Site Administration The College of William and Mary

Participants

Greg Cooper is a junior Government major and Marketing minor at the College of William and Mary and also Editor-in-Chief of the Monitor: Journal of International Studies. His substantive interests include models of anti-corruption control in developing countries, Southeast Asian politics, and the impact of overlapping responsibilities in international organizations.

Jennifer M. Keister is a graduate student at UC San Diego studying international relations and comparative politics.  Her substantive interests include intra-state conflict, the targetting practices of terrorist organizations and the political economy of development.

James D. Long is a graduate student at UC San Diego studying international relations, comparative politics, and African politics.  He is interested in intra-state and inter-state conflict, the politics of rebel movements, and explaining paradigmatic shifts in the social sciences.

Daniel Maliniak is a senior Government and Economics major at William and Mary.  Dan managed the TRIP survey of IR faculty in 2004, compiled a large dataset on international curricula at four year colleges in the United States, and has co-authored several articles and papers using TRIP data.  In addition to his work on the TRIP project, Dan's research interests include international economics and political economy.

Amy Oakes is Assistant Professor of Government at William and Mary.  Her research interests include international security, comparative foreign policy, diversionary war, and internatioanl relations theory.

Sue Peterson is Professor of Government at William and Mary and the Executive Editor of Security Studies.  She has published extensively on the relationship between domestic politics and national/international security.  Her current research focuses on international cooperation in global health.

Mike Tierney is Assistant Professor of Government at William and Mary.  His current research interests include IR theory, International Organization, the World Bank, and Development.

 

©2004 Michael J. Tierney