23
January 1, 2020 A. JAMES MCADAMS William M. Scholl Professor of International Affairs Concurrent Professor, Department of History University of Notre Dame Notre Dame, IN 46556 (574) 631‐7119 (office) (574) 273‐2555 (home) [email protected] www.nd.edu/~amcadams Education Ph.D., Department of Political Science, University of California, Berkeley, 1983. Dissertation: “Surviving Détente: East German Political Character After the Wall” M.A., Department of Political Science, University of California, Berkeley, 1977. Thesis: “Georg Lukács and the Critique of Kant” B.A., Department of Political Science, Earlham College, Richmond, Indiana, 1976. Professional Positions 2002 ‐ 2018, Director, Nanovic Institute for European Studies, University of Notre Dame (two renewed five‐year appointments, 2007 and 2012) 2001 ‐ , William M. Scholl Professor of International Affairs, University of Notre Dame 1997‐ 2002, Professor and Department Chair, Government and International Studies (renamed Department of Political Science in 2002), University of Notre Dame 1992‐1997, Associate Professor, Government and International Studies, University of Notre Dame 1985‐1992, Assistant Professor of Politics and Robert K. Root Preceptor, Princeton University 1989‐1990, Acting Director, Program in Russian Studies, Princeton University

A. JAMES MCADAMS · 2020. 1. 16. · January 1, 2020 . A. JAMES MCADAMS . William M. Scholl Professor of International Affairs Concurrent Professor, Department of History University

  • Upload
    others

  • View
    5

  • Download
    0

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

  • January 1, 2020

    A. JAMES MCADAMS

    William M. Scholl Professor of International Affairs Concurrent Professor, Department of History

    University of Notre Dame Notre Dame, IN 46556 (574) 631‐7119 (office) (574) 273‐2555 (home) [email protected]

    www.nd.edu/~amcadams

    Education

    Ph.D., Department of Political Science, University of California, Berkeley, 1983. Dissertation: “Surviving Détente: East German Political Character After the Wall”

    M.A., Department of Political Science, University of California, Berkeley, 1977.

    Thesis: “Georg Lukács and the Critique of Kant”

    B.A., Department of Political Science, Earlham College, Richmond, Indiana, 1976.

    Professional Positions

    2002 ‐ 2018, Director, Nanovic Institute for European Studies, University of Notre Dame (two renewed five‐year appointments, 2007 and 2012)

    2001 ‐ , William M. Scholl Professor of International Affairs, University of Notre Dame 1997‐

    2002, Professor and Department Chair, Government and International Studies (renamed Department of Political Science in 2002), University of Notre Dame

    1992‐1997, Associate Professor, Government and International Studies, University of Notre

    Dame

    1985‐1992, Assistant Professor of Politics and Robert K. Root Preceptor, Princeton University

    1989‐1990, Acting Director, Program in Russian Studies, Princeton University

    mailto:[email protected]://www.nd.edu/%7Eamcadams

  • 2

    1983‐1985, Assistant Professor, Department of Government, Hamilton College

    Spring 1980, 1981, 1983, Visiting Lecturer, University of California, Davis

    Research Appointments

    September 1990‐June 1991, Fellow, Center for Russian and East European Studies and Hoover Institution, Stanford Univ.

    June 1989, Visiting Scholar, Academy for Social Sciences, East Berlin, GDR

    April‐June, 1999, Visiting Scholar, Academy of Sciences, East Berlin, GDR

    September 1987‐March 1988, visiting Scholar, Deutsche Gesellschaft für Auswärtige Politik, Bonn, FRG

    June‐August 1984, Visiting Scholar, Center for International Affairs, Harvard University

    1981‐82, Dissertation Research, Osteuropa Institut, Free Univ., West Berlin

    Grants and Fellowships

    2012‐2013, Research Fellowship, Institute for Advanced Study, University of Konstanz. Konstanz, Germany

    1996‐1997 John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation, Writing Fellowship in International Security

    1991 American Council of Learned Societies Senior Research Fellowship

    1991‐1993 National Council for Soviet and East European Research

    1990‐1991 William C. Bark National Fellow, Hoover Institution, Stanford University

    1989 International Research and Exchanges (IREX) Grant for Short‐term Independent Research (to German Democratic Republic)

    1988 International Research and Exchanges Fellowship (to German Democratic Republic)

    1987‐1988 Fulbright‐Hays Faculty Research Abroad Grant (Federal Republic of Germany)

    1987‐1988 Alexander von Humboldt Foundation Fellowship (Federal Republic of Germany)

  • 3

    1984 American Council of Learned Societies Senior Research Fellowship

    1982‐1983 University Regents Fellowship, U.C., Berkeley

    1981‐1982 DAAD (German Academic Exchange Service) Fellowship (to West Berlin)

    1976‐1977 Richard Weaver Graduate Fellowship (U.C., Berkeley)

    Distinctions, Honors, Awards

    2019 Doctorate honoris causa, John Paul II Catholic University of Lublin, Poland

    2018 Doctorate honoris causa, Catholic University of Ukraine 2018 Named Endowment for Excellence (given by the Nanovic Institute Advisory Board) 2018 A. James McAdams Endowment, Nanovic Institute for European Studies (gift from donors of $1 million) 2018 Rev. Edmund P. Joyce, C.S.C Award for Excellence in Undergraduate Teaching (Notre Dame) 2018 Outstanding Mentor Award, Kellogg Institute International Scholars Program 2018 Partnership of Catholic Universities “What are you fighting for?” video on NBC (7,091 million viewers during the Notre Dame‐Michigan Football game)

    2010 Senior Class Speaker (The “Last Lecture” Lecture).

    2009 Senior Speaker, Pi Sigma Alpha Honor Society, Department of Political Science

    2007 Rev. Edmund P. Joyce, C.S.C Award for Excellence in Undergraduate Teaching (Notre Dame)

    2006 Faculty Fellow, Kaneb Center for Teaching and Learning (by invitation)

    2001 Thomas J. Madden Teaching Award (highest university award for teaching First‐Year

    students, Notre Dame)

    2001 John A. Kaneb Teaching Award (Notre Dame)

    2000 President’s Award (award for university administration, Notre Dame)

    1997 DAAD Prize for Distinguished Scholarship in German Studies (top national award in

  • 4

    German studies; first national recipient in “Political Science and Foreign Policy”)

    1995 The Charles E. Sheedy Award for Excellence in Teaching (highest teaching award in the College of Arts and Letters, Notre Dame)

    1989‐1992 Robert K. Root Preceptorship, Princeton University, university‐wide

    award for scholarship and teaching

    1976 Phi Beta Kappa

    1976 College Honors (Earlham College)

    1975 Department Honors, Political Science

    1975 Clifford Crump Phi Beta Kappa Prize (top‐ranked junior student, Earlham College) 1974 Clifford Crump Phi Beta Kappa Prize (top‐ranked sophomore student, Earlham College)

    Grants and Sponsored Programs Co‐Principal Investigator, Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council, Canada “Rise of the Radical Right: A Podcast Series,” University of Toronto: January to December 2020

    Principal Fundraiser, Nanovic Institute for European Studies, more than $18 million, 2002‐2018

    Co‐Principal Investigator, Grant for Nanovic Institute Conference on “The Year of the Euro,” December 6‐8, from the European Union Delegation to the U.S.

    Grant writer, Undergraduate Research Initiatives, from the Strake Foundation, several successful applications from 1997‐2001.

    Organizer and fund‐raiser, Notre Dame Symposium on Political Justice and the Transition to Democracy, April 28, 1995; an international conference cosponsored by the Helen Kellogg Institute and the Center for Civil and Human Rights.

    Principal Investigator and author of successful institutional grant proposal to National Council for Soviet and East European Research, “An Oral History of the GDR,” 1991–1993; also, raised grants from John Foster Dulles Fund, Princeton University and the Library Archives of the Hoover Institution, Stanford University.

    Organizer, Hamilton College Conference on Modern German Politics, April 26–28, 1985; a three‐day meeting attended by over 30 American and European experts on Germany, partially funded by the Council for European Studies, Columbia University.

  • 5

    Publications (* denotes refereed publication)

    Monographs:

    *Vanguard of the Revolution: The Global Idea of the Communist Party (Princeton and Oxford: Princeton University Press, 2017). 600 pages. Publisher Ranking in Political Science: #2.

    Named one of the best books of 2018 by Foreign Affairs Paperback edition, 2019 Italian translation, L'avanguardia della rivoluzione. L'idea globale del Partito Comunista (Rome: Mondadori, Le Monnier, 2019)

    * Judging the Past in Unified Germany (New York and Cambridge: Cambridge Univ. Press, 2001). 244 pages. Cloth and Paper. Publisher Ranking in Political Science: #1. Also accepted by Princeton University Press, Publisher Ranking: #2.

    * Germany Divided: From the Wall to Reunification (Princeton: Princeton Univ. Press, 1993),

    266 pages. Publisher Ranking in Political Science: #2.

    Named an Outstanding Academic Book of 1993 by Choice Magazine. Numerous printings. Expanded paperback edition, July 1994.

    * East Germany and Detente: Building Authority after the Wall (Cambridge: Cambridge Univ.

    Press, 1985). Publisher Ranking in Political Science: #1

    Second printing, 1987.

    Paperback edition, 2007.

    Edited Volumes and Collections:

    * The Revolutionary Sixties: ‘1968’ in Europe and Latin America (with Anthony P. Monta), ed., (Notre Dame: University of Notre Dame Press, forthcoming). * The Crisis of Modern Times: Perspectives from The Review of Politics, 1939‐1962 (Notre Dame: University of Notre Dame Press, 2007), 444 pp.

    Chinese Edition Xiandai weiji:zhengzhixue pinglun 1939‐1962 (Shanghai, China: 2013).

    Hungarian Edition A modernitás válsága (Budapest: Szabadság, 2014).

  • 6

    The Review of Politics Series, co‐editor with Catherine H. Zuckert, four volumes (Notre Dame: University of Notre Dame Press, forthcoming 2007‐2012).

    Introduction to Comparative Government, Co‐author, with Michael Curtis, et al. (New York: Longman, 2002), fourth edition.

    Fifth edition, 2005.

    Transitional Justice and the Rule of Law in New Democracies, Editor (Notre Dame:

    Univ. of Notre Dame Press, 1997). Cloth and Paper.

    Second printing, 2003.

    *Rebirth: A History of Europe Since World War II. Co‐author, with Cyril Black, et al. (Boulder: Westview Press, 1992).

    Second edition, 1999.

    The Past as Arsenal: Debating German Unification. Co‐editor, with John Torpey, A special issue

    of German Politics and Society, no. 30 (Fall 1993). GDR Oral History Archive. Principal Investigator, Archives of the Hoover Institution for War,

    Revolution and Peace, Stanford University, 1990‐1994.

    Named one of the top 100 most viewed oral history archives in the English language, ranking #54 out of approximately 3,350 collections, by In the First Person, 2006, http://www.inthefirstperson.com/firp/firp.top.100.aspx

    Refereed (*) Journal Articles:

    *“Transitional Justice: The Issue that Won’t Go Away,” International Journal of Transitional Justice, v. 5, n. 2, (2011), pp. 304‐312.

    “Der letzte Ostdeutscher,” Deutschland Archiv, v. 44, n. 1, 2011. “The Last East German and the Memory of the GDR,” German Politics and Society, vol. 28, no. 1 (Spring 2010).

    Also in, Jeffrey Anderson and Eric Langenbacher, eds., From the Bonn to the Berlin Republic (New York: Berghan Books, 2010), pp. 51‐62.

    *“Spying on Terrorists: Germany in Comparative Perspective,” German Politics and Society,

    http://www.inthefirstperson.com/firp/firp.top.100.aspx

  • 7

    Winter 2008, pp. 70‐88.

    * "Surveillance of the Internet after 9/11: Is the U.S. Becoming Great Britain?” Comparative Politics, v. 37, n. 4 (July 2005), pp. 479‐498

    “Vergangenheitsaufarbeitung nach 1989: Ein deutscher Sonderweg?” Deutschland Archiv, n. 5, vol.36 (2003), pp. 851‐860.

    An English‐language version of this article appeared as “Transitional Justice after 1989” in the Bulletin of the German Historical Institute, n. 33, Fall 2003, pp. 53‐64.

    * “What Remains? The Political Culture of an Unlucky Birth,” German Politics and Society, v. 20, n. 2 (Summer 2002), pp. 26‐42.

    * "Reappraising the Conditions of Transitional Justice in Unified Germany," East European Constitutional Review, v. 10, n. 1 (Winter 2001), pp. 53‐60.

    A Russian‐language version appeared as the lead article in a Russian law journal, “Korrektsionoe iustitsia v ob’edinenii Germania,” Konstitutionaia pravo: vostochnoevropeiskoi obozrenia [“Corrective Justice in Unified Germany,” Constitutional Law: East European Review], n. 2, vol. 35, 2001, pp. 2‐9

    * “Germany After Unification: Normal at Last?” World Politics, 49, n. 2 (January 1997), pp. 282– 308.

    * “The Honecker Trial: The East German Past and the German Future,” Review of Politics, v. 58,

    n.1 (Winter 1996), pp. 53–80.

    Also printed as a Working Paper no. 216, Helen Kellogg Institute for International Studies, University of Notre Dame (1996), pp. 1–20.

    “Epilogue” in Germany Divided: From the Wall to Reunification (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1994), pp. 229–43.

    * “Inter‐German Relations in Historical Perspective: The Risks of Biased Hindsight,” German

    Politics, v. 3, n. 2 (August 1994), pp. 193–205.

    Also reprinted as Occasional Paper 6: OP: 3, Joan B. Kroc Institute for International Peace Studies, University of Notre Dame (1994), pp. 1–27.

    * “Revisiting the Ostpolitik in the 1990s,” German Politics and Society, no. 30 (Fall 1993), pp.

    49–60.

    *“The Political Arsenal of the German Past,” with John Torpey, German Politics and Society, no. 30 (Fall 1993), pp. 1–6.

  • 8

    * “Towards a New Germany? Problems of Unification,” Government and Opposition (Summer 1990), pp. 304–16.

    * “Explaining Inter‐German Cooperation in the 1980s,” German Studies Review (Summer 1990),

    pp. 99–114.

    “An Obituary for the Berlin Wall,” World Policy Journal, v. vii, n. 2 (Spring 1990), pp. 357–76.

    “The GDR at 40: The Perils of Success,” German Politics and Society, June 1989, pp. 14–26.

    “The New Logic of Soviet‐East German Disputes,” Problems of Communism, September‐ October, 1988, pp. 47–60.

    * “Crisis in the Soviet Empire: Three Ambiguities in Search of a Prediction,” Comparative

    Politics, v. 20, n. 1, October 1987, pp. 107–118.

    “Inter‐German Detente: A New Balance?” Foreign Affairs, Fall 1986, pp. 136–53 “The East German‐Soviet Dispute in Retrospect,” Addendum, n. 42, U.S. Information Agency,

    October 18, 1985, pp. 22–28

    * “Surviving the Missiles: The GDR and the Future of Inter‐German Relations,” Orbis, Summer 1983, pp. 343–70.

    Book Chapters (*refereed):

    * “Revolutionary 1968: Contending Approaches to an Elusive Concept,” in The Revolutionary Sixties: ‘1968’ in Europe and Latin America (with Anthony P. Monta), ed., (Notre Dame: University of Notre Dame Press, forthcoming). “Populism, Democracy, and the Role of the Catholic University,” in Volodymyr Trchynovskyy, Responding to the Challenges of Post‐Truth (Lviv, Ukraine: Ukrainian Catholic Univ. Press, 2019), pp. 22‐29.

    “Which Europe, What Union? Pacem in Terris and the Future of European Unification,” in Acta 18, Mary Anne Glendon and R. Hittinger, eds. (Vatican City, Italy: Pontifical Academy of the Social Sciences, 2013).

    “Transitional Justice and the Politicization of Memory in post‐1989 Europe,” in Vladimir Tismaneanu, ed., The End and the Beginning: The Revolutions of 1989 and the Resurgence of History (Budapest: Central European University Press, 2012).

    “Yves Simon: A Preface” The Invasion of Ethiopia and French Political Thought (Notre Dame: University of Notre Dame Press, 2009).

  • 9

    * "The Issue That Won't Go Away," in Berndt Fischer, Essays in Transitional Justice (New York, Cambridge University Press, 2008).

    * “The Origins of the Review of Politics,” in The Crisis of Modern Times: Perspectives from The Review of Politics, 1939‐1962 (Notre Dame Press, 2007), pp. 1‐28.

    * “The Double Demands of Reconciliation: The Case of Unified Germany,” in Daniel Philpott, The Politics of Past Evil (Notre Dame: University of Notre Dame Press, 2006), pp. 127‐150.

    “¿Por qué no podemos llevarnos bien? Una perspective Americana” (Originally: “Why Can’t We Get Along? An American Perspective on Relations between the U.S. and Europe”), in Europa, Sé tú Misma, v. 1 (Madrid, Spain: Fundación Universitaria San Pablo, 2005), pp. 1171‐1181.

    “The Government of Germany,” chapters on “Political Development,” “Political Processes and Institutions,” and “Public Policy,” in Introduction to Comparative Government, Co‐author, with Michael Curtis, et al. (New York: Longman, 2002), pp. 185‐242.

    "German Officials as Historians: Revisiting the Debates over the Stasi Files," in Wolfgang Schluchter and Peter Quint, eds., Der Vereinigungsschock ‐‐ Zehn Jahre danach: Eine vergleichende Betrachtung (Velbrueck Wissenschaft, 2001).

    “Preface,” in A. James McAdams, ed., Transitional Justice and The Rule of Law in New Democracies (Notre Dame: University of Notre Dame Press, 1997), pp. ix–xviii

    “Communism on Trial: The East German Past and The German Future,” in A. James McAdams, ed., Transitional Justice and the Rule of Law in New Democracies. (Notre Dame: University of Notre Dame Press, 1997).

    * “The New Diplomacy of the West German Ostpolitik,” in Gordon A. Craig and Francis

    Loewenheim, eds., The Diplomats: 1939–1979 (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1994), pp. 537–63.

    “German Ostpolitik in the 1990s: Anticipating the Post–Soviet Disorder,” in Peter Merkl, ed.,

    The Federal Republic of Germany at 45 (London and New York: Macmillan and New York University Press, 1995), pp. 407‐23.

    “Explaining Inter‐German Cooperation in the 1980s,” in Michael Huelshoff, Andrei Markovits,

    and Simon Reich, eds., From Bundesrepublik to Deutschland (Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 1993, pp. 191–206.

    “Inter‐German Relations in Historical Perspective,” in Gustav Schmidt, ed., Ost‐West Beziehungen: Konfrontation und Détente (Bochum: Brockmeyer, 1993), pp. 369–80. (Version of article above).

    “The German Question Revisited,” in George Breslauer, ed., Dilemmas of Transition in the

  • 10

    Soviet Union and Eastern Europe (Berkeley: Institute of International Studies, 1991), pp. 129– 40.

    “Political Myths and Germany’s Future,” in G. Geipel, ed., The Future of Germany (Indianapolis:

    Hudson Institute, 1990), pp. 30–36.

    “From the East German Volkskammer election to a new Germany,” in G. Geipel, ed., The Future of Germany (Indianapolis: Hudson Institute, 1990), pp. 18–29.

    “West German Perspectives on Inter‐German Relations,” in Gordon Smith, William Paterson,

    and Peter Merkl, eds., Developments in German Politics (London: Macmillan, 1989), pp. 229–46.

    “Inter‐German Détente: A New Balance?” (version of the Foreign Affairs article above), in

    Steven Larrabee, ed., The Two German States and European Security (London and New York: Macmillan and St. Martin’s Press, 1988), pp. 53–72.

    “Gorbachev’s Gamble: A New Deal For Eastern Europe,” The Nation, June 3, 1987. (This

    special issue of The Nation received the Olive Branch Award. Numerous reprints of this article elsewhere.

    The ‘German Question’ Reopened,” in Thomas Baylis, ed., East Germany, West Germany, and the Soviet Union: Perspectives on a Changing Relationship (Ithaca: Cornell University Center for International Studies, 1986), pp. 37–42.

    Popular Articles (numerous publications)

    Reviews:

    In the American Political Science Review; Political Science Quarterly; German Politics and Society; Slavic Review; New York Times; Soviet Union/Union Sovietique; and many others.

    Professional Activities

    National and International Conferences, Papers and Other: Organizer and Paper Presenter, “Taking New Right Thinkers Seriously: Perspectives from Europe, Russia, and the United States,” Selected as a Theme Panel, American Political Science Association, Annual Meeting, August 29‐September 1, 2019; Paper: “Vanguards of the European New Right: From de Benoist to Friberg and Kubitschek” Presenter, “Education and the Surveillance State under Communism,” Conference on “Toward Freedom: Celebrating Central and Eastern European Independence,” Victims

  • 11

    of Communism Memorial Foundation, Chicago, May 3, 2019 Participant, Conference Roundtable, International Conference for the Study of Political Thought, Yale University, May 10, 2019 Panel Chair and Discussant, Panel on Authoritarian Regimes, American Political Science Association, Annual Meeting, September 5, 2015.

    Panel Chair, “St. John Paul II and the Catholic University,” Catholic University of Lublin, Poland, September 26, 2015.

    Paper: “Which Europe, What Union? Pacem in Terris and the Future of European Unification,” Pontifical Academy of the Social Sciences, Vatican City, Italy. April 29, 2012.

    Paper, “Transitional Justice and the Politicization of Memory in post‐1989 Europe, Conference on The End and the Beginning: The Revolutions of 1989 and the Resurgence of History, University of Maryland, November 9, 2009.

    Paper, “Franco‐German Reconciliation,” Conference on “Reconciliation or Resentment in Germany and Japan,” American Institute for Contemporary German Studies, Johns Hopkins University, May 1, 2009.

    Paper, “Transitional Justice: The Issue that won’t go away,” Conference on “Twenty Years After: Dealing with the Heritage of Communism,” Munk Center for International Relations, University of Toronto, Canada, March 20, 2009.

    Paper, “Why Can’t We Get Along? An American Perspective on Relations between the U.S. and Europe,” Congress on Catholics and Public Life at Fundación Universitaria San Pablo‐CEU, Madrid, Spain, Nov. 19‐21, 2004

    Paper (Keynote address), “Transitional Justice after 1989: Is Germany so different?” Conference on “Historical Justice in International Perspective” German Historical Institute and Woodrow Wilson Center, Washington D.C., March 27‐29, 2003.

    Presenter and Chair, Roundtable on the German response to Terrorism, Annual Meeting of the German Studies Association, October, 2002.

    Paper, "German Officials as Historians: The Debates over the Stasi Files," Annual meeting of the German Studies Assoc., Salt Lake City, UT, Oct. 9‐11, 1998.

    Chair and discussant, panel on democratization in the new German States, Annual meeting of the German Studies Assoc., Salt Lake City, UT, Oct. 9‐11, 1998.

    Paper, "Beyond Nuremberg: German Justice and East German Law in the 1990s," International Nuremberg Symposium, Univ. of Connecticut, Oct. 17, 1996.

  • 12

    Paper, “The German Enquete‐Kommission and the Making of the New Germany,” Meeting of the Eastern German Studies Assoc., Stanford Univ., Nov. 18, 1995.

    Chair and Discussant, panels on the Foreign Policy of United Germany and the Stages of Vergangenheitsbewältigung, Annual Meeting of the German Studies Association, Chicago, IL., Sept. 22, 1995.

    Discussant, Panel on Historical Memory and German Foreign Policy, Annual Meeting of the American Political Science Assoc., Chicago, IL., Sept. 2, 1995.

    Paper, “Prosecuting East Germany’s Former Dictators,” Notre Dame Symposium on Political Justice and the Transition to Democracy, Apr. 28, 1995.

    Chair and discussant, Panel on the U. S., the Soviet Union, and East Germany, Society for Historians of American Foreign Relations, Waltham, MA., June 24, 1994.

    Chair and discussant, Panel on National Identity and Citizenship in Eastern Europe, Ninth International Conference of Europeanists, Chicago, IL., Apr. 1, 1994.

    Paper, “Mythologies of the Inter‐German Relationship,” Annual Meeting of the German Studies Assoc., Washington, DC, Oct. 8, 1993.

    Paper, “The Risks of Biased Hindsight,” Conference on East‐West Relations, Ruhr Univ., Bochum, Germany, Sept. 22–25, 1993.

    Paper, “Constructing an Oral History of the GDR," GDR Studies Assoc., Washington, DC, Nov. 13, 1992.

    Paper, “The East German Volkskammer Election: Toward a New Germany,” Hudson Institute Conference on Germany, June 18–19, 1990.

    Rapporteur, Ditchley Conference on the Future of Germany, Oxfordshire, England, December 1–3, 1989.

    Paper, “Two Germanies,” 1989 Annual Meeting of the American Political Science Assoc., Panel on the Politics of Divided Nations

    Paper, “Explaining Inter‐German Cooperation in the 1980s,” DAAD conference on “German Studies and Political Science,” August 29, 1989.

    Paper, “Conflict and Consensus in Soviet‐East German Relations,” Aspen Institute Conference on German Politics, West Berlin, May 30, 1987.

    Discussant, Conference on Soviet‐Latin American Relations, Center of International Studies, Princeton Univ., 1986

  • 13

    Paper, “Conceptualizing Change in Soviet‐East European Relations,” 1985 Annual Meeting of the American Political Science Assoc., Washington, D.C.

    Paper, “The Origins of a New Inter‐German Relationship,” Hamilton College Conference on Modern German Politics, 1985.

    Discussant, 1984 Annual Meeting of the International Studies Assoc., Panel on Problems of Socialist Politics and Economics, Atlanta, GA.

    Paper, “Weighing Detente’s Future: The Case of the GDR,” 1982 Annual Meeting of the American Political Science Assoc., Denver CO

    Invited Lectures (listed by location and year):

    2010s

    USA: National History Institute, Woodrow Wilson Center (2019)Georgetown University (2010, 2017); Miami University (2012), Chicago Seminary Co‐Op (2017); Library of Congress (2017)

    International: Catholic University of Lublin (2010); College of Pinsk, Belarus (2010); Institut Catholique de Paris (2010); Institute for Advanced Study, Konstanz, Germany (2012); Catholic University of Croatia, Zagreb, Croatia (2013); Pazmany Peter University, Budapest, Hungary (2013), University College, Dublin (2018); Catholic University of Ukraine (2018); John Paul II Catholic University, Lublin, Poland (2019); Lingnan University, Hong Kong (2019); Hong Kong Baptist University (2019)

    2000s

    USA: University of California, Berkeley (2001); German Historical Institute (2001); German Historical Institute (2003); Wayne State University (2005); University of Maine (2006); American Institute for Contemporary German Studies, Washington, DC (2008); University of Maryland (2009).

    International: Wissenschaftskolleg, Berlin (2001); Ditchley, Oxfordshire (2002); University of Warsaw (2002); Universitat Abat Oliba CEU (2004); Pazmany Peter Catholic University, Budapest (2005); Catholic University of Lublin (2006); International University of Shanghai, China (2007); International Center for Transitional Justice, Amman, Jordan (2007); Ukrainian Catholic University, Lviv, Ukraine (2008); Sogang University, Seoul, South Korea (2008); Seraficum, Rome (2009); Vietnam National University, Hanoi, Vietnam (2009); U.S. Embassy, Hanoi Vietnam (2009)

  • 14

    1990s

    USA: American Institute for Contemporary German Studies (1992); Columbia University (1992); Connecticut (1994); Harvard University (1993); Houston Seminar (1990); International Research and Exchanges Board (1992); Princeton University (1991); Stanford University (1990a, 1990b, 1991, 1998); University of California, Berkeley (1990, 1998); University of Connecticut (1996); Wayne State University (2005).

    International: Academy of Sciences, Berlin, German Democratic Republic (1990); Potsdam,

    Germany (1991); University of Bochum, Germany (1993); Central European University, Budapest, Hungary (1994).

    1980s

    USA: American Council on Germany (1989); American Institute for Contemporary German Studies (1988, 1989); Columbia University (1986, 1987, 1989); Cornell University (1984); Council on Foreign Relations (1989); Harvard University (1986a, 1986b, 1989a, 1989b); Institute for East‐West Security Studies (1986); International Research and Exchanges Board (1986, 1987); U.S. Congress (1987); University of California, Berkeley (1983).

    International: Academy of Sciences, East Berlin, German Democratic Republic (1988); Aspen

    Institute, West Berlin (1988); German Society for Foreign Policy, Federal Republic of Germany (1988); Free University, West Berlin (1985); Humboldt University, East Berlin, German Democratic Republic (1988); Institute of International Relations, East Berlin, German Democratic Republic (1988, 1989); Jagiellonian University, Krakow, Poland (1986); University of Bonn (1988a, 1988b)

    Academic Placements (former graduate and undergraduate students)

    Thomas Banchoff (Princeton, PhD), Professor, Department of Government and Institute Director; Vice‐President for Global Affairs, Georgetown University

    Andrew Bramsen (Notre Dame, PhD), Assistant Professor, Department of Political Science,

    Bethel College, St. Paul, MN

    Kathleen Collins (Notre Dame), Associate Professor, Department of Political Science, University of Minnesota

    Alexander Dukalskis, (Notre Dame, PhD), Lecturer, School of Politics and International Studies,

    University College, Dublin, Ireland

    Robert English (Princeton, PhD), Associate Professor, School of International Affairs, University of Southern California

  • 15

    Anna Grzymala‐Busse (Princeton), Chaired Professor, Department of Political Science, Stanford University

    Mark Jubulis (Notre Dame, PhD), Associate Professor, Department of Political Science, Gannon

    University

    Kevin Krause (Notre Dame, PhD), Associate Professor, Department of Political Science, Wayne State University

    James McCann (Princeton, PhD), Rector, Pontifical Oriental Institute, Rome, Italy

    Dirk Moses (Notre Dame, MA), Senior Lecturer, Department of History, University of Sydney,

    Australia John Scherpereel (Notre Dame), Associate Professor, Department of Political Science, James

    Madison University

    Claire Smith (Notre Dame, PhD), Department of Political Science, University of Oldenburg

    Mitchell Smith (Princeton, PhD), Associate Professor, Department of Political Science, University of Oklahoma

    Other Professional Activities

    National and International Fellowship and Grant Panels: American Council of Learned Societies (3 times); German Academic Exchange Service (5 times); International Research and Exchanges Board

    Academic Consulting and Refereeing:

    American Academy—Berlin; U. S. Institute of Peace, Council on International Educational Exchange, American Council of Learned Societies, Ford Foundation, International Research and Exchanges Board, American Institute for Contemporary German Studies, Wilson Center of the Smithsonian Institution, German Marshall Fund; radio and television commentary (National Public Radio, McNeil‐Lehrer News Hour, Nightline with Ted Koppel; National Geographic) and many others.

    Consulting:

    U.S. Department of State, U.S. Congress, the White House, National Security Council, many others

    Scholarly Referee:

  • 16

    Publishers: Princeton Univ. Press, Harvard Univ. Press, Cornell Univ. Press, Cambridge Univ. Press, Univ. of California Press, Oxford Univ. Press, Univ. of North Carolina Press, Penn State Univ. Press, Univ. of Notre Dame Press, etc.

    Journals: American Political Science Review, Political Science Quarterly; Review of Politics; World Politics; American Journal of Political Science; Journal of Politics; Review of Politics; Comparative Politics; Law and Society Review; Journal of Transitional Justice; etc.

    Foundations and Institutes: National Science Foundation, American Council of Learned Societies, U. S. Institute of Peace, MacArthur Foundation, Research Council of Canada, Social Science Research Council, German Academic Exchange Service (DAAD), American Academy—Berlin, among others

    Member, Indiana Advisory Board, US Commission on Civil Rights, 1995–1999.

    November 21, 1989: Congressional Testimony, U.S. Congress, House Subcommittee on Europe and the Middle East

    In February 1989, I was offered (and declined) the position of Director of Central and Southern European Affairs at the National Security Council, The White House.

    1986‐1991: Member, Continuing seminar on German Politics, Aspen Institute‐Berlin

    January 12‐29, 1985: Lecturer, U.S. Information Agency (in German) in East Germany, West Germany, and Czechoslovakia; and in Poland, 1986

    1985‐1987, 1988‐1990: Associate Editor, World Politics

    1976‐‐present: Contributing Editor, New Oxford Review

    2001 ‐‐ 2008, Member, Academic Advisory Board, American Institute for Contemporary German

    Studies

    2001 ‐‐ ? , Who’s Who in America

    2002 – 2010. Editorial Board, Comparative Politics Newsletter, American Political Science Association

    2004 – present, Associate Editor, Review of Politics

    2004‐ 2009, Research Associate, Center for the Study of American Civic Literacy, Wilmington Delaware

    2003 and 2006, Member, National Selection Committee, DAAD Prize in German Politics and International Affairs

  • 17

    2006‐2007, Chair, Selection Committee for the Best Book in German History or Politics, German Studies Association

    2008, 2009, 2010 National Selection Committees, Graduate and Faculty Research Grants, DAAD

    2008‐ present, Senior Non‐resident Fellow, American Institute for Contemporary German Studies, Washington, DC 2018 ‐ present, Member, Academic Advisory Council, Memorial Foundation for the “Victims of Communism” Princeton University Activities (abbreviated)

    1989‐90 Acting Director, interdisciplinary undergraduate and graduate program in Russian

    Studies Founder, interdisciplinary major in German and Politics, Dept. of Germanic Languages and

    Literatures and Dept. of Politics Sponsor, numerous lectures and colloquia on European politics, US foreign policy, and

    international security Member, Dept. of Politics Undergraduate Committee Member, Dept. of Politics Graduate Committee Chair and/or member of dissertation and masters committees; supervisor numerous junior and

    senior theses 1986‐90 Faculty Fellow, Forbes College

    Courses: Undergraduate: Soviet Foreign Policy; East European Politics; German Politics Graduate: The German Question; Comparative Communist Politics

    Notre Dame Activities

    Department of Government and International Studies (renamed Department of Political Science in 2002)

    Member, Comparative Politics Search Committees, 1993 (Chair); 1994 (Chair); 2004‐2005; 2008 (Chair)

    Chair, Undergraduate Studies Committee, 1995‐1996

    Member, Graduate Admissions Committee, 2003‐2004; 2006‐2007

    Chair, Comparative Politics Committee, 1993‐1995l; 2004‐2005; 2014‐15

  • 18

    Member, Undergraduate Policy Committee, 2006‐2007

    Member, International Relations Search Committee, 2007‐2008; 2010‐2011

    Elected member, Appointments and Promotions Committee, 1994/1995; 1995/1996; 1996/1997; 2009‐2010; 2011‐2012; renamed Executive Committee, 2015/2016; 2017/18

    Chair, Department of Government and International Studies, 1997‐2002 (reappointment, 2000):

    In this capacity, I was responsible for the management of a large academic program (41 faculty, 4 staff) with a multi‐million dollar budget. I was charged with oversight of scholarly research in four professional sub‐fields (Comparative Politics, International Relations, Political Theory, and American Politics) and undergraduate (570+ students) and graduate (80+ students) teaching programs. Related activities: Hiring (directly involved in the recruitment and hiring of 18 full‐time faculty), Curriculum, Program development, Fund‐raising (raised approx. $1.5 million in external gifts for department programs). In 2000, I organized and chaired a successful external review of department.

    Courses

    Undergraduate: Seminar in Comparative Communism; The Rise and Fall of Communism; German Politics; Ten Images of Hell in the Twentieth Century; Democracy in the Age of the Web; Private/Public/Internet; Introduction to Comparative Politics; Sophomore Core Course (Humanities); East European Politics; Dream of Communism (Junior Seminar); Ten Images of Hell in the Twenty‐First Century; Introduction to World Politics

    Graduate: Comparative Communism; Philosophy and Dictatorship

    Thesis supervision:

    Undergraduate Honors Theses

    1992‐93: Kathleen Collins (Honors Program)—best thesis prize

    1993‐94: Doug Dewitt; Daniel DiPaola; Dan Fulkerson; Michael McGarry; Christopher Kanis (Honors Program); Timothy Mooney (Honors Program); Rita Parhad (Honors program)—two best thesis prizes

    1994‐95: Kimberly Gooley; Stephen Smith; Elizabeth Caruso (Honors Program); Brad Hunter; Michelle McQuillan

    1995‐96: Larissa Herzeg; Eric Johnson; Kathleen Murphy (Honors Program)

    1997‐98: Matthew Wingerter

  • 19

    2000‐01: Quinn Vandenberg; Eric Bodony

    2003‐04: Brianna Todd

    2004‐05: Kim Anderson; Petra Dankova

    2005‐06: Mark Szuka; Patrick Seul; Brittany Bacon 2006‐07: Victoria Danielsky

    2007‐08: Caitlin Landuyt; Brian Klein; Amanda Deckelman 2008‐

    09: Sebastian Lederer

    2009‐10: Kristine Nugent

    2010‐11: Sean Philbin; Brittany Schmier; Timothy Beemer

    2011‐12: Stephen Payne

    2013‐14: Samantha Heggum

    2016‐17: April Dan Feng; Kayla Mullen

    M.A. Theses:

    Kevin Krause Stalbek Mishakov Brendan Gaffney Nikolay Valkov Dirk Moses (Dept. of History) Alejandro Salines (Law School) Jonathan Richardson Oleksii Kovalenko (Keough School) Kevin Richardson (Keough School), in progress

    Ph.D. Theses:

    Ana Petrova, Political Science (Committee member, in progress) Emma Rosenberg (Committee member, in progress) Mary Shiraef (Committee member, in progress)

  • 20

    Alejandro Castrillon (committee member, in progress) Shaojin Chai, Political Science (committee member, successfully defended, July 2014) Andrew Bramsen, Political Science (Chair, successfully defended, 2013) Maria Rogacheva (History, committee member, successfully defended 2013) Alex Duklaskis, Political Science and Peace Studies (Chair, successfully defended 2012) Sean Brennan, Dept. of History (committee member; successfully defended, March 2009) Claire Smith (Chair, successfully defended, April 2005) James Thompson (Committee Member) Peter Baker (Committee Member, successfully defended, May 2007) Stalbek Mishakov (Chair) Kevin Krause (Chair, successfully defended, April 2000) Mark Thomas (Chair, 1993‐95) Mark Jubulis (Committee Member, 1994‐97; successfully defended, 1997) Carol Stuart (Comm. Member, 1996‐98; successfully defended, 1998) Steven Brady (History, Comm. Member, 1995‐98; successfully defended, 1998)

    College of Arts and Letters

    Director, Fulbright Fellowship Competition, all Notre Dame undergraduates, 1993‐95 23 National winners

    Director, National Security Education Program fellowship competition, 1993‐95

    3 National grants

    Member, Search Committee for Chair of Department of Germanic/Slavic Languages and Literatures, 1994‐1995 (appointment of Mark Roche)

    Member, Senior Search Committee, 1997‐98, (appointment of Robert Norton)

    Institute for Scholarship in the Liberal Arts Member, Award Committee, 1996

    Member, Committee on Internet and e‐Learning

    Member, Sheedy Award Selection Committee, numerous times since 1996

    Director, Interdisciplinary Minor in European Studies, 2002‐2018.

    Member, numerous Endowed Chair committees, 2002‐present

    Member, Search Committees for Chair of Department of Germanic/Slavic Languages and Literatures, 2004‐2005.

    Keough School of Global Affairs

  • 21

    Member, Leadership Council, 2016‐2018 Committee on Appointments and Promotions, 2016‐2018

    University Institutes

    Director, Nanovic Institute for European Studies, 2002‐2018.

    As director, I was responsible for all aspects of the administration of a large (170+ faculty fellows) teaching and research institute in European Studies. Further information is available at http://nanovic.nd.edu/.

    Faculty Fellow, 1993‐present Elected Member, Steering Committee, 1994‐95 Appointed Member, Steering Committee, 1998‐2000

    Faculty Fellow, Helen Kellogg Institute for International Studies, 1992‐present Member, Faculty Steering Committee, 1995 and subsequently numerous times Organizer of European‐related activities; principal author or co‐author of grant proposals

    in comparative studies, early 1990s Organizer, symposium on the crisis in Russia, October 1993 Organizer, international symposium on transitional justice, April 28, 1995 Organizer, university‐wide discussion group on the politics of the Internet, 2000‐2008 Supervisor, numerous Kellogg Undergraduate International Scholars, 2010 to present Organizer, Workshop on “Taking New Right Thinkers Seriously: Reflections from Europe, Russia, and the United States,” May 1, 2019

    Faculty Fellow, Kroc Institute for International Peace Studies, 1994‐present

    Member, Research Committee, 1994‐96

    Faculty Fellow, Center for Civil and Human Rights, Law School Member, Advisory Council, 1992‐2000; 2014 Member, Strategic Planning Committee, 1994‐96 Member, Director Search Committee, 1997‐98 (appointment of Juan E. Mendez) Member, Director Search Committee, 2004‐2005 (appointment of Douglas Cassell)

    University‐Wide Service

    Office of the Provost

    Member, University Committee on International Studies, 1995‐98, 2002‐2007 Member, University Committee on Program in Washington, DC, 1995 Seminar leader, “Democratic Politics in the Age of the Internet,” Faculty Intellectual

    Retreat, Dearborn, MI, June 18‐June 21, 2001 Chair, Internal Review Committee, Center for Sports and Culture, fall 2002.

    http://nanovic.nd.edu/

  • 22

    Office of Executive Vice‐President: Laetare Award–Notre Dame Award Committee, 1995‐2004; Laetare, 2005‐2006; 2014‐20 Academic Council, 2005‐2008 (presidential appointee) Chair, Internal Review Committee, Mendelson Center for Sport and Character, 2002‐03 Internal Reviewer, External Review, Department of Sociology, 2006. Member, Social Sciences Curriculum Review Committee, 2005‐present Rome Center Planning Committee, 2006; 2014 Member, Search Committee, Director of the Kellogg Institute of International Studies (appointment of Scott Mainwaring) Member, Search Committee, Dean of the Graduate School (appointment of Greg Sterling)

    Notre Dame International

    Member, International Programs, Steering Committee, 2013‐2016 Member, Liu Institute Director Search Committee, 2013‐14

    Graduate School Graduate Council, 2006‐2007 Graduate Affairs Committee, Academic Council, 2006‐2007

    Notre Dame Board of Trustees

    Elected Faculty Member, Academic Affairs Committee, 2004‐2007

    Department of Athletics Member, Steering Committee for NCAA Accreditation, 1995‐96 Chair, Academic Integrity Subcommittee, 1995‐96 (directed campus‐wide review of academic programs) Member and Co‐Founder, Committee on Academic Mentoring, 1997‐2001

    Faculty Board on Athletics

    Elected Member, At‐large, 1996‐98 Appointed Member, 1998‐2001 Member, Subcommittee on Athletic Benchmarking, 1998‐present

    Center for Social Concerns

    Member, Education for Mission Task Team, Academic Programs, 1993‐94 Member, Board of Advisors, 1998‐present (only faculty member named to the board)

    Kaneb Teaching Center

    Member, Committee on Carnegie Project on "The Scholarship of Teaching," 1998‐2000 Presentation, to incoming teaching assistants, “The first‐day of teaching,” August 2004 Presentation, to incoming teaching assistants, “The psychology of teaching,” August 2005

    Law School

    Member, Endowed Chairs Committee, 2005; 2014 Member, Center for Civil and Human Rights Director Review, 2011

  • 23

    Office of Development: consulting, advising on donors, fund‐raising, and international studies Lead presentation on international studies at Notre Dame to International Advisory Council, September 30, 1994 Presentations at Quarterly Meetings of National and Regional Directors, 1997, 2002, 2013

    First Year of Studies, Lead Speaker, Freshman Honors Convocation, February 21, 1995

    Thomas Madden Award Selection Committee, 2004; 2005; 2006

    Office of Admissions Member, Global Issues Seminar Steering Committee, 1998‐1999

    Hall Fellow

    Carroll Hall, 1993‐94 Walsh Hall, 1994‐96

    A. JAMES MCADAMSEducationProfessional PositionsResearch AppointmentsGrants and FellowshipsDistinctions, Honors, AwardsGrants and Sponsored ProgramsMonographs:

    Italian translation, L'avanguardia della rivoluzione. L'idea globale del Partito Comunista (Rome: Mondadori, Le Monnier, 2019)Edited Volumes and Collections:Refereed (*) Journal Articles:Book Chapters (*refereed):Reviews:

    Professional ActivitiesNational and International Conferences, Papers and Other:Organizer and Paper Presenter, “Taking New Right Thinkers Seriously: Perspectives from Europe, Russia, and the United States,” Selected as a Theme Panel, American Political Science Association, Annual Meeting, August 29-September 1, 2019; Paper: “Vang...Invited Lectures (listed by location and year):2010s

    Other Professional ActivitiesNotre Dame ActivitiesDepartment of Government and International Studies (renamed Department of Political Science in 2002)CoursesThesis supervision:M.A. Theses:Ph.D. Theses:College of Arts and LettersKeough School of Global AffairsUniversity InstitutesUniversity‐Wide Service