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Learn more about IGCC's unique cross-disciplinary partnerships with:

Los Alamos and Lawrence Livermore National Laboratories

Berkeley Roundtable on the International Economy

IGCC People


The IGCC community is a far-flung cohort of scholars, students, staff, and interested parties both within and outside of the University of California, brought together by their common interest in studying international conflict and cooperation. Director Susan Shirk, the central office staff, the state-wide steering committee, and program directors on the individual campuses are responsible for keeping this community informed about new developments, opportunities, and potential collaborations.

Use the links below to find more information on IGCC faculty, staff, steering committee members, and campus program directors.

IGCC Director
IGCC Director Emeritus
IGCC Research Directors
IGCC Affiliated Faculty
Steering Committee Members
Campus Program Directors
IGCC Staff
*Indicates former IGCC dissertation fellow

Affiliated Faculty

Peter Cowhey
Immediate Past Director, IGCC
IGCC Principal Investigator

Background: Peter Cowhey is associate vice chancellor of international affairs and dean of the School of International Relations and Pacific Studies at UC San Diego and co-principal investigator for IGCC's Public Policy and Biological Threats program. His major fields of research are international political economy, comparative foreign policy, and international relations theory. In 1994, Cowhey took leave from UC San Diego to join the Federal Communications Commission. In 1997, he became the chief of the International Bureau of the FCC, where he was in charge of all policy and licensing for international telecommunications services, including all satellite issues and licensing for the FCC. Prior to becoming bureau chief, he was the commission's senior counselor for international economic and competition policy. Cowhey served as director of IGCC from 1999 to 2006.

Cowhey’s current research includes the political determinants of foreign policy, the reorganization of the global communications and information industries, and the future of foreign trade and investment rules in the Pacific Rim. His extensive research and writings on international telecommunications markets and regulation have been supported by such research institutes as the World Bank, the Council on Foreign Relations, the American Enterprise Institute, the Brookings Institution, the Markle Foundation, and the Twentieth-Century Fund. His books include The Problems of Plenty: Energy Policy and International Politics; When Countries Talk: International Trade in Telecommunications Services (with J. Aronson); Managing the World Economy: The Consequences of Corporate Alliances (with J. Aronson); and Structure and Policy in Japan and United States (co-edited with Mathew McCubbins).

Prof. Cowhey's home page


Samuel Bozzette
Adjunct Professor, IRPS
IGCC Principal Investigator

Background: Samuel Bozzette is co-principal investigator for IGCC's Public Policy and Biological Threats program. He is a senior natural scientist at the RAND Corporation, adjunct professor of medicine and of international relations at UC San Diego, and executive director of health outcomes at Amylin. He is board-certified in Internal Medicine and Infectious Diseases and is a fellow of the American College of Physicians and the Infectious Diseases Society of America. He has a strong record of clinical, translational, outcomes, and health economics research, resulting in more than 150 publications (including more than 20 in the New England Journal of Medicine and Journal of the American Medical Association) that have been cited in over 5,000 other publications.  Many of these studies significantly changed clinical practice or policy, as did his seminal work in modeling of potential bioterrorist attacks.

Bozzette has served in the leadership of collaborative groups such as the AIDS Clinical Trials Group (where he was head of the Opportunistic Infections and later the Outcomes Working Groups) and has been a principal investigator for many large, multicenter clinical trials and outcomes research projects. He founded an academic division of health services research in San Diego, headed a center for research in patient-oriented care, and directed the VA's national Quality Improvement Research Initiative in HIV as well as sites for the Southern California Evidence-Based Practice Center and the Center for the Study of Provider Behavior, the San Diego Center for Patient Safety, and the UCSD Center for AIDS Research. He has been an advisor to the pharmaceutical industry, the Centers for Disease Control, the Food and Drug Administration, and research centers and funders.

Bozzette earned his B.S. at Georgetown University, his M.D. at the University of Rochester and his Ph.D. at the RAND Graduate School of Policy Studies.

Prof. Bozzette's home page


Lewis Branscomb
Adjunct Professor, IRPS
IGCC Project Leader

Background: Lewis M. Branscomb is currently a visiting professor at UC San Diego, where he has been instrumental in developing IGCC's Critical Infrastructure Protection program. A former director of the National Institute of Standards and Technology (1951–1969) and vice president and chief scientist of IBM (1972–1986), he served as chairman of the National Science Board from 1980 to 1984. The author of books on technology policy and early-stage high-tech innovation, he was co-chair of the National Academy's project on Science and Technology for Countering Terrorism (2002). Professor Branscomb has an A.B. in physics from Duke University summa cum laude (1945), and a Ph.D. in physics from Harvard University (1950). He is Public Service Professor of Public Policy and Corporate Management in the Aetna Chair (emeritus) at the Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs at Harvard University.

Prof. Branscomb's home page


J. Lawrence Broz
Associate Professor and Director of Graduate Studies, Political Science, UC San Diego

Background: J. Lawrence Broz is an associate professor and the director of graduate studies in the Department of Political Science at UC San Diego. He received his Ph.D. from UCLA. As a research director for IGCC, Broz focused on the political economy of international finance and brought together UC researchers and economists from institutions such as the International Monetary Fund. Broz's current research focuses on the institutions of monetary and financial policymaking—central banks, exchange rate regimes and so on—of which there is remarkable variation across countries and over time. Analytically, he draws from open-economy macroeconomics and positive political economy. He employs both quantitative and case study research methods. Broz's publications include the International Origins of the Federal Reserve System (1997) and a number of articles in International Organization and other top journals.

Prof. Broz's home page


Richard Carson
Professor, Economics, UC San Diego

Background: Richard T. Carson is professor in and chair of the Department of Economics at UC San Diego, and a senior fellow at the San Diego Supercomputer Center. He previously served as research director for international environmental policy at IGCC. Carson has extensive experience in the assessment of the benefits and costs of environmental policies. His specialty is valuing non-marketed and new goods using a wide array of techniques, including contingent valuation, hedonic pricing, and the household production method. Carson has been a consultant to a number of non-profit organizations, major corporations, and government agencies, including the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, the U.S. Forest Service, and the World Bank. He has been a visiting professor at the University of Oslo and the University of Sydney, a faculty research fellow at the National Bureau of Economic Research, and a continuing consultant at Resources for the Future.

Carson's publications appear in the American Economic Review, American Political Science Review, Ecological Economics, Environment and Development Economics, Environmental and Resource Economics, Journal of Economic Perspectives, and many other professional journals and edited volumes.He is co-author with Linda Fernandez of the recent book Both Sides of the Border: Transboundary Environmental Management Issues Facing Mexico and the United States and co-author with Robert Mitchell of Using Surveys to Value Public Goods: The Contingent Valuation Method, which won the Association of Environmental and Resource Economists' Publication of Enduring Quality Award. He received a Ph.D. in resource economics and M.A. in statistics from UC Berkeley in 1985 and an M.A. in international relations from George Washington University in 1979.

Prof. Carson's home page


William Chandler
Professor, Political Science, UC San Diego

Background: William Chandler has been a professor of political science at UC San Diego since 1997. His research has concentrated on comparative political analysis, with special interests in Canadian, German, French, and Italian governments and the European Union. Publications include Public Policy and Provincial Politics, Federalism and the Role of the State, and Challenges to Federalism: Policy-Making in Canada and West Germany, plus numerous journal articles and book chapters on party government, Christian Democracy, party system change, European integration, and immigration policy. He has previously served as guest professor in Germany at Tübingen and Oldenburg Universities. He is a member of the editorial advisory boards of German Politics and the Journal of European Integration.

From 2001–2003, Chandler served as a research director for IGCC and was president of the Conference Group on German Politics (2002–2004), the national association of German specialists in political science. During 2004, he wrote on the U.S. presidential election and was on leave in Paris, focusing on Europe's new populism. He completed his undergraduate education at Cornell University, and earned his Ph.D. at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.

Prof. Chandler's home page


Richard Feinberg
Professor, IRPS
Associate Director, IGCC National Security Fellows Program

Background: Richard Feinberg is currently professor of international political economy at the School of International Relations and Pacific Studies at UC San Diego. He is an authority on U.S. foreign policy, multilateral institutions, and summitry and an expert on trade and investment, globalization, democratization, and non-governmental organizations. Feinberg serves as director of the Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) Study Center, dedicated to research, scholarly exchange, and public education on subjects of interest to APEC member countries. Feinberg is the book reviewer for the Western Hemisphere section in Foreign Affairs magazine and has authored more than 150 articles and books. His book, Summitry in the Americas: A Progress Report (1997), provides an in-depth analysis of how U.S. foreign policy is made. Other publications include The Intemperate Zone: The Third World Challenge to U.S. Foreign Policy (1983) and Subsidizing Success: The Export-Import Bank in the U.S. Economy (1982).

Feinberg served as special assistant for national security affairs under President Clinton and as senior director of the National Security Council's (NSC) Office of Inter-American Affairs. While at the NSC, Feinberg was a principal architect of the 1994 Summit of the Americas in Miami. He previously served as president of the Inter-American Dialogue, executive vice president of the Overseas Development Council, and has held positions on the policy planning staff of the U.S. Department of State and in the Office of International Affairs in the U.S. Treasury Department. Feinberg joined UC San Diego in 1996. He earned his Ph.D. from Stanford University.

Prof. Feinberg's home page


Clark Gibson
Professor, Political Science, UC San Diego

Background: Clark Gibson is currently professor of political science and director of the international studies program at UC San Diego. He is a past IGCC steering committee member and remains active in IGCC projects. Gibson studies the politics of development, democracy, and the environment and has explored issues related to these topics in Africa, Central and South America, and the United States. His current research focuses on the accountability between governments and citizens in Africa.

The results of Gibson's work have appeared in journals such as Comparative Politics, World Development, Annual Review of Political Science, Social Science Quarterly, Human Ecology, Conservation Biology, Ecological Economics, and African Affairs. Gibson's research about the politics of wildlife policy in Africa appears in his book Politicians and Poachers: The Political Economy of Wildlife Policy in Africa (Cambridge 1999). He has also co-edited two volumes: People and Forests: Communities, Institutions, and Governance (MIT 2000; co-editors E. Ostrom and M. McKean) and Communities and the Environment: Ethnicity, Gender, and the State in Community-Based Conservation (Rutgers 2001; co-editor A. Agrawal). His latest book analyses the political economy of foreign aid and offers suggestions for its improvement (Samaritan’s Dilemma: The Political Economy of Development Aid, Oxford 2005; co-authors E. Ostrom, K. Andersson, and S. Shivakumar). He earned his M.A. and Ph.D. at Duke University.

Prof. Gibson's home page


Stephan Haggard
Professor, IRPS

Background: Stephan Haggard is currently professor of political science at the the School of International Relations and Pacific Studies at UC San Diego. He was interim director of IGCC (1997–99) and is active in the IGCC National Security Fellows program. Haggard's research interests center on the international relations and comparative political economy of East Asia and Latin America. He is currently conducting research on the political and social consequences of globalization. He has written on East Asia's economic growth, the Latin American and East Asian financial crises, democratization, and federalism. His books include Pathways from the Periphery: The Politics of Growth in the Newly Industrializing Countries (1990); The Political Economy of Democratic Transitions (with Robert Kaufman 1995); Developing Nations and the Politics of Global Integration (1995); The Political Economy of the Asian Financial Crisis (2000); and From Silicon Valley to Singapore: Location and Competitive Advantage in the Hard Disk Drive Industry (with David McKendrick and Richard Doner, 2000). His latest work is North Korea: Aid, Markets and Reform (with Marcus Noland, Columbia University Press, 2007). He earned his Ph.D. from UC Berkeley.

Prof. Haggard's home page


Tsuyoshi Hasegawa
Professor, History, UC Santa Barbara

Background: Tsuyoshi Hasegawa is professor of modern Russian and Soviet history at UC Santa Barbara. He was co-founder of the Center for Cold War Studies with Frederik Logevall in 1994. His publications include The Northern Territories Dispute and Russo-Japanese Relations (International and Area Studies, UC Berkeley, 1998), The February Revolution: Petrograd, 1917 (U. Washington Press, 1981), and Russia and Japan: An Unresolved Dilemma Between Distant Neighbors (International and Area Studies, UC Berkeley, 1993).

Hasegawa studies the political and social history of the Russian Revolution, Russian/Soviet-Japanese relations, and Soviet military history. He has extensive teaching experience in Japan, and in April 2001 was a visiting professor to Meiji-Gakuin University Hasegawa is a former IGCC steering committee member and co-PI on IGCC's Public Policy and Nuclear Threats Program. He received his Ph.D. from Washington University in 1969.

Prof. Hasegawa's home page


Miles Kahler
Professor, IRPS

Background: Miles Kahler is Rohr Professor of Pacific International Relations at the School of International Relations and Pacific Studies and professor of political science at UC San Diego.  From 2001 to 2005, he served as founding director of the Institute for International, Comparative, and Area Studies (IICAS). Prior to that, he was an IGCC research director.

Recent publications include Territoriality and Conflict in an Era of Globalization (co-edited with Barbara Walter, Cambridge University Press, 2006); Governance in a Global Economy (co-edited with David Lake, Princeton University Press, 2003) and Leadership Selection in the Major Multilaterals (Institute for International Economics, 2001). Current research interests include international institutions and global governance, the evolution of the nation-state, multilateral strategies toward failed states, and the political economy of international finance.

Kahler directs the research project on "Rebuilding Political Authority in States at Risk," supported by a grant from the Carnegie Corporation of New York. He was senior fellow in international political economy at the Council on Foreign Relations from 1994 to 1996 and is a member of the editorial board of International Organization. He earned his Ph.D. in government at Harvard University.

Prof. Kahler's home page


Michael Kleeman
Senior Fellow, IGCC
National Chair of Strategy, American Red Cross

Background: Michael Kleeman is a senior fellow at IGCC and involved in several projects involving homeland security and critical infrastructure protection, including "Training and Exercises in California Homeland Security." He has also worked with the School of International Relations and Pacific Studies and the California Institute of Telecommunications and Internet Technology at UC San Diego on complex modeling, wireless technology applications, and complex visualization systems. Kleeman is a technology industry strategist whose particular skill is in bridging technical and business issues.  For more than 30 years he has been involved in the technology industry in engineering, planning, management, and advisory roles. Formerly a vice president at the Boston Consulting Group, director at Arthur D. Little, and executive at Sprint, Kleeman has been involved with numerous technology companies in North America as advisor and executive. He has most recently served as the co-founder, vice president, and chief technical officer of Cometa Networks, a nationwide 802.11 firm.

Kleeman serves as the National Chair of Strategy for the American Red Cross as science advisor for the University of California Center in Sacramento, and on the boards of Equal Access, a not-for-profit providing digital satellite radio services to developing nations and the Marine Mammal Center in Sausalito. He is also on the advisory council for the San Diego Technology Council.  He holds an undergraduate degree from Syracuse University and an M.A. from the Claremont Graduate School.


David A. Lake
Professor, Political Science, UC San Diego

Background: David A. Lake is professor of political science at UC San Diego. He received his Ph.D. from Cornell University in 1984 and taught at UCLA for nine years before coming to UCSD in 1992. Lake has published widely in international relations theory, international political economy, and international security studies. He is presently completing a book, Hierarchy in International Relations: Authority, Sovereignty, and the New Structure of World Politics. In addition to over fifty scholarly articles, he is the author of Power, Protection, and Free Trade: International Sources of U.S. Commercial Strategy, 1887–1939 (1988) and Entangling Relations: American Foreign Policy in its Century (1999) and co-editor of eight volumes including Governance in a Global Economy: Political Authority in Transition (2003) and Delegation and Agency in International Organizations (2006).

Lake has served in numerous administrative posts, including research director for IGCC (1992–1996 and 2000–2001), co-editor of the journal International Organization (1997–2001), chair of UCSD's Political Science Department (2000–2004), and associate dean of social sciences at UCSD (acting, 2006–2007). He is the vice president (elect) of the International Studies Association, program co-chair of the 2007 Annual Meeting of the American Political Science Association, and founding chair of the International Political Economy Society. He is the recipient of the UCSD Chancellor's Associates Award for Excellence in Graduate Education (2005) and was elected to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 2006.

Prof. Lake's home page


Thomas E. Novotny
Professor, Epidemiology, UC San Francisco

Background: Dr. Thomas E. Novotny is the director of international programs at the UC San Francisco School of Medicine, coordinator of educational programs in global health sciences, and professor in residence in epidemiology and biostatistics. A graduate of the University of Nebraska Medical Center, the UCSF family practice residency in Santa Rosa, California, and the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Novotny served for 23 years in the U.S. Public Health Service. During that career, he was a National Health Service Corps family physician in northern California, an epidemiologist with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), and CDC liaison to UC Berkeley School of Public Health and to the World Bank. He most recently was Deputy Assistant Secretary for International and Refugee Health in the Department of Health and Human Services and an assistant Surgeon General.

Dr. Novotny has worked extensively in tobacco control and in health systems reform, particularly in Eastern Europe. He has published widely on tobacco issues and has been a contributing author and editor of several Reports of the Surgeon General on Tobacco and Health. He consults regularly with the World Bank and other international organizations and serves on the UC Senior International Leaders Council and the IGCC steering committee. His research now includes HIV/AIDS in Eastern Europe, the bioethics of globalization, and non-communicable disease control. He supervises the area of concentration in Global Health and Training in Clinical Research courses for medical students and coordinates UCSF Global Health Sciences educational activities for pre-doctoral and doctoral students as well as training activities for international scholars.

Prof. Novotny's home page


Phillip G. Roeder
Professor, Political Science, UC San Diego

Background: Philip G. Roeder is professor of political science at UC San Diego. Roeder’s research focuses on nationalism and on authoritarian politics with special attention to the Soviet successor states. He was the co-PI with Don Rothchild for the project "Power Sharing and Peacemaking" in association with IGCC. Roeder is the author of Where Nation-States Come From: Institutional Change in the Age of Nationalism, Red Sunset: The Failure of Soviet Politics, and Soviet Political Dynamics. He is also the co-author of Postcommunism and the Theory of Democracy and co-editor of Sustainable Peace: Power and Democracy After Civil Wars. His articles have appeared in such journals as American Political Science Review, World Politics, and International Security Quarterly. He is currently conducting research on 1) the design of political institutions to avoid or resolve wars of national liberation; and 2)] American foreign policy interests in the Soviet successor states of Central Eurasia. He received his Ph.D. and M.A. from Harvard University.

Prof. Roeder's home page


Gershon Shafir
Professor, Sociology, UC San Diego
Director, Institute for International, Comparative, and Area Studies (IICAS)

Background: Gershon Shafir is currently professor in sociology and director of the Institute for International, Comparative and Area Studies at UC San Diego. His major area of interest is comparative-historical sociology, with emphases on nationalism, ethnicity, and citizenship rights. He is the author of Land, Labor, and the Origins of the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict, 1982–1914 (1989, and updated edition 1995), Immigrants and Nationalists (1995), editor of The Citizenship Debates (1998) and co-editor of The New Israel: Liberalization and Peacemaking (2000). In addition, Shafir co-authored People out of Place: Globalization, Human Rights, and the Citizenship Gap (with Alison Brysk, 2004) which resulted from research funded in part by IGCC. His articles have appeared in the American Journal of Sociology, British Journal of Sociology, International Journal of Middle East Studies, and other prestigious journals. His current research projects include: "Decolonization and Peacemaking in South Africa and Israel/Palestine" and "Was the Yom Kippur War Unavoidable?" He received his B.A.s in economics, political science, and sociology from Tel Aviv University, his M.A. from UCLA, and his Ph.D. from the UC Berkeley.

Prof. Shafir's home page


Etel Solingen*
Professor, Political Science, UC Irvine

Background: Etel Solingen is professor of political science at UC Irvine. Her most recent book Nuclear Logics: Contrasting Paths in East Asia and the Middle East (Princeton University Press 2007) is the recipient of the 2008 Woodrow Wilson Foundation Award for the best book on government, politics, or international affairs by the American Political Science Association, and of the 2008 APSA’s Robert Jervis and Paul Schroeder Award for the Best Book on International History and Politics.

Solingen was vice-president of the International Studies Association, president of the International Political Economy Section of ISA, and the recipient of a MacArthur Foundation Research and Writing Award on Peace and International Cooperation, a Social Science Research Council-Mac Arthur Foundation Fellowship on Peace and Security in a Changing World, a Japan Foundation/SSRC Abe Fellowship, and a Center for Global Partnership/Japan Foundation fellowship, and Carnegie Corporation, USIP, Sloan Foundation, Columbia Foundation and other grants.

Solingen is also the author of Regional Orders at Century's Dawn: Global and Domestic Influences on Grand Strategy (Princeton University Press, 1998), Industrial Policy, Technology, and International Bargaining: Designing Nuclear Industries in Argentina and Brazil (Stanford University Press, 1996) and editor of Scientists and the State (University of Michigan Press, 1994). Her articles on international relations theory, international political economy, comparative regionalism, institutional theory, democratization, and international security appeared in the American Political Science Review, International Organization, International Studies Quarterly, Comparative Politics, International Security, Global Governance, Journal of Peace Research, Journal of Theoretical Politics, International Relations of Asia-Pacific, Journal of Democracy, Asian Survey, and International History Review, among others. She served as Chair of the Institute on Global Conflict and Cooperation’s Steering Committee between 2004 and 2008, and is currently Review Essay Editor of the journal International Organization.

Prof. Solingen's home page


Steven Spiegel
Professor, Political Science, UCLA

Background: Steven L. Spiegel is professor of political science and director of the Center for Middle East Development at UCLA.  He specializes in the analysis of world politics, U.S. foreign policy, and U.S. foreign policy in the Middle East.  Through the innovative informal negotiation technique he has honed over the years, Spiegel develops cutting-edge ideas for Mideast regional security and promotes a community of accommodation and understanding among members of the region. In honor of his sustained efforts, Spiegel has received a number of awards, including the Karpf Peace Prize in 1995, awarded to the UCLA professor considered to have done the most for the cause of world peace during the previous two years.

Spiegel's recent university activities include the position of international chair of the Middle East cooperative security program for IGCC. His latest books are World Politics In a New Era (with Jennifer Morrison Taw, Fred L. Wehling, and Kristen P. Williams, 2003) and The Dynamics of Middle East Proliferation (edited with Jennifer Kibbe and Elizabeth Matthews, 2001). He is now working on a volume about the U.S. record in the Middle East. Spiegel is also widely published in such well-known magazines and journals as National Interest, Orbis, Middle East Insight, Middle East Quarterly, and International Studies Quarterly. In addition, he writes frequently for major newspapers: articles have appeared in the New York Times, Los Angeles Times, Wall Street Journal, International Herald Tribune, Washington Post, San Francisco Chronicle, San Diego Union-Tribune, and Miami Herald.

Prof. Spiegel's home page


Jeff Vincent
Duke University

Background: Jeff Vincent is a professor of environmental and resource economics at Duke University and past IGCC research director for international environmental policy. He continues his work with IGCC in the project Conserving Biological Diversity in Tropical Rainforests, a five-year research project iIn partnership with the Forest Research Institute Malaysia on how to assess and value biodiversity and integrate it into forest planning processes.

Vincent joined IGCC in 2001 after serving as a fellow at Harvard Institute for International Development (1990–2001) and an assistant professor at Michigan State University (1987–1990). His research focuses on natural resource and environmental management in developing countries, especially in Asian countries. He is lead author of Environment and Development in a Resource-Rich Economy: Malaysia Under the New Economic Policy (Harvard Studies in International Development, 1997), co-editor of the Handbook of Environmental Economics (North-Holland, 2002), and author of numerous articles in economics, development, and forestry journals. In addition to his research, Vincent has extensive experience on policy advising and capacity-building projects sponsored by the World Bank, the Asian Development Bank, USAID, the UN Commission for Sustainable Development, the UN Development Program, the UN Food and Agriculture Organization, and other international organizations.


Barbara Walter
Associate Professor, IRPS

Background: Barbara Walter is currently an associate professor of political science at the School of International Relations and Pacific Studies at UC San Diego. Walter is an authority on international security, with an emphasis on internal wars, bargaining and cooperation, and terrorism/counter-terrorism. Her current research and teaching interests include reputation building and war, the strategies of terrorism, and the behavioral foundations of rational behavior.She is a former IGCC research director.

Publications include: "The Strategies of Terrorism" (with Andrew Kydd, International Security, 2006); "Building Reputation: Why Governments Fight Some Separatists But Not Others" (American Journal of Political Science, 2006); "Information, Uncertainty, and the Decision to Secede" (International Organization, 2006); Committing to Peace: The Successful Settlement of Civil Wars (Princeton University Press, 2001); and Civil Wars, Insecurity, and Intervention (Columbia University Press, 1999, co-edited with Jack Snyder). She has just completed a book manuscript on reputation building and war, and is continuing to work on a manuscript on strategies and counter-strategies of terrorism. Walter is the recipient of numerous grants and fellowships, including awards from the National Science Foundation, Carnegie Corporation of New York, Guggenheim, and Smith Richardson Foundations. She earned her M.A. and Ph.D. in political science at the University of Chicago.

Prof. Walter's home page

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