elisabeth Hilbink, associate professor, department of political science, University of Minnesota
Katherine Hite, professor, department of political science, Vassar College
Pamela Herd, associate professor, school of public affairs, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Joaquin Herranz, associate professor, school of public affairs, University of Washington
Christopher M. Jones, professor, department of political science, Northern Illinois University
David A. Jones, professor, department of political science, James Madison University
Jimmy Kandeh, professor, department of political science, University of Richmond
Jenny Kehl, associate professor with tenure, department of political science, Rutgers University – Camden
Nate Kelly, associate professor, department of political science, University of Tennessee
Rogan Kersh, professor, school of public service, New York University
Kate Knutson, associate professor with tenure, department of political science, Gustavus Adolphus College
Mahendra Lawoti, professor, department of political science, Western Michigan University
Jongho Lee, tenure, department of political science, Western Illinois University
Elvin Lim, associate professor with tenure, department of government, Wesleyan University
Howard L. Lubert, professor, department of political science, James Madison University
Eric MacGilvray, associate professor, department of political science, Ohio State University
Akan Malici, tenure, department of political science, Furman University
Kristina Mani, associate professor with tenure, department of politics, Oberlin College
Isabela Mares, professor, department of political science, Columbia University
Richard Matthew, professor, department of planning, policy, and design, University of California, Irvine
Lori Maxwell, professor, department of sociology and political science, Tennessee Technological University
David Mitchell, tenure, department of political science, Bucknell University
Sara Mitchell, professor, department of political science, University of Iowa
Quin Monson, associate professor with tenure, department of political science, Brigham Young University
Jana Morgan, associate professor, department of political science, University of Tennessee
Layna Mosley, professor, department of political science, University of North Carolina – Chapel Hill
M. Victoria Murillo, professor, department of political science, Columbia University
Shadrack Nasong'o, associate professor with tenure, department of international studies, Rhodes College
Branda Nowell, associate professor with tenure, school of public and international affairs, North Carolina State University
Alina Oxendine, associate professor with tenure, department of political science, Hamline University
Christine Palus, associate professor wih tenure, department of political science, Villanova University
Michael Parkin, associate professor with tenure, department of politics, Oberlin College
Amy Patterson, professor, department of political science, Calvin College
Kathryn Pearson, associate professor, department of political science, University of Minnesota
Justin Phillips, associate professor, department of political science, Columbia University
Pablo Pinto, associate professor, department of political science, Columbia University
Robert Pirro, professor, department of political science, Georgia Southern University
Jeremy Pope, associate professor with tenure, department of political science, Brigham Young University
Graeme Robertson, associate professor with tenure, department of political science, University of North Carolina – Chapel Hill
Abdoulaye Saine, professor, department of political science, Miami University (OH)
Mark Schaefer, associate professor with tenure, department of history, philosophy, political science, and religion, Marietta College
Heike Schotten, associate professor with tenure, department of political science, University of Massachusetts – Boston
Gulnaz Sharafutdinova, associate professor with tenure, department of political science, Miami University (OH)
Lisa Sharlach, associate professor with tenure, department of government, University of Alabama at Birmingham
Thomas Shaw, associate professor with tenure, department of political science and criminal justice, University of South Alabama
Ben Storey, associate professor with tenure, department of political science, Furman University
Fubing Su, associate professor with tenure, department of political science, Vassar College
Randall Swain, associate professor with tenure, department of government, Eastern Kentucky University
Susan Tabrizi, associate professor with tenure, department of political science, Wells College
Cameron Thies, professor, department of political science, University of Iowa
Michael Ting, professor, department of political science, Columbia University
Matthew O. Thomas, professor, political science department, California State University, Chico
George Vanberg, professor, department of political science, University of North Carolina – Chapel Hill
Vincent Wei-Chang Wang, professor, department of political science, University of Richmond, also admin appointment
Sarah Wiliarty, associate professor with tenure, department of government, Wesleyan University
Anthony Wohlers, associate professor with tenure, department of history and government, Cameron University
Darryl Wood, tenure, department of political science, Washington State University Vancouver
Susan Webb Yakee, associate professor, school of public affairs, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Edward Yang, associate professor, department of political science, James Madison University
Kurt Young, associate professor with tenure, department of political science, University of Central Florida
Alex Zakaras, associate professor with tenure, department of political science, University of Vermont
Zhiqun Zhu, associate professor with tenure, department of political science, Bucknell University
VISITING OR TEMPORARY POSITIONS
Avi Acharya, post-doctoral fellow, W. Allen Wallis Institute of Political Economy, University of Rochester
Jason Adams, visiting assistant professor, department of political science, Williams College
Riad Attar, visiting assistant professor, department of political science, Miami University (OH)
Gail Buttorff, post-doctoral fellow, New York University – Abu Dhabi
Dominic Corva, visiting lecturer, department of politics, Sarah Lawrence College
Carlos Costa, visiting professor, department of international studies, Rhodes College
Martin Dimitrov, Fellow, Institute for Advanced Study, University of Notre Dame
Audrey K. Flemming, adjunct instructor, department of political science, Coe College
Lindsay Flynn, visiting professor, department of political science, Rhodes College
Arman Grigoryan, visiting assistant professor, department of political science, Lehigh University
Heejin Han, visiting assistant professor, department of political science, Northern Illinois University
Kate Huston, visiting part-time faculty, department of political science, Oklahoma City University
Daniel Lehman, visiting assistant professor, department of history, philosophy, political science, and religion, Marietta College
David Levy, post-doctoral fellow, department of political science, Emory University
Noam Lupu, visiting fellow, Helen Kellogg Institute for International Studies, University of Notre Dame
Todd Makse, visiting assistant professor, department of political science, Dickinson College
Mingus Mapps, visiting assistant professor, division of political science, Portland State University
Gregory McBrayer, post-doctoral fellow, department of political science, Emory University
John McTague, visiting assistant professor, department of political science, Randolph-Macon College
Stephen Meserve, visiting assistant professor, department of political science, Texas Tech
Caitlin Milazzo, associate research fellow, Center for Elections, Media, and Parties, University of Exeter
Jessica Minnis-McClain, visiting lecturer, department of political science, James Madison University
Joshua Mitchell, visiting assistant professor, department of political science, University of Arkansas – Fayetteville (second year continuation)
Wairimu Njoya, visiting assistant professor, department of political science, Williams College
Margaret Peters, post-doctoral fellow, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, Stanford University
Robi Ragan, post-doctoral fellow, department of political science, Emory University
Paul Schroeder, visiting assistant professor, department of political science, Case Western Reserve University
Shan Sappleton, visiting assistant professor, department of political science, St. Mary's College of Maryland
Erica Simmons, post-doctoral fellow, Chicago Center for Contemporary Theory
Caitlin Talmadge, visiting scholar, department of political science, George Washington University
Vincent Vecera, visiting assistant professor, department of political science, Gustavus Adolphus College
Joseph White, visiting assistant professor of American Government, Oxford University (Michaelmas term)
Nicholas Wheeler, visiting faculty, department of political science, Brigham Young University
AWARDS
Daniel Aldrich, associate professor, department of political science, Purdue University, will be an American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) Fellow at the Department of State in Washington, DC.
Ken Greene, associate professor, department of government, University of Texas at Austin, received a 2011–12 Raymond Dickson Centennial Endowed Teaching Fellowship.
J. Scott Johnson, professor, department of political science, St. John's University (MN), received the Robert L. Spaeth Teacher of Distinction Award.
James H. Mittelman, university professor of international affairs, School of International Service, American University, was named Honorary Fellow at the Helsinki Collegium for Advanced Studies.
Elliot Posner, associate professor, department of political science, Case Western Reserve University, has won a European Union Affairs Research Program Fulbright Scholarship for Spring 2012. His professional affiliation will be at Sciences Po, Centre d'études européennes (CEE).
RETIREMENTS
Juan del Aguila, professor, department of political science, Emory University
John Anderson, professor, department of political science, University of Nebraska at Kearney
Gerald Bender, associate professor, School of International Relations, University of Southern California
Andrea Bonnicksen, professor, department of political science, Northern Illinois University
Charles Brockett, professor, department of political science, University of the South
Charles K. Coe, professor, school of public and international affairs, North Carolina State University
John Comer, professor, department of political science, University of Nebraska-Lincoln
Paul Conway, professor, department of political science, SUNY College at Oneonta
John Copper, professor, department of international studies, Rhodes College
Warren Dixon, professor, department of political science, Texas A&M University
Larry A. Eberhardt, professor, department of political science, Oklahoma City University
Roy Flemming, professor, department of political science, Texas A&M University
Robert Gorman, professor, department of political science, University of Tennessee
Gary Halter, professor, department of political science, Texas A&M University
Will Hazleton, professor, department of political science, Miami University (OH)
Donald Jackson, professor, department of political science, Texas Christian University
Thomas James, professor, department of political science, University of Oklahoma
Ian T. King, professor, department of politics and international relations, Hendrix College
John Korey, professor, department of political science, California State Polytechnic University – Pomona
Michael Kraft, professor, department of public and environmental affairs, University of Wisconsin, Green Bay
Michael Lewis-Beck, professor, department of political science, University of Iowa
R. William Liddle, professor, department of political science, Ohio State University
Jon Lofton, professor, department of political science, Arkansas State University
Abraham Lowenthal, professor, School of International Relations, University of Southern California
Franco Mattei, professor, department of political science, University at Buffalo
James Millikan, professor, department of political science & international studies, Stonehill College
Gabriel Pellathy, professor, department of politics, Saint Vincent College
David Rapkin, professor, department of political science, University of Nebraska-Lincoln
Noel Reynolds, professor, department of political science, Brigham Young University
Sanford R. Silverberg, professor, department of history and politics, Catawba College
William Stevenson, professor, department of political science, Calvin College
J. Larry Taulbee, professor, department of political science, Emory University
Joseph Thompson, professor, department of political science, Villanova University
Gloria Toivola, professor, department of political science, University of Wisconsin, Superior
Farouk Umar, professor, department of government, law and international affairs, Murray State University
Jose Vadi, professor, department of political science, California State Polytechnic University , Pomona
Herbert F. Weisberg, professor, department of political science, Ohio State University
Lynn White III, professor, Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs, Princeton University
Alex Willingham, professor, department of political science, Williams College
Mikel Wyckoff, professor, department of political science, Northern Illinois University