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Will H. Moore Professor School of Politics & Global Studies Arizona State University Tempe, AZ 85287-3902 520.200.7390; [email protected] http://whmoore.net/ Education 1991 Ph.D., Political Science, August, University of Colorado at Boulder. Dissertation: Why Internal Wars End: The Decision to Fight, Negotiate or Surrender Professors Ted Robert Gurr and James R. Scarritt, Co-Chairs. 1984 B.A., Cum Laude, Economics, May, University of Colorado at Boulder. Positions Professor, School of Politics and Global Studies, Arizona State University, 8/15 – present. Co-Director, Conflict Consortium (wwww.conflictconsortium.com), 8/12 – present. Alumnni Distinguished Professor, Political Science, Florida State University, 9/14 – 5/15. Visiting Faculty Fellow, QuanTM Institute, Emory University, 6/15 – 7/15. Professor, Political Science, Florida State University, 8/03 – 8/14. Visiting Research Fellow, Kroc Center for International Peace, Notre Dame, 8/11 – 5/12. Associate Professor, Political Science, Florida State University, 8/97 – 7/03. Assistant Professor, Political Science, University of California at Riverside, 7/91 – 7/97. Instructor, Political Science, University of Colorado at Boulder, 1/91 – 7/91. Publications Book 2013. A Mathematics Course for Political and Social Research, Will H. Moore & David A. Siegel, Princeton University Press. Articles 2016. “How Much Terror? Dissidents, Governments, Institutions and the Cross-National Study of Terror Attacks,” Ryan Bakker, Daniel W. Hill, Jr. & Will H. Moore, Journal of Peace Research, 53(5): 711-726.

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Will H. Moore

ProfessorSchool of Politics & Global Studies

Arizona State UniversityTempe, AZ 85287-3902

520.200.7390; [email protected]://whmoore.net/

Education

1991 Ph.D., Political Science, August, University of Colorado at Boulder.Dissertation: Why Internal Wars End: The Decision to Fight, Negotiate or SurrenderProfessors Ted Robert Gurr and James R. Scarritt, Co-Chairs.

1984 B.A., Cum Laude, Economics, May, University of Colorado at Boulder.

Positions

Professor, School of Politics and Global Studies, Arizona State University, 8/15 – present.Co-Director, Conflict Consortium (wwww.conflictconsortium.com), 8/12 – present.Alumnni Distinguished Professor, Political Science, Florida State University, 9/14 – 5/15.Visiting Faculty Fellow, QuanTM Institute, Emory University, 6/15 – 7/15.Professor, Political Science, Florida State University, 8/03 – 8/14.Visiting Research Fellow, Kroc Center for International Peace, Notre Dame, 8/11 – 5/12.Associate Professor, Political Science, Florida State University, 8/97 – 7/03.Assistant Professor, Political Science, University of California at Riverside, 7/91 – 7/97.Instructor, Political Science, University of Colorado at Boulder, 1/91 – 7/91.

Publications

Book

2013. A Mathematics Course for Political and Social Research, Will H. Moore & David A.Siegel, Princeton University Press.

Articles

2016. “How Much Terror? Dissidents, Governments, Institutions and the Cross-NationalStudy of Terror Attacks,” Ryan Bakker, Daniel W. Hill, Jr. & Will H. Moore, Journalof Peace Research, 53(5): 711-726.

2015 “Tilting at a Windmill? The Conceptual Problem in Contemporary Peace Science,”Will H. Moore. Conflict Management and Peace Science, 32(4): 356-369. PresidentialAddress to the 2014 Annual Meeting of the Peace Science Society.

2015 “Modeling Two Types of Peace: The Zero-inflated Ordered Probit (ZiOP) Model inConflict Research,” Benjamin E. Bagozzi, Daniel W. Hill, Jr., Will H. Moore, andBumba Mukherjee. Journal of Conflict Resolution, 59(4): 728-752.

2014 “Torture Allegations as Events Data: Introducing the Ill-Treatment and Torture(ITT) Specific Allegation Data,” Courtenay R. Conrad, Jillienne Haglund & Will H.Moore, Journal of Peace Research, 51(3): 429-438.

2013 “Information Politics v Organizational Incentives: Are Amnesty International’s“Naming and Shaming” Reports Biased?” Daniel W. Hill, Jr., Will H. Moore &Bumba Mukherjee, International Studies Quarterly, 57(2): 219-232.

2013 “Disaggregating Torture Allegations: Introducing the Ill-Treatment and Torture(ITT) Country-Year (CY) Data,” Courtenay R. Conrad, Jillienne Haglund & Will H.Moore, International Studies Perspectives, 14(2): 199-220.

2012 “Time Horizons Matter: The Hazard Rate of Coalition Governments and the Size ofGovernment,” Sergio Bejar, Bumba Mukherjee & Will H. Moore. Economics ofGovernance, 12(3): 201-235.

2011 “Judicial Power in Domestic and International Politics,” Jeffrey K. Staton & Will H.Moore, International Organization, 65(3):553-588.

2010 “What Stops the Torture?” Courtenay R. Conrad & Will H. Moore. AmericanJournal of Political Science, 54(2): 459-476.

2009 “Does Environmental Degradation Influence Migration? Emigration to DevelopedCountries in the Late 1980s and 1990s,” Rafael Reuveny & Will H. Moore, SocialScience Quarterly, 90(3):461-479.

2008 “A Bayesian Quantal Response Estimator for Incomplete Information Games,” JustinEsarey, Bumba Mukherjee and Will H. Moore, Political Analysis, 16(3):250-273.

2007 “Whither Will They Go? A Global Analysis of Refugee Flows, 1955-95,” Will H.Moore and Stephen M. Shellman, International Studies Quarterly, 51(4):811-834.

2007 “Risk Factors for Forced Migrant Flight,” Jacqueline H. Rubin and Will H. Moore,Conflict Management & Peace Science, 24:85-104.

2006 “Refugee or Internally Displaced Person? To Where Should One Flee?” Will H.Moore and Stephen M. Shellman, Comparative Political Studies, June, 39(5): 599-622.

2006 “Government Formation in Parliamentary Democracies and Foreign ExchangeMarkets: Theory and Empirical Evidence from Europe,” Will H. Moore and BumbaMukherjee, International Studies Quarterly, 50: 195-210.

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2004 “Fear of Persecution: Forced Migration, 1952-95,” Will H. Moore and Stephen M.Shellman, Journal of Conflict Resolution, 48(5):723-745.

2003 “Domestic Politics and US Foreign Policy: A Study of Cold War Conflict Behavior,”Will H. Moore and David J. Lanoue, Journal of Politics, 65(2):376-396.

2003 “Sometimes You Just Have to Leave: Threat and Refugee Movements, 1964-1989,”Christian A. Davenport, Will H. Moore, and Steven C. Poe, InternationalInteractions, 29(1):27-55.

2003 “Foreign Policy Behavior and Fractional Integration,” Matthew J. Lebo and Will H.Moore, Journal of Conflict Resolution, 47(1):13-32.

2002 “Presidential Use of Force During the Cold War: Aggregation, Truncation, andTemporal Dynamics,”Sara McLaughlin Mitchell and Will H. Moore, American Journalof Political Science, 46(2): 438-452.

2000 “The Repression of Dissent: A Substitution Model of Government Coercion,” Will H.Moore, Journal of Conflict Resolution, 44(1):107-127.

1998 “Repression and Dissent: Substitution, Context and Timing,” Will H. Moore,American Journal of Political Science, 42(3):851-873.

1998 “Ties that Bind? Domestic and International Conflict Behavior in Zaire,” Will H.Moore and David R. Davis, Comparative Political Studies, 31(1):45-71.

1997 “Ethnopolitical Rebellion: A Cross-sectional Analysis of the 1980s with RiskAssessments for the 1990s,” Ted Robert Gurr and Will H. Moore, American Journal ofPolitical Science, 41(4):1079-1103.

1997 “Ethnicity Matters: Transnational Ethnic Alliances and Foreign Policy Behavior,”David R. Davis and Will H. Moore, International Studies Quarterly, 41(1):171-184.

1996 “Land Reform, Political Violence and the Economic Inequality–Political ConflictNexus: A Longitudinal Analysis,” Will H. Moore, Ronny Lindstrom and ValerieO’Regan, International Interactions, 21(4): 335-363.

1995 “Deprived, Rational or Both? ‘Why Minorities Rebel’ Revisited,” Ronny Lindstromand Will H. Moore, Journal of Political and Military Sociology, 23 (Winter):167-190.

1995 “Rational Rebels: Overcoming the Free-Rider Problem,” Will H. Moore, PoliticalResearch Quarterly, June, 48(2):417-454.

1995 “Action-Reaction or Rational Expectations? Reciprocity and theDomestic-International Conflict Nexus During the Rhodesia Problem,” Will H. Moore,Journal of Conflict Resolution, March, 39(1):129-167.

1991 “Rebel Music: Appeals to Rebellion in Zimbabwe,” Will H. Moore, PoliticalCommunication and Persuasion, 8(2):125-138.

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1990 “IMF Conditionality and Polity Type in Black Africa: An Exploratory Analysis,”Will H. Moore and James R. Scarritt, Africa Today, December, 37(4):39-60. Reprintedin V.P. Nanda, G.W. Shepherd, Jr. and E. McCarthy-Arnolds (eds.) World Debt andthe Human Condition: Structural Adjustment and the Right to Development, NewYork: Greenwood, 1993, pp. 113-138.

1990 “Discrimination and Political Violence: A Cross-Sectional Study with Two TimePeriods,” Maro Ellina and Will H. Moore, The Western Political Quarterly, June,43(2):267-278.

1990 “Deprivation, Mobilization and the State: A Synthetic Model of Rebellion,” Will H.Moore and Keith Jaggers, Journal of Developing Societies, January - April, 6(1):17-36.Reprinted in Q. Kim (ed.) Revolutions in the Third World, Leiden: E.J. Brill, 1991,pp. 17-36.

1990 “The Transformation of the Western State: Indicators of Democracy, Autocracy, andState Power since 1800,” Ted Robert Gurr, Keith Jaggers and Will H. Moore, Studiesin Comparative International Development, Spring, 25(1):73-108. Reprinted in A.Inkeles (ed.) On Measures of Democracy, New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction, 1991, pp.69-104.

Chapters in Edited Volumes

2014 “Modeling Terror Attacks: A Cross-National, Out-of-Sample Study.” Ryan Bakker,Daniel W. Hill & Will H. Moore, in R. Caruso & A. Locatelli (eds.) UnderstandingTerrorism: A Socio-Economic Perspective, Blingby: Emerald Group Publishing.

2012. “Domestic—International Conflict Linkages.” Will H. Moore and Ahmer Tarar.Guide to the Study of International Processes. S.M. Mitchell, P.F. Diehl & J.A.Morrow (eds.), New York: Blackwell Publishing, pp. 171-188.

2010 “Domestic–International Conflict Linkages,” Will H. Moore and Ahmer Tarar. TheInternational Studies Encyclopedia. Denemark, Robert A. (ed.) Blackwell Publishing.Blackwell Reference Online.

2004 “Ethnicity and Repression: The Ethnic Composition of Countries and Human RightsViolations,” Chris Lee, Ronny Lindstrom, Will H. Moore and Kursad Turan, in S.C.Carey & S.C Poe (eds) Understanding Human Rights Violations: New SystematicStudies, Aldershot: Ashgate, pp. 186-201.

2000 “Coercion and Protest: An Empirical Test Revisited,” Chris Lee, Sandra Maline, andWill H. Moore, in Christian A. Davenport (ed.) Paths to State Repression: HumanRights and Contentious Politics in Comparative Perspective, Boulder: Rowman andLittlefield, pp. 125-144.

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1998 “Assessing Risks of Ethnorebellion in the Year 2000: Three Empirical Approaches,”Will H. Moore and Ted Robert Gurr, in Susanne Schmeidl and Howard Adelman (eds.)Early Warning and Early Response. Columbia International Affairs Online, ColumbiaUniversity Press, https://wwwc.cc.columbia.edu/sec/dlc/ciao/book/schmeidl/.

1998 “Transnational Ethnic Ties and Foreign Policy,” Will H. Moore and David R. Davis,in David A. Lake and Donald Rothchild (eds.) Ethnic Fears and Global Engagement:The International Spread and Management of Ethnic Conflict, Princeton: PrincetonUniversity Press, pp. 89-103.

1997 “Ethnicity, Minorities and International Conflict Patterns,” David R. Davis, KeithJaggers and Will H. Moore, in David Carment and Patrick James (eds.) Wars in theMidst of Peace: The International Politics of Ethnic Conflict, Pittsburgh, Universityof Pittsburgh Press, pp. 148-163.

Essays, Communications, Codebooks, Other

2015 “Conflict Consortium Data Standards & Practices for Observational Data.” ChristianDavenport & Will H. Moore.http://conflictconsortium.weebly.com/standards--best-practices.html.

2012 “The Arab Spring, Winter, and Back Again?(Re) Introducing the Dissent–RepressionNexus with a Twist.” Christian Davenport & Will H. Moore. InternationalInteractions, 38(5): 704-713.

2011 “The Next Generation: Making Sense of Contemporary Contentious Politics.”Christian Davenport & Will H. Moore. States, Power & Societies, 16(3): 6-8.

2010 “Incarceration, Interrogation and Counterterror: Do (Liberal) Democratic InstitutionsConstrain Leviathan?” Will H. Moore PS: Political Science & Politics, 43(3):421-424

2002 “Ethnic Minorities and Foreign Policy,” Will H. Moore, SAIS Review, Summer-Fall,22(2):77-92.

2002 “Refugee or Internally Displaced Person? To Where Should One Flee?” Will H.Moore and Stephen M. Shellman, Working Paper #65, Center for ComparativeImmigration Studies, University of California, San Diego.

2001 Testbank to accompany Bruce Bueno de Mesquita’s Principles of InternationalPolitics, Eric Carr and Will H. Moore, Congressional Quarterly Press,http://bdm.cqpress.com/testbank inst registration.htm.

1996 The Violent Intranational Conflict Data Project (VICDP) Codebook, Will H. Mooreand Ronny Lindstrom,http://garnet.acns.fsu.edu/∼whmoore/vicdp/Codebook.pdf.

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1995 Intranational Political Interactions (IPI) Coding Rules, Brett Ashley Leeds, David R.Davis, and Will H. Moore, with Christopher McHorney,http://garnet.acns.fsu.edu/∼whmoore/ipi/codebook.html.

1995 “The Intranational Political Interactions Project,” Will H. Moore and David R.Davis, Conflict Processes Section Newsletter, May, p. 2.

1993 “The Violent Intranational Conflict Data Project,” Will H. Moore, Conflict ProcessesSection Newsletter, November, p. 3.

1989 “Polity II,” Ted Robert Gurr, Keith Jaggers and Will H. Moore, DDIR Update,3(4):1-7.

1989 Polity II Codebook, Ted Robert Gurr, Keith Jaggers and Will H. Moore, Boulder:Center for Comparative Politics, University of Colorado (also deposited with theInter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research, and made available aspart of Study #9263, 1990).

Grants

Federal

7/11-6/12 National Science Foundation (SES-1123666), Courtenay R. Conrad & Will H.Moore co-PIs, $27,000.

9/09-8/10 National Science Foundation (SES-0921397), Courtenay R. Conrad & Will H.Moore co-PIs, $173,000.

1/03-12/03 National Science Foundation (SES-0241877), Doctoral DissertationEnhancement Award for Andrew G. Long (Will H. Moore PI), $5,504.

7/02-6/03 National Science Foundation (SES-0214287), Doctoral DissertationEnhancement Award for Stephen M. Shellman (Will H. Moore PI), $7,700.

5/01-4/02 National Science Foundation (SES-0099313), Will H. Moore PI, $49,000.

7/95-5/98 National Science Foundation (SBR-9423762, SBR-9896144), David R. Davis &Will H. Moore co-PIs, $105,000.

2/94-7/96 National Science Foundation (SBR-9321862), Ted Robert Gurr PI, $120,000.

Extramural

AY 1993-94 Research Grant, Institute on Global Conflict and Cooperation (IGCC),University of California.

AY 1992-93 Research Grant, Institute on Global Conflict and Cooperation (IGCC),University of California.

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Intramural

2/08 Conference support from Center for the Advancement of Human Rights, Florida StateUniversity, to host the Mini-Conference on Delegation and Independence in Domesticand International Law, Tallahassee, FL.

AY 1992-93 Regents’ Faculty Fellowship, University of California at Riverside.

Awards & Honors

10/13-9/14 President, Peace Science Society (International).

9/13-8/14 Vice President, Human Rights Section, American Political Science Association.

2002 Developing Scholar Award, The Florida State University.

2001 Teaching Excellence Recognition, Alpha Chi Omega, The Florida State University.

1996 Editorial Board Award for Excellence in Research for the best article in volume 21 ofInternational Interactions (for Land Reform, Political Violence and the EconomicInequality–Political Conflict Nexus: A Longitudinal Analysis).

1992 UC, Riverside Panhellenic Teaching Award.

Professional Presentations

Invited Presentations

2015 “Political Institutions, Plausible Deniability and the Decision to Hide Torture,”Research Symposium on Torture in the Americas, Center for Human Rights andDemocracy and the Center for Latin American Latino Studies, Georgia StateUniversity.

2015 “Threat Perception & Public Support of Government Torture,” IR Speakers Series,University of California, San Diego.

2015 “Global Torture Data: A Comparison of the Human Rights Global Knowledge Graph(HR-GKG) Data to the Ill Treatment and Torture (ITT) Data,” “How Do We KnowWhat We Know? Charting the Future for Human Rights Documentation andAnalysis” Conference/Workshop, Arizona State University.

2014 “Democracy, Courts and Torture,” Department of Political Science, WashingtonUniversity, St. Louis.

2014 “Tilting at a Windmill? The Conceptual Problem in Contemporary Peace Science,”Presidential Address, Peace Science Society (International).

2014 “Minorities, Demand for Intelligence, and American Support for Torture,” PeaceResearch Institute, Oslo.

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2014 “What do we Know about States and Torture?” Department of Poltical Science,Texas A&M University.

2013 “What Makes National Human Rights Institutions Effective?,” “The DomesticPolitics of International Human Rights Agreements” Conference, Niehaus Center forGlobalization & Governance, Princeton University.

2013 “Constraining Leviathan: Political Institutions and the Human Rights Practices ofStates,” Department of Political Science, University of Pittsburgh.

2013 “Dissent, Repression & the Outcomes of the Arab Spring,” Workshop on “ThirdParties and Ethnic Conflict: The Impact of Transnational Actors on Ethnic CivilWars,” Conflict and Security Research Group, Central European University.

2013 “Political Institutions, Plausible Deniability, and the Use of Stealth Torture,” (withCourtenay Conrad) Human Rights University Seminar, Columbia University.

2013 “The Cross-National Correlates of Domestic Terror Attacks,” START Center,University of Maryland.

2012 “Dissent, Repression & the Outcomes of the Arab Spring,” Program on Order,Conflict and Violence, Yale University.

2012 “Dissent, Repression & the Outcomes of the Arab Spring,” School of Public andEnvironmental Affairs & Department of Political Science, Indiana University.

2012 “Dissident-State Interactions and Outcomes in the Arab Spring,” Kroc Institute forInternational Peace Studies, University of Notre Dame.

2012 “Dissident-State Interactions and Outcomes in the Arab Spring,” Department ofConflict & Peace Research, Uppsala University, Sweden.

2011 “Why Abandon Home? Dissent, Repression & Forced Migration,” Core ConnectionsLectures 2011-12, University of New England.

2011 “Why Abandon Home? Dissent, Repression & Forced Migration,” and “InformationPolitics v Organizational Incentives: Are Amnesty Internationals Naming andShaming Reports Biased?” presented at the College of William & Mary.

2011 “Choosing Terror: Dissidents, Governments, Institutions and the Cross-NationalStudy of Terror Attacks,” Will H. Moore, Ryan Bakker & Daniel Hill, presented atDepartment of Political Science, University of North Texas.

2011 ““Nonviolent Protest: Stylized Facts, Existing Data, and Research Opportunities,”Will H. Moore, Peace Research Institute, Oslo, Norway.

2010 “It’s All About Freedom of the Press.” Innovations in the Study of Mass Violations ofHuman Rights Workshop, Kroc Institute for International Peace Studies, University ofNotre Dame.

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2010 “Choosing Terror: Dissidents, Governments, Institutions and the Cross-NationalStudy of Terror Attacks,” Will H. Moore, Ryan Bakker & Daniel Hill, presented at theCenter for the Study of Civil War, Peace Research Institute, Oslo, Norway.

2007 “The Puzzle of Abu Ghraib: Are Democratic Institutions a Palliative or Panacea?”Christian Davenport, Dave Armstrong & Will H. Moore, presented at the Universityof Notre Dame, November.

2007 “Teaching about Torture,” Summer Workshop on Teaching Terrorism, University ofMaryland, College Park.

2006 “What Can IR Do? The Systematic Study of Human Rights,” Will H. Moore,presented at the War Crimes and International Responsibility: A Symposium onHuman Rights, Law and Governance conference, Florida International University,Miami, 23-24 February.

2005 “What Have Empirical Models Taught Us About Forced Migration?” Will H. Moore,presented at the Workshop on the Economics of Forced Migration, Inter-UniversityCommittee on International Migration, MIT, 9-10 December and at the University ofIowa, 3 November.

2002 “Refugee or Internally Displaced Person? To Where Should One Flee?” Will H.Moore and Stephen M. Shellman, presented at the ”Forced Migration, Global Security,and Humanitarian Assistance” Conference, Center for Comparative ImmigrationStudies, University of California, San Diego, 3 December.

2002 “Whither Will They Go? A Global Analysis of Refugee Flows, 1964-1995,” Will H.Moore and Stephen M. Shellman, Department of Political Science, Rice University, 18March.

2001 “Modeling Refugee and IDP Flows,” Will H. Moore and Stephen M. Shellman,presented at the Politics, Democracy & Human Rights Symposia, University of NorthTexas, 19 October.

2001 “Does Aggregation Matter?” Will H. Moore and Stephen M. Shellman, presented atthe ‘Repression and Mobilization: What We Know and Where We Should Go FromHere?’ Conference, University of Maryland, 21-24 June.

2001 “40 Years of Refugee Flows: New UNHCR Data–Challenges and Prospects,” Will H.Moore and Stephen M. Shellman, presented at the PRIO/Uppsala University/DECRG High-Level Scientific Conference Identifying Wars: Systematic ConflictResearch and Its Utility in Conflict Resolution and Prevention, Uppsala, 7-8 June.

2001 “Prospective or Retrospective? Directed-Dyadic Foreign Policy Behavior,” presentedat the Workshop on Emerging Methodologies in the Quantitative Study ofInternational Conflict, Binghamton University, 30-31 March.

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1999 “Rational Models of Rebellion,” Conference on Alternative Approaches to Assessingand Anticipating Political Instability, Science Applications International Corporation,23 March.

1998 “Deprivation and Mobilization: Variation in Ethnopolitical Rebellion,” Department ofPolitical Science, Texas A&M University, 7 December.

1998 “Measuring Dissident and State Behavior: The Intranational Political Interactions(IPI) Project,” Department of Political Science, Texas A&M University, 21 November.

1998 “Repression and Dissent: Substitution, Context, and Timing,” Department ofGovernment and Politics, University of Maryland, 27 January.

1998 “Dissent and Repression,” Department of Political Science, Emory University, 16January.

1997 “Assessing Risks of Ethnorebellion in the Year 2000: Three Empirical Approaches,”Synergy in Early Warning Research, University of Toronto, 15 March.

1994 “Action-Reaction or Rational Expectations? Reciprocity and theDomestic-International Conflict Nexus During the Rhodesia Problem,” Running Dogs(Southern California Seminar on Political Economy), California Institute ofTechnology, 2 December.

1994 “Does Ethnicity Matter? Ethnic Alliances and International Interactions,” TheInternational Spread and Management of Ethnic Conflict Workshop #1, Institute onGlobal Conflict and Cooperation, 10 May.

1994 “Economic Inequality & Violent Political Conflict,” Department of Political Science,University of Kentucky, 8 February.

1993 “Action-Reaction or Rational Expectations? Reciprocity and theDomestic-International Conflict Nexus During the Rhodesia Problem,” Department ofPolitical Science, Miami University.

1992 “Reciprocity in Armed Intranational Conflicts,” Institute for International Securityand Conflict Resolution, San Diego State University, 16 November.

Public Education

2013 Panelist, “Privacy vs. Security: Bradley Manning, Edward Snowden, the NSA andthe Right of Privacy,” FSU Law School and the ACLU at FSU, 9 October.

2011 Interviewed on “The 6:00 Eyewitness News,” WCTV, Tallahassee, and guest on“Today with John Perlman,” Kaya FM, Johannesburg, South Africa, 3 May.

2007 Guest on “ABC 27 News,” WTXL, Tallahassee, 27 December.

2007 Moderator for student discussion of the film “Lions for Lambs,” FSUs Student LifeCinema, 25 October.

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2006 Panelist, “Conditions on the Ground in Iraq and Where do we go from here?”Seminar sponsored by Students United for Peace, Florida State University, 16 March.

2005 Interviewed on WFLA radio, Tallahassee, 14 March.

2003 Interviewed for “FSU Headlines,” WFSU radio, Tallahassee, 28 October.

2003 Panelist, “A Panel Discussion of Post-War Iraq,” Seminar sponsored by Theta Nu XiMulticultural Sorority, Lambda Theta Phi Latin Fraternity, Sigma Lambda BetaFraternity, Muslim Student Associaiton, Amnesty International, Arab CulturalAssociation, Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity, and Students United for Peace, Florida StateUniversity, 8 October.

2003 Guest on “Capital Outlook,” WFSU television, Tallahassee, 12 September.

2003 Guest on “The 6:00 Eyewitness News,” WCTV, Tallahassee, 11 September.

2003 Guest on “Front Page on the Air,” WRUF Radio, Gainesville, 23 April.

2003 Panelist, Human Rights Film Festival, Amnesty International (FSU), Florida StateUniversity, 26 March.

2003 Panelist, “The Face Off: Consequences of War,” Seminar sponsored by Theta Nu XiMulticultural Sorority, Lambda Theta Phi Latin Fraternity, and Students United forPeace, Florida State University, 25 March.

2003 Guest on “The Capital Report,” Florida Public Radio, 21 February.

2003 Guest on “The 6:00 Eyewitness News,” WCTV, Tallahassee, 28 January.

2002 “Terrorism after 9/11,” St. Eugene Chapel and Student Center, Florida A&MUniversity, Tallahassee, 10 October.

2002 “Are Truth Commissions Useful and Could Your Community Benefit from One?”City of Tallahassee Race Relations Summit, Tallahassee, 7 October.

2001 “Why 9/11?” Tallahassee-South Georgia Army Retiree Sub-council, Tallahassee, 5November.

2001 Panelist, “America’s New War: Students Cry for Help” Roundtable, Model UnitedNations, Florida A&M University, Tallahassee, 24 October.

2001 “Why 9/11?” Northside Kiwanis, Tallahassee, 17 October.

2001 Guest on WTAL radio, Tallahassee, 11 October.

2001 Panelist, “Trying to Understand the Bombings,” Department of Anthropology,Florida State University, Tallahassee, 21 September.

2001 Panelist, “A Response to Terrorist Attacks” Forum, Model United Nations, FloridaA&M University, Tallahassee, 24 September.

2001 Guest on “The 5:00 Eyewitness News,” WCTV, Tallahassee, 17 September.

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2001 Guest on “Perspectives,” WFSU radio (Florida Public Radio), Tallahassee, 13 and 20September.

2001 Guest on “The Vassalinda Report,” Florida News Channel, 12 and 24 September.

2001 Guest on “The 5:00 News,” WTXL (NewsChannel 27), Tallahassee, 11 September.

Service

Editorial Service

8/13 - 12/14 Associate Editor, Research & Politics.

1/10-12/13 Editorial Board Member, American Journal of Political Science.

1/11-12/12 Editorial Board Member, International Studies Review.

1/06 - 12/09 Associate Editor, American Journal of Political Science.

1/99 - 12/07 Editorial Board Member, International Studies Quarterly.

6/00 - 12/05 Editorial Board Member, Comparative Political Studies.

7/96 - 6/00 Editorial Board Member, Political Research Quarterly.

Committee Work for Professional Societies

3/11-2/13 Chair, Academic Freedom Committee (AFC) of the International StudiesAssociation.

2011 Member, J. David Singer Data Innovation Award Committee, Conflict ProcessesSection of the American Political Science Association.

2/10-2/11 Member, Academic Freedom Committee (AFC) of the International StudiesAssociation.

11/09-12/09 Member, MINERVA Panel, National Science Foundation.

2008 Committee Member, Best Paper in International Relations at the 2008 MidwestPolitical Science Association annual meeting.

2007 Committee Member, Pi Sigma Alpha Award for Best Paper at the 2007 MidwestPolitical Science Association annual meeting.

9/02-5/04 Member, Political Science Panel, National Science Foundation.

10/00- Member, Advisory Board to the Polity IV Project, Center for InternationalDevelopment and Conflict Management, University of Maryland.

9/99- Member, Advisory Board to the Minorities at Risk Project, Center for InternationalDevelopment and Conflict Management, University of Maryland.

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9/00-8/04 Co-editor, Conflict Processes Section Newsletter, Conflict Processes Section ofthe American Political Science Association.

2000 Committee Member, Isard Award for the best dissertation in peace science, PeaceScience Society International.

7/99-6/02 Councilor, Council of Officers, Peace Science Society International.

8/96-7/99 Member of the Executive Comittee, Conflict Processes Section of the AmericanPolitical Science Association.

1996-8/04 Site manager for the Conflict Processes Section of the American Political ScienceAssociation’s World Wide Web site (http://www.apsanet.org/∼conflict/).

1996 Committee Member, ’Best Book in Conflict and Peace Studies Award, 1993-95,’Conflict Processes Section, American Political Science Association.

Book Reviews

2006 “Synthesis v. Purity and Large-N Studies: How Might we Assess the Gap betweenPromise and Performance?” Will H. Moore, Human Rights & Human Welfare: AnInternational Review of Books and Other Publications, vol. 6, pp. 89-97, availableonline at: http://www.du.edu/gsis/hrhw/volumes/2006/.

1999 Marina Arbetman & Jacek Kugler’s Political Capacity and Economic Behavior(Boulder: Westview, 1997); William H. Mott, IVs The Economic Basis of Peace(Westport: Greenwood, 1997); and John M. Rothgeb, Jr.s Foreign Investment andPolitical Conflict in the Developing World (Westport: Praeger) in American PoliticalScience Review, 93(3):742-744.

1997 Erich Weede’s Economic Development, Social Order, and World Politics (Boulder:Lynne Rienner, 1996), in American Political Science Review, 91(3):786-787.

1995 Stephen John Stedman’s Peacemaking in Civil War - International Mediation inZimbabwe, 1974-1980 (Boulder: Lynne Rienner, 1991), in Africa Today42(1-2):138-139.

1995 John Hatchard’s Individual Freedoms and State Security in the African Context(Athens: Ohio University Press, 1993), in African Studies Review, 38(1):155-156.

1993 Norma J. Kriger’s Zimbabwe’s Guerrilla War: Peasant Voices (Cambridge:Cambridge University Press, 1992), in African Studies Review, 36(3):137-138.

External Reviewer for Tenure/Promotion Cases

2015 One Case.

2014 Two cases.

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2013 Two cases.

2012 Two cases.

2011 One case.

2010 Two cases.

2009 Two cases.

2008 Three cases.

2007 One case.

2006 Three cases.

2005 One case.

2004 One case.

2003 One case.

2002 Four cases.

External Reviewer for Academic Programs

2015: Department of Political Science, Kent State University

2014: Department of Political Science, Central European University

Manuscript/Grant Proposal Referee

2014: American Journal of Political Science, American Political Science Review, BritishJournal of Political Science, Conflict Management & Peace Science, InternationalStudies Quarterly, Journal of Conflict Resolution, Journal of Peace Research, Journalof Politics and National Science Foundation.

2013: American Journal of Political Science, American Political Science Review, ConflictManagement & Peace Science, Global Peace, Change & Security, International StudiesQuarterly, Journal of Conflict Resolution, Journal of Peace Research and Journal ofPolitics.

2012: American Journal of Political Science, American Political Science Review, BritishJournal of Political Science, International Organization, International StudiesQuarterly, Israel Science Foundation, Journal of Conflict Resolution, Journal of PeaceResearch, Journal of Politics, National Science Foundation, and World Politics.

2011: American Journal of Political Science, American Political Science Review, ConflictManagement & Peace Science, International Studies Quarterly, Journal of ConflictResolution, Journal of Peace Research, Journal of Politics, and National ScienceFoundation.

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2010: American Journal of Political Science, American Political Science Review, HumanRights Review, International Studies Quarterly, and National Science Foundation.

2009: American Journal of Political Science, American Political Science Review,International Studies Quarterly, Journal of Conflict Resolution, Journal of PeaceResearch, and National Science Foundation.

2008: American Journal of Political Science, American Political Science Review,International Studies Quarterly, Journal of Conflict Resolution, Journal of Politics,National Science Foundation, World Politics.

2007: American Journal of Political Science, American Political Science Review,International Studies Quarterly, Journal of Conflict Resolution, Journal of Politics,National Science Foundation.

2006: American Journal of Political Science, American Political Science Review,International Politics, International Studies Quarterly, Journal of Conflict Resolution,Journal of Politics, National Science Foundation, Political Geography.

2005: American Journal of Political Science, American Political Science Review,Comparative Politics, Conflict Management and Peace Science, InternationalOrganization, International Studies Quarterly, Journal of Conflict Resolution, Journalof Peace Research, Journal of Politics, National Science Foundation, Time-SharingExperiments for the Social Sciences (TESS).

2004: American Journal of Political Science, American Political Science Review,Comparative Political Studies, International Studies Quarterly, Journal of ConflictResolution, National Science Foundation.

2003: American Journal of Political Science, American Political Science Review,Comparative Political Studies, International Interactions, International StudiesQuarterly, Journal of Conflict Resolution, National Science Foundation, PoliticalAnalysis, Political Research Quarterly.

2002: American Journal of Political Science, Comparative Political Studies, ConflictManagement and Peace Science, Economic Development and Cultural Change,International Studies Quarterly, International Organization, Journal of ConflictResolution, Journal of Peace Research, Journal of Politics, National ScienceFoundation.

2001: American Political Science Review, Comparative Political Studies, InternationalStudies Quarterly, Journal of Conflict Resolution, National Science Foundation,Political Research Quarterly.

2000: American Journal of Political Science, American Political Science Review,Bedford/St. Martins, Comparative Political Studies, Comparative Politics, ConflictManagement and Peace Science, International Interactions, International Politics,International Studies Quarterly, Penn State Press, Political Research Quarterly.

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1999: American Journal of Political Science, American Political Science Review,Comparative Political Studies, Comparative Politics, International Interactions,International Studies Quarterly, Journal of Conflict Resolution, Journal of TheoreticalPolitics, Journal of Peace Research, Political Research Quarterly.

1998: American Journal of Political Science, American Political Science Review,Comparative Politics, Conflict Management and Peace Science, Gordon and BreechScience Publishers, International Interactions, International Studies Quarterly,Journal of Conflict Resolution, University of Michigan Press.

1997: American Journal of Political Science, American Political Science Review,International Studies Quarterly, Journal of Conflict Resolution, Journal of PeaceResearch, National Science Foundation, Political Research Quarterly, Studies inComparative International Development, University of Michigan Press.

1996: African Studies Review, American Journal of Political Science, American PoliticalScience Review, Conflict Management and Peace Science, International Interactions,International Studies Quarterly, Journal of Conflict Resolution, National ScienceFoundation, Political Research Quarterly, Studies in Comparative InternationalDevelopment, University of Michigan Press.

1995: African Studies Review, American Political Science Review, Comparative PoliticalStudies, International Interactions, International Studies Quarterly, National ScienceFoundation, Political Research Quarterly.

1994: African Studies Review, American Journal of Political Science, American PoliticalScience Review, Comparative Political Studies, International Interactions, Journal ofPolitics, Political Research Quarterly.

1993: International Interactions

1992: African Studies Review, Comparative Political Studies, International StudiesQuarterly, The Western Political Quarterly.

1991: Harper-Collins, The Western Political Quarterly.

1990: American Political Science Review, International Studies Quarterly.

1989: American Political Science Review.

Paper Discussant/Panel Chair

2013 International Studies Association, American Political Science Association

2012 Midwest Political Science Association

2010 Midwest Political Science Association

2008 International Studies Association.

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2006 International Studies Association, Midwest Political Science Association

2005 Midwest Political Science Association

2004 Midwest Political Science Association

2003 Midwest Political Science Association, International Studies Association, South.

2002 International Studies Association.

2001 International Studies Association, Peace Science Society.

2000 Southern Political Science Association, Peace Science Society.

1999 American Political Science Association, Peace Science Society.

1998 Midwest Political Science Association, Southern Political Science Association.

1992 International Studies Association, “Linkage Politics and International Conflict”Conference (Davis, CA), “Rational Choice in Comparative Politics” Conference(Irvine, CA).

University Service

9/13-5/15 Promotion & Tenure Committee, The Florida State University.

9/13-5/15 Promotion & Tenure Committee, College of Social Science, The Florida StateUniversity.

5/06-4/07 Director of Graduate Studies, Department of Political Science, The FloridaState University.

5/05-4/08 Graduate Placement Director, Department of Political Science, The FloridaState University.

9/03-5/05 Policy & Academic Affairs Committee, College of Social Science, The FloridaState University.

9/02-4/06 Faculty Advisor, Pagan Student Association, The Florida State University.

9/01-5/03 Promotion & Tenure Committee, College of Social Science, The Florida StateUniversity.

9/01-5/03 Promotion & Tenure Committee, Department of Political Science, The FloridaState University.

9/00-5/06 Graduate Policy Committee, Department of Political Science, The Florida StateUniversity.

1/98-5/01 Senator, Faculty Senate, The Florida State University.

1/98-5/01 Undergraduate Policy Committee, Faculty Senate, The Florida State University.

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9/97-5/99 Executive Committee, Department of Political Science, The Florida StateUniversity.

9/97-5/98 Graduate Policy Committee, Department of Political Science, The Florida StateUniversity.

9/93-5/97 Director, Political Science Honors Program, University of California at Riverside.

7/95-6/96 Graduate Committee, Department of Political Science, University of Californiaat Riverside.

9/91-6/95 Undergraduate Curriculum Committee, Department of Political Science,University of California at Riverside.

10/91-5/93 Steering Committee, Global Conflict and Cooperation Program, University ofCalifornia at Riverside.

Student Advising

Graduate Students:

Chair:

Casey Delehanty, ABD, Political Science, Florida State UniversityDissertation: Internally Displaced: Understanding Subnational Variation

Scott Meachum, ABD, Political Science, Florida State UniversityDissertation: Who Recognizes? The Politics of Legitimizing Governments afterExtra-Legal Change

Ryan M. Welch, Ph.D. (8/15), Political Science, Florida State UniversityDissertation: National Human Rights Institutions: Adoption, Design, andEffectiveness.

Jillienne Haglund, Ph.D. (8/14), Political Science, Florida State UniversityDissertation: Domestic Implementation of Supranational Court Decisions: The Roleof Domestic Politics in Respect for Human Rights.Position: Post-doc Washington University.

Andreas Beger, Ph.D. (8/12), Political Science, Florida State UniversityDissertation: Predicting the Intensity and Location of Violence in WarPosition: Research Scholar, Duke University, Durham, NC.

Sunhee Park, Ph.D. (8/12), Political Science, Florida State UniversityDissertation: Third Party Peace Enforcement and Civil War Termination Bargaining.

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Daniel W. Hill, Jr., Ph.D. (5/12), Political Science, Florida State UniversityDissertation: International Human Rights Law, Political Institutions, and CollectiveBehavior.Position: Assistant Professor, University of Georgia, Athens, GA.

Daniel Milton, Ph.D. (5/12), Political Science, Florida State UniversityDissertation: Foreign Policy and Transnational Terrorism.Position: Assistant Professor, United States Military Academy, West Point, NY.

Patrick Armshaw, Ph.D. (5/11), Political Science, Florida State UniversityDissertation: Tortured Logic: Torture for Information as a Rational Process.

Jeffrey R. Weber, Ph.D. (8/10), Political Science, Florida State UniversityDissertation: From Foreign Policy to Strategic Interaction.Position: Assistant Professor, Ipek University, Ankara, Turkey.

Courtenay R. Conrad, Ph.D. (8/10), Political Science, Florida State UniversityDissertation: Constrained at Home: The Effect of Domestic and InternationalInstitutions on Domestic Respect for Human Rights.Position: Associate Professor, University of California, Merced, CA.

Robert A. Parrillo, Ph.D. (8/09), Political Science, Florida State UniversityDissertation: Extradition Treaties: A Test of International Cooperation in theEnforcement of Domestic Criminal Law.Position: Faculty & Program Director, Full Sail University, Orlando, FL.

Jacqueline H.R. DeMeritt, Ph.D. (5/09), Political Science, Florida State UniversityDissertation: Delegating Death: The Strategic Logic of Government Killing.Position: Associate Professor, University of North Texas, TX.

Joseph K. Young, Ph.D. (8/08), Political Science, Florida State UniversityDissertation: The Process of Civil War: State Strength, Dissident Behavior and theProduction of Violence.Position: Associate Professor, American University, Washington, DC.

Kursad Turan, Ph.D. (4/05), Political Science, Florida State University.Dissertation: Political Change in Ethnically Diverse Societies: Democratization andEthnic Violence.Position: Associate Professor, Bas.kent University, Turkey.

Andrew G. Long, Ph.D. (4/04), Political Science, Florida State University.Dissertation: Rational Expectations, Conflict, and International Trade.Position: Associate Professor, Kansas State University, Manhattan, KS.

Stephen M. Shellman, Ph.D. (12/03), Political Science, Florida State University.Dissertation: Taking Turns: A Theory and A Model of Government-DissidentInteractions.Position: Research Scientist, William & Mary, Williamsburg, VA.

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Elizabeth O. Naser, M.A. (4/02), International Affairs, Florida State University.Thesis: Did Israel’s Interventions in Lebanon Raise the Level of Violence?

Marjorie Bernard, M.A. (5/01), International Affairs, Florida State University.Thesis: The Causes of Haitian Migration to the Dominican Republic and United States.

John A. Tures, Ph.D. (4/00), Political Science, Florida State University.Dissertation: An Analysis of Regime Claims in the Americas, 1816-1992.Position: Associate Professor, LaGrange College, LaGrange, GA.

Ronny Lindstrom, Ph.D. (12/96), Political Science, University of California at Riverside.Dissertation: Private Goods and Collective Action: Overcoming the Large N Problemin Ethnic Conflict.Position: Program Officer, United Nations Fund for Population Activities.

Committee Member:

Christine Mele, Ph.D. (8/13), Political Science, Florida State University.Dissertation: Terrorism, Provocation, and Mobilization

K. Russell Shekha, Ph.D. (8/12), Sociology, Florida State University.Dissertation: Universal Human Rights as New Political Power Resources: ExplainingSocial Spending Variation and National Income Inequality in 18 Latin AmericanNations, 1980-2008.

John Sulick, Ph.D. (12/11), Geography, Florida State University.Dissertation: Subnational Analysis of Darfur: Examining the Role of Landscape onConflict Incidence.

Justin Conrad, Ph.D. (8/11), Political Science, Florida State University.Dissertation: Essays on Power, Resolve and International Conflict.

Clark, John. M.S. (12/10), Political Science, Florida State University.Thesis: Audience Costs, Initiation and the Response.

Elizabeth Nyman, Ph.D. (8/10), Political Science, Florida State University.Dissertation: The Development and Settlement of International Maritime Claims.

Hong Cheol-Kim, Ph.D. (5/10), Political Science, Florida State University.Dissertation: The Paradox of Power between the Strong and the Weak.

Ragnhild Nordas, Ph.D. (4/10), Political Science, Norwegian University of Science &Technology.Dissertation: Beliefs & Bloodshed: Understanding Religion and Intrastate Conflict.

Clayton L. Thyne, Ph.D. (5/07), Political Science, University of Iowa.Dissertation: Cheap Signals, Costly Consequences: How International Relations AffectCivil Conflict.

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Scott Edwards, Ph.D. (5/07), Political Science, University of Illinois.Dissertation: A Composite Theory and Practical Model of Forced Displacement.

Allison, Michael E., Ph.D. (5/06), Political Science, Florida State University.Dissertation: Leaving the Past Behind? A Study of the FMLN and URNG Transitionsto Political Parties.

Levings, Robert Sean. M.A. (5/06), International Affairs, Florida State University.Thesis: March 11, 2004 Attack on the Madrid Commuter Rail System.

Sabrina, Reisinger, M.A. (12/05), International Affairs, Florida State University.Thesis: Truth, Race and Reconciliation: Ayacucho and the Peruvian Truth andReconciliation Commission.

Chris Lee, Ph.D. (8/01), Political Science, University of California at Riverside.Dissertation: Protest and Repression: A Synthetic Model.

David H. Clark, Ph.D. (8/99), Political Science, Florida State University.Dissertation: Institutions and Foreign Policy: The Impact of Selected and SelectoralInstitutions on Economic and Military Conflict Behavior.

Joseph D. Eyerman, Ph.D. (12/98), Political Science, Florida State University.Dissertation: The Synthesis of Violence: The Role of Political Systems in theProduction of International and Sub-National Political Violence.

Eleni A. Michael, M.A. (5/98), International Affairs, Florida State University.Thesis: Ethnic Diversity and the Need for a Common Political Culture.

Seema Ajila, M.A. (12/97), International Affairs, Florida State University.Thesis: Woman Leaders in South Asia.

Christopher Allen McHorney, Ph.D. (6/97), Political Science, University of California atRiverside.Dissertation: Public Opinion and Regional Economic Integration: Explaining PopularSupport for the European Union.

Michelle Weber, Ph.D. (12/96), Political Science, University of California at Riverside.Dissertation: Native Wisdom: Indigenous Identity and Rural Community Action.

Undergraduate Students:

Chair:

Margaret Spicer, B.S. (5/11), with honors, Political Science, Florida State University.Thesis: Violent Conflict and States’ Use of Torture: A Statistical Analysis.

Marlee McCleary, B.S. (5/10), with honors, Political Science, Florida State University.Thesis: Microfinance and Womens Empowerment: Interviews from Kosovo.

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Amanda Stone, B.S. (5/08), with honors, Political Science, Florida State University.Thesis: Feminism in Uganda: A Comparison of Two Districts.

Angela Van Hover, B.S. (5/99), with honors, Political Science, Florida State University.Thesis: Chad: A Solution to Underdevelopment? An Analysis of the Exxon/WorldBank Pipeline Project and the VITA Microenterprise Program.

Michael Garcia, B.A. (5/95), with Upper Division Honors, Political Science, University ofCalifornia, Riverside.Thesis: Party Accommodation and Political Violence: The Historical Case Studies ofColombia and Haiti.

Jorge Avila, Minority Summer Research Intern Program, University of California atRiverside, 1996.

Uzoma Obiora Miller, Minority Summer Research Intern Program, University of Californiaat Riverside, 1992.

Committee Member:

Amanda Fidalgo, B.S. expected, with honors, Political Science, Florida State University.Thesis: Federalism and Human Rights: A Comparative Analysis.

Will Romine, B.A. (4/06), with Honors, Humanities, Florida State University.Thesis: Sergei M. Eisenstein: The Artist Made Greater Through Propaganda.

Hilary K. Jonczak, B.A. (4/05), with Honors, History, Florida State University.Thesis: The Relationship That Led to Euthenasia Action T4 and MedicalExperimentation on Human Subjects.

Lauren Yates, B.A. (4/05), with Honors, Anthropology, Florida State University.Thesis: Perceptions of Interracial Adoption among Middle Class Black Parents.

Jeslin Shahrezaei, B.A. (4/04), with Honors, International Affairs, Florida State University.Thesis: In the Dawn of Freedom, There is No Freedom: Placing Women in the 1979Iranian Revolution.

Dana Stefanelli, B.A. (5/99), with honors, History, Florida State University.Thesis: Frontier Intrigue and Court Adventure: Ideology in the Settlement ofPinckney’s Treaty.

Michael J. Plata, BA (12/98), with honors, Political Science, Florida State University.Thesis: The Quality of Democracy in Puerto Rico.

Academic Associations

American Political Science Association

International Political Economy Society

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International Studies Association

Midwest Political Science Association

Peace Science Society International

Political Methodology Society

Non-Academic Positions

9/85-7/86 Account Executive, Beco Inc., Park Ridge, Illinois.

7/84-5/85 Sales Specialist, Kroy Inc., Rolling Meadows, Illinois and Foster City, California.

Personal

Born: 9 March 1962, Baltimore, MD.

Citizenship: United States of America

Children: Kristopher Evan Moore, born 30 May 1988, died 9 November 1993;Chelsea Quint Moore, born 4 March 1991;Kevin Marie Moore, born 18 December 1992.

September, 2016

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