Daniel W. Drezner - Brookings Institution · Daniel W. Drezner Education Ph.D.: 1996 Stanford...

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Daniel W. Drezner Education Ph.D.: 1996 Stanford University, Department of Political Science M.A.: 1995 Stanford University, Department of Economics M.A.: 1995 Stanford University, Department of Political Science B.A.: 1990 Williams College, Department of Political Economy Professional experience 9/08-present Professor of International Politics, the Fletcher School, Tufts University 7/06 8/08 Associate Professor of International Politics, the Fletcher School, Tufts University 7/99 6/06 Assistant Professor of Political Science, University of Chicago 12/00 8/01 International Economist, Office of International Banking and Securities Markets, U.S. Department of the Treasury 8/96 7/99 Assistant Professor of Political Science, University of Colorado at Boulder 8/96 6/97 John M. Olin National Security Fellow, Center for International Affairs, Harvard University 6/94 - 12/94 Research consultant, RAND Corporation, Project AIR FORCE, Washington, DC. 8/93 - 6/94 Civic Education Project Visiting Lecturer in Economics, Donetsk Technical University, Donetsk, Ukraine. Books The Ideas Industry: How Pessimists, Partisans, and Plutocrats are Transforming the Marketplace of Ideas (New York: Oxford University Press, 2017).

Transcript of Daniel W. Drezner - Brookings Institution · Daniel W. Drezner Education Ph.D.: 1996 Stanford...

Page 1: Daniel W. Drezner - Brookings Institution · Daniel W. Drezner Education Ph.D.: 1996 Stanford University, Department of Political Science M.A.: 1995 Stanford University, Department

Daniel W. Drezner

Education

Ph.D.: 1996 Stanford University, Department of Political Science

M.A.: 1995 Stanford University, Department of Economics

M.A.: 1995 Stanford University, Department of Political Science

B.A.: 1990 Williams College, Department of Political Economy

Professional experience

9/08-present Professor of International Politics, the Fletcher School, Tufts

University

7/06 – 8/08 Associate Professor of International Politics, the Fletcher School,

Tufts University

7/99 – 6/06 Assistant Professor of Political Science, University of Chicago

12/00 – 8/01 International Economist, Office of International Banking and

Securities Markets, U.S. Department of the Treasury

8/96 – 7/99 Assistant Professor of Political Science, University of Colorado at

Boulder

8/96 – 6/97 John M. Olin National Security Fellow, Center for International

Affairs, Harvard University

6/94 - 12/94 Research consultant, RAND Corporation, Project AIR FORCE,

Washington, DC.

8/93 - 6/94 Civic Education Project Visiting Lecturer in Economics, Donetsk

Technical University, Donetsk, Ukraine.

Books

The Ideas Industry: How Pessimists, Partisans, and Plutocrats are Transforming the

Marketplace of Ideas (New York: Oxford University Press, 2017).

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The System Worked: How the World Stopped another Great Depression (New York:

Oxford University Press, 2014).

Theories of International Politics and Zombies (Princeton: Princeton University Press,

2011). Two editions. Translated into Danish, Japanese, and Korean.

Avoiding Trivia: The Role of Strategic Planning in American Foreign Policy

(Washington: Brookings Institution Press, 2009), editor.

All Politics is Global: Explaining International Regulatory Regimes. (Princeton:

Princeton University Press, 2007).

U.S. Trade Strategy: Free Versus Fair (New York: Council on Foreign Relations

Press, 2006).

Locating the Proper Authorities: The Interaction of Domestic and International

Institutions (Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 2003), editor.

The Sanctions Paradox: Economic Statecraft and International Relations (Cambridge:

Cambridge University Press, 1999).

Journal articles

“American Think Tanks in the Twenty-First Century.” International Journal 70

(December 2015): 637-644.

“Targeted Sanctions in a World of Global Finance.” International Interactions 41

(Summer 2015): 755-764.

“Metaphor of the Living Dead: Or, the Effect of the Zombie Apocalypse on Public

Policy Discourse.” Social Research 81 (Winter 2014): 825-849.

“The System Worked: Global Economic Governance during the Great Recession.”

World Politics 66 (January 2014): 123-164.

“Military Primacy Doesn’t Pay (Nearly As Much As You Think).” International

Security 38 (Summer 2013): 52-79.

“The Purest Political Economist of Them All: Albert Hirschman’s Legacy.” The

Political Economist 10 (Summer 2013): 6-8.

“International Political Economy, Global Financial Orders and the 2008 Financial

Crisis.” Perspectives on Politics 11 (March 2013): 155-166 (co-authored with

Kathleen McNamara).

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“Rebooting Republican Foreign Policy.” Foreign Affairs 92 (January/February 2013):

143-152.

“The Power of Economics and Public Opinion.” Policy Review 172 (April/May 2012):

17-26.

“Acerca Del Poder Económico en el Siglo XXI.” Revista Mexicana De Politica

Exterior 94 (February 2012): 69-93.

“Does Obama Have a Grand Strategy?” Foreign Affairs 90 (July/August 2011): 57-68.

“Sanctions Sometimes Smart: Targeted Sanctions in Theory and Practice.”

International Studies Review 13 (February 2011): 96-108.

“Is Historical Institutionalism Bunk?” Review of International Political Economy 17

(October 2010): 791-804.

“First Bank of the Living Dead.” The National Interest 109 (September/October 2010):

62-71.

“Will Currency Follow the Flag?” International Relations of the Asia-Pacific 10

(September 2010): 389-414.

“International Relations 2.0: The Implications of New Media for an Old Profession.”

International Studies Perspectives 11 (August 2010): 255-272 (co-authored with R.

Charli Carpenter).

“Night of the Living Wonks.” Foreign Policy 180 (July/August 2010): 34-38.

“Weighing the Scales: The Internet’s Effect on State-Society Relations.” Brown

Journal of World Affairs 16 (Spring/Summer 2010): 31-44.

“Bad Debts: Assessing China's Financial Influence in Great Power Politics.”

International Security 34 (Fall 2009): 7-45.

“The Long Legs of the Crash.” Foreign Policy 171 (March/April 2009): 99-100.

“The Power and Peril of International Regime Complexity.” Perspectives on Politics 7

(March 2009): 65-70.

“The Challenging Future of Strategic Planning.” Fletcher Forum on World Affairs 33

(Winter 2009): 13-26.

“Public Intellectuals 2.1.” Society 46 (January/February 2009): 49-54.

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“Sovereign Wealth Funds and the (In)Security of Global Finance,” Journal of

International Affairs 62 (Fall/Winter 2008): 115-130.

“Oil Dependence as Virtue,” The National Interest 98 (November/December 2008): 8-

16.

“The Realist Tradition in American Public Opinion.” Perspectives on Politics 6

(March 2008): 51-70.

“The Future of U.S. Foreign Policy,” Internationale Politik und Gesellschaft 15

(January 2008): 11-35.

“Dismal Political Science,” Foreign Policy 164 (January/February 2008): 88-90.

“Blogs, Politics, and Power.” Public Choice 134 (January 2008): 1-13. (co-authored

with Henry Farrell).

“The Power and Politics of Blogs.” Public Choice 134 (January 2008): 15-30 (co-

authored with Henry Farrell).

“Foreign Policy Goes Glam,” The National Interest 92 (November/December 2007):

22-29.

“The New New World Order.” Foreign Affairs 86 (March/April 2007): 34-46.

“Mind the Gap,” The National Interest 87 (January/February 2007): 47-53.

“Globalization, Coercion, and Competition: the Different Pathways to Policy

Convergence.” Journal of European Public Policy 12 (October 2005): 841-859.

“Values, Interests, and American Grand Strategy,” Diplomatic History 29 (June 2005):

429-432.

“Trade Talk,” The American Interest 1 (Winter 2005): 68-76.

“Web of Influence,” Foreign Policy 145 (November/December 2004): 32-40 (co-

authored with Henry Farrell).

“The Global Governance of the Internet: Bringing the State Back In.” Political Science

Quarterly 119 (Fall 2004): 477-498.

“The Outsourcing Bogeyman,” Foreign Affairs 83 (May/June 2004): 22-34.

“The Hidden Hand of Economic Coercion.” International Organization 57 (Summer

2003): 643-659.

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“On the Balance Between International Law and Democratic Sovereignty.” Chicago

Journal of International Law 2 (Fall 2001): 321-336.

“Sovereignty for Sale.” Foreign Policy 125 (September/October 2001): 76-77.

Reprinted (in Spanish) in Gestión, February 2002.

“Outside the Box: Explaining Sanctions in Pursuit of Foreign Economic Goals.”

International Interactions 26 (Summer 2001): 379-410.

“Globalization and Policy Convergence.” International Studies Review 3 (Spring

2001): 53-78.

“State Structure, Technological Leadership, and the Maintenance of Hegemony.”

Review of International Studies 27 (January 2001): 3-27.

“Bottom Feeders.” Foreign Policy 121 (November/December 2000): 64-70.

Reprinted in Developing World, 12th edition (New York: McGraw-Hill, 2002)

“Ideas, Bureaucratic Politics, and the Crafting of Foreign Policy.” American Journal of

Political Science 44 (October 2000): 733-749.

“Bargaining, Enforcement, and Multilateral Economic Sanctions: When is Cooperation

Counterproductive?” International Organization 54 (Winter 2000): 73-102.

“The Trouble with Carrots: Transaction Costs, Conflict Expectations, and Economic

Inducements.” Security Studies 9 (Autumn 1999/Winter 2000): 188-218.

“Conflict Expectations and the Paradox of Economic Coercion.” International Studies

Quarterly 42 (December 1998): 709-731.

“Serious About Sanctions.” The National Interest 53 (Fall 1998): 66-74. Reprinted in

Strategy and Force Planning, 3rd edition. (Newport, RI: Naval War College Press,

2000).

“So You Want to Get a Tenure-Track Job…” PS: Political Science and Politics 31

(September 1998): 609-614.

“Globalizers of the World, Unite!” The Washington Quarterly 21 (Winter 1998): 209-

225. Reprinted in Current 400 (February 1998): 26-33.

“Allies, Adversaries, and Economic Coercion: Russian Foreign Economic Policy since

1991.” Security Studies 6 (Spring 1997): 65-111.

Think tank reports

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Five Known Unknowns About the Next Generation Global Economy. Washington:

Brookings Institution, May 2016.

The New Tools of Economic Warfare: Effects and Effectiveness of Contemporary U.S.

Financial Sanctions. Washington: Center for a New American Security, April 2016

(with Elizabeth Rosenberg, Zachary Goldman, and Julie Solomon-Strauss).

Book chapters

“Does American Military Power Attract Foreign Investment?” With Nancy Hite-Rubin.

To be included in Sustainable Security, Jeremi Suri, ed. (New York: Oxford University

Press, 2016).

“Is there an Exceptional American Approach to Global Economic Governance?” In

America, China, and the Struggle for World Order, John Ikenberry and Wang Jisi, eds.

(London: Palgrave MacMillan, 2015).

“Bucks for the Bang? Assessing the Economic Returns to Military Primacy.” In A

Dangerous World? Threat Perception and U.S. National Security, Christopher Preble

and John Mueller, eds. (Washington: Cato Institute, 2014).

“The Contradictions of Post-Crisis Global Economic Governance.” In Handbook of

Global Economic Governance: Players, Power and Paradigms, Manuela Moschella

and Catherine Weaver, eds. (London: Routledge, 2013).

“The Tragedy of the Global Institutional Commons.” In Back to Basics: Power in a

Contemporary World, Martha Finnemore and Judith Goldstein, eds. (New York:

Oxford University Press, 2013).

“An Analytically Eclectic Approach to Sanctions and Nonproliferation.” In Sanctions,

Statecraft, and Nuclear Proliferation, Etel Solingen, ed. (Cambridge: Cambridge

University Press, 2012).

“BRIC by BRIC: The Emergent Regime for Sovereign Wealth Funds.” In Can the

World Be Governed? Rising States, Rising Institutions, Alan Alexandroff, ed.

(Washington: Brookings Institution Press, 2010).

“Weighing the Scales: the Internet’s Effect on State-Society Relations.” In The Global

Flow of Information, Jack Balkin, Eddan Katz, and Ramesh Subramanian, eds. (New

York: New York University Press, 2010).

“American Foreign Policy toward Russia: Is a U-turn, or Any Turn, Possible?” In The

Policy World Meets Academia: Designing U.S. Policy toward Russia, Timothy Colton,

Timothy Frye, and Robert Legvold, eds. (Cambridge: American Academy of Arts and

Sciences, 2010).

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“Mercantilist and Realist Perspectives on the Global Political Economy.” In The

International Studies Encyclopedia, Robert A. Denemark, ed. (New York: Blackwell,

2010).

“Regulating Global Complexity.” In International Relations, 9th edition, Joshua

Goldstein and Jon Pevehouse, eds. (New York: Pearson Longman, 2010).

“The Great Recession: What Does It Mean?” In Great Decisions 2010 (New York:

Foreign Policy Association, 2010).

“How Universal are Club Standards? Emerging Markets and Volunteerism.” With

Mimi Lu. In Voluntary Programs: A Club Theory Perspective, Matthew Potoski and

Aseem Prakash, eds. (Cambridge: MIT Press, 2009).

“The Trouble with Trade Analogies.” In Climate Change, Trade and Competitiveness:

Is a Collision Inevitable?, Lael Brainard and Isaac Sorkin, eds. (Washington:

Brookings Institution Press, 2009).

“Two Challenges to Institutionalism,” in Can the World Be Governed? Possibilities for

Effective Multilateralism, Alan Alexandroff, ed. (Waterloo, ON: Wilfrid Laurier

University Press/CIGI, 2008).

“International Economic Order.” Entry for International Encyclopedia of the Social

Sciences, 2nd edition (New York: MacMillan, 2008).

“So You Want to Blog.” In Publishing Political Science: APSA Guide to Writing and

Publishing, Steven Yoder, ed. (Washington: American Political Science Association,

2008).

“Lost in Translation: The Transatlantic Divide Over Diplomacy,” in Growing Apart:

America and Europe in the 21st Century, Jeffrey Kopstein and Sven Steinmo, eds.

(Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2007).

“How to Market Trade in America,” in Free and Fair: Making the Progressive Case

for Removing Trade Barriers, Phoebe Griffith and Jack Thurston, eds. (London: The

Foreign Policy Centre, 2004).

“The Complex Causation of Sanctions Outcomes.” In Sanctions as Economic

Statecraft: Theory and Practice, Steve Chan and A. Cooper Drury, eds. (London:

MacMillan Press, 2000).

Projects under review or in progress

“Counter-Hegemonic Strategies in the Global Economy.” Working paper, Fletcher

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School of Law and Diplomacy.

“The Rise of the Angry Populist Head of State.” Fletcher Forum of World Affairs,

forthcoming.

“Does Military Power Attract Foreign Investment? An Empirical Investigation.” Co-

authored with Nancy Hite-Rubin. Under review at International Studies Quarterly.

“Perception, Misperception and Sensitivity: Chinese Economic Power and Preferences

during the Great Recession.” To be included in China, the United States, and the East

Asian Order: Managing Instability, Robert Ross, Zhu Feng and Øystein Tunsjø, eds.

“Economic Sanctions in Theory and Practice: How Smart Are They?” To be included

in The Power to Hurt: Coercion in Theory and Practice, Kelly Greenhill and Peter

Krause, eds. New York: Oxford University Press, forthcoming.

“Assessing Scholarly Impact on Thinking About State Legitimacy.” Carnegie

Corporation-sponsored research.

Book reviews

Scandalous Economics, by Aida Hozic and Jacqui True, eds., Perspectives on Politics,

forthcoming.

Narrative and the Making of US National Security, by Ron Krebs, in International

Politics Reviews 4 (January 2017): 100-103.

Connectography, by Parag Khanna, in New York Times Book Review, May 1, 2016.

Economic Interdependence and War, by Dale Copeland, in Journal of Cold War

Studies 17 (Summer 2015): 228-231.

The Dollar and National Security, by Paul Viotti, in Political Science Quarterly 130

(Summer 2015): 353-54.

War and Gold, by Kwasi Kwarteng, in New York Times Book Review, September 16,

2014.

The Invention of Market Freedom, by Eric MacGilvray, in Political Theory 41

(February 2013): 160-62.

China, the United States, and Global Order, by Rosemary Foot and Andrew Walter, in

H-Diplo Roundtable 3 (July 25, 2012): 10-12.

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No One’s World, by Charles Kupchan, in The National Interest 119 (May/June 2012):

80-87.

The Unfinished Global Revolution, by Mark Malloch-Brown, in New Global Studies 5

(December 2011): issue 3, article 7.

The Next Decade: What the World Will Look Like, by George Friedman, in Texas

Monthly, February 2011, p. 48-50.

Sonic Boom: Globalization at Mach Speed, by Gregg Easterbrook, in New York Times

Book Review, January 17, 2010, p. 16.

Why Iceland?, by Ásgeir Jónsson, in Wall Street Journal, August 19, 2009.

One Economics, Many Recipes, by Dani Rodrik, in Cambridge Journal of International

Affairs 22 (March 2009): 190-192.

Power Rules, by Leslie H. Gelb, in The National Interest 100 (March/April 2009): 65-

70.

Twice as Good, by Marcus Mabry; Condoleezza Rice, by Elizabeth Bumiller; and The

Confidante, by Glenn Kessler, in Foreign Affairs 87 (November/December 2008):

166-167.

Common Wealth, by Jeffrey Sachs, in Washington Post, July 17, 2008, p. C12.

The J-Curve, by Ian Bremmer, in Wall Street Journal, September 1, 2006, p. W6.

Bubble Man, by Peter Hartcher, in Washington Post Book World, August 13, 2006, p.

BW06.

Case Studies and Theory Development in the Social Sciences, by Alexander George

and Andrew Bennett, in QualMeth 4 (Spring 2006): 34-37.

The White Man’s Burden, by William Easterly, in Wall Street Journal, March 16, 2006,

p. D8.

Off Center, by Jacob Hacker and Paul Pierson, in The Forum 3 (Winter 2005), article 9.

The UN Gang, by Pedro Sanjuan, in Wall Street Journal, September 13, 2005, p. D8.

Saving Capitalism from the Capitalists, by Raghuram Rajan and Luigi Zingales, in

Journal of Politics 67 (August 2005): 937-939.

Why Globalization Works, by Martin Wolf, in International Journal 60 (Spring 2005):

586-588.

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The End of Poverty: Economic Possibilities For Our Time, by Jeffrey Sachs, in New

York Times Book Review, April 24, 2005, p. 18.

The World’s Banker, by Sebastian Mallaby, in New York Times Book Review,

December 5, 2004, p. 77.

The Bubble of American Diplomacy, by George Soros, in International Journal 59

(Summer 2004): 716-719.

Colossus: The Price of America’s Empire, by Niall Ferguson, in Wall Street Journal,

June 17, 2004, p. D7.

In Defense of Globalization, by Jagdish Bhagwati, in New York Times Book Review,

April 18, 2004, p. 18.

Smart Sanctions: Targeting Economic Statecraft, edited by David Cortright and

George A. Lopez, in International Studies Review 5 (Spring 2003): 107-111.

Globalization: A Critical Introduction, by Jan Aart Scholte, in Political Science

Quarterly 116 (Fall 2001): 480-482.

Norms in International Relations, by Audie Klotz, in The Annals of the American

Academy of Political and Social Science 573 (January 2001): 178-179.

States, Firms, and Power, by George Shambaugh, in American Political Science

Review 94 (June 2000): 520.

The Price of Peace: Incentives and International Conflict Prevention, David Cortright,

ed., in American Political Science Review 93 (March 1999): 236-237.

Disarming Strangers: Nuclear Diplomacy with North Korea, by Leon Sigal, in

American Political Science Review 92 (September 1998): 757-758.

Interests, Institutions and Information: Domestic Politics and International Relations,

by Helen Milner, in American Political Science Review 92 (June 1998): 506-507.

Occasional publications

Blogs: (http://www.washingtonpost.com/pb/daniel-drezner), May 2014—present;

(http://drezner.foreignpolicy.com), January 2009—March 2014;

(http://www.danieldrezner.com/blog), September 2002—January 2009.

“Trump likes to be unpredictable. That won’t work so well in diplomacy,” Washington

Post, November 27, 2016.

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“Trump’s winning because no one thought he could,” Washington Post, February 28,

2016.

“How Trolling Could Become the New International Language of Diplomacy.”

Washington Post, May 17, 2015.

“A Post-Hegemonic Latin American Paradise?” Americas Quarterly (Winter 2015):

27-29.

“Congratulations, 2014! You Could’ve Been a Lot Worse.” Washington Post,

December 26, 2014.

“The System is Working,” Project Syndicate, September 17, 2014.

“The Uses of Being Wrong,” Chronicle of Higher Education, July 7, 2014.

“Five Myth about Sanctions,” Washington Post, May 4, 2014.

“Putin's Excuse for a Referendum is Wrong.” The Guardian, March 17, 2014.

“What Nick Kristof Doesn’t Get About the Ivory Tower.” Politico, February 21, 2014.

“America’s Fast Food for Thought,” The World Today, June/July 2013, pp. 28-30.

“While Britain Stagnates, America is Roaring Back.” The Spectator, June 29, 2013.

“The Lessons of Zombie-Mania,” Wall Street Journal, April 6, 2013.

“Why Presidents Love Foreign Affairs,” New York Times, September 21, 2012.

“Republicans vs. the World,” The Spectator, November 6, 2011.

“The Loudest ‘F’ One Can Earn,” Chronicle of Higher Education, July 3, 2011.

“Why Wikileaks is Bad for Scholars,” Chronicle of Higher Education, December 5,

2010.

“A World of Ignorance,” The Spectator, October 23, 2010.

“Off Target,” The New Republic, May 27, 2010, pp. 6-8.

“The Paranoid Style in World Politics,” The Spectator, May 5, 2010.

“Uncle Sam vs. the Dragon,” The Spectator, February 17, 2010.

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“China Bucks the Dollar,” Newsweek, June 8, 2009.

“Public Intellectuals 2.0.” Chronicle of Higher Education, November 14, 2008.

“The Sovereigns are Coming!” The American, May/June 2008.

“Methodological Confusion,” Chronicle of Higher Education, February 22, 2008.

“Should Celebrities Set the Global Agenda?” Los Angeles Times, December 30, 2007.

“What Trade Means to the American People,” The Ripon Forum, September 2007.

“The Persistent Power of the State in the Global Economy,” Cato Unbound, June 2006.

“The Power of the State in a Global Economy,” Chronicle of Higher Education, May 29, 2007.

“Davos’ Downhill Slide,” Los Angeles Times, January 21, 2007.

“The Grandest Strategy of them All,” Washington Post, December 17, 2006.

“U.S. Trade Dilemma: Free or Fair?” Washingtonpost.com, September 15, 2006.

“The Trouble With Blogs.” Chronicle of Higher Education, July 28, 2006.

“The Soccer Wars,” Washington Post, June 4, 2006.

“He’s Started a GOP Civil War Over Foreign Policy,” Los Angeles Times, March 12, 2006.

“So, You Want to Buy a Strategic American Company….” Slate, February 28, 2006.

“Classic Could Be Home Run,” Newsday, July 17, 2005.

“Confessions of a Scholar-Blogger,” University of Chicago Magazine, March 2005.

“I Hope… Trade Will Be Freer.” Reason, February 2005.

“Where Did All the Jobs Go? Nowhere.” New York Times, September 29, 2004.

“Bush the Bumbler.” Slate, December 17, 2003.

“Fables of the Reconstruction.” Slate, November 3, 2003.

“Moderate Medium, Extreme Message.” The Indian Express, October 23, 2003.

“Democracy by America.” Weekendavisen Berlingske, March 21, 2003.

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Occasional contributor, National Public Radio’s Marketplace, October 2007-July 2010.

Occasional contributor, Newsweek International, October 2007-October 2009.

Occasional contributor, The National Interest Online, October 2008-October 2009.

Monthly contributor, The New Republic Online, February 2003—October 2004.

Fellowships

Rockefeller Foundation Bellagio Center Writing Residency, February-March 2017.

Non-resident senior fellowship, Chicago Council on Global Affairs, February 2016-

present.

Non-resident senior fellowship, Brookings Institution, January 2013-present.

Non-resident Transatlantic Fellowship, German Marshall Fund of the United States,

2005-2006.

British-American Project Fellowship, November 2003.

Salzburg Seminar Fellowship, April 2002.

Council on Foreign Relations International Affairs Fellowship, 1999-2000.

Institute for Technology and Scholarship Summer Fellowship, University of Colorado

at Boulder, 1998.

John M. Olin Post-Doctoral Fellowship in National Security, Center for International

Affairs, Harvard University, 1996-1997.

Stanford Center on Conflict and Negotiation Graduate Student Fellowship, Stanford

University, 1995.

Awards, honors and grants

Carnegie Corporation research grant, 2016-2018.

Center for New American Security research grant, 2015.

Lionel Gelber Prize shortlist for The System Worked, 2015.

Center for Excellence in Higher Education grant, 2012-2017.

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Online Achievement in International Studies, Special Achievement Award, 2014

Tobin Project research grant, 2013.

Online Achievement in International Studies, Best Individual Blog, 2013.

Top 25 Blog of the Year, Time, 2012.

Honorable mention for Theories of International Politics and Zombies, 2011 PROSE

Award in Government & Politics, Association of American Publishers.

Carnegie Foundation conference grant, Tufts University, 2008.

Cabot Family Charitable Trust conference grant, Tufts University, 2008.

Who’s Who in America, 2002-present.

Social Science Division Research Grants, University of Chicago: 2002, 2003, 2005.

Inclusion in The Best American Political Writing 2004

2003 Choice Outstanding Academic Title (for Locating the Proper Authorities)

Special Act Award, U.S. Treasury Department, July 2001.

Council on Research and Creative Work conference grant, University of Colorado at

Boulder, 1999.

Junior Faculty Development Award, University of Colorado at Boulder, 1998.

Professional service

Referee American Journal of Political Science; American Journal of

Sociology; American Political Science Review; British Journal of

Political Science; Business and Politics; Business and Society;

Cambridge Review of International Affairs; Comparative Political

Studies; Conflict Management and Peace Science; Cooperation

and Conflict; Economics and Politics; Emerging Markets Finance

and Trade; European Journal of International Relations;

European Journal of Political Research; Finance & Society;

Foreign Policy Analysis; Global Governance; Global Summitry;

Global Policy; Governance; India Review; International Affairs;

International Interactions; International Journal of Internet

Science; International Organization; International Relations of the

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Asia-Pacific; International Security; International Studies

Perspectives; International Studies Quarterly; International

Theory; Journal of Cold War Studies; Journal of Common Market

Studies; Journal of Computer-Mediated Communication; Journal

of Conflict Resolution; Journal of East Asian Studies, Journal of

European Public Policy; Journal of Human Rights; Journal of

Information Technology and Politics; Journal of International

Relations and Development; Journal of Peace Research; Journal

of Policy Analysis and Management; Journal of Politics;

Literature Interpretation Theory; Millennium; New Political

Economy; Policy Studies Journal; Political Communication;

Political Psychology; Political Research Quarterly; Political

Science Quarterly; Political Studies; Politics; Polity; PS: Political

Science and Politics; Post-Soviet Affairs; Public Finance Review;

Regulation and Governance; Research Policy; Review of

International Political Economy; Review of International Studies;

Security Dialogue; Security Studies; Social Problems; Social

Science Quarterly; Studies in American Political Development;

The Pacific Review; World Politics; World Trade Review

Cambridge University Press; Cornell University Press;

International Studies Association Compendium Project; Johns

Hopkins University Press; Longman Publishers; McGraw-Hill;

University of Michigan Press; MIT Press; New York University

Press; Oxford University Press; Palgrave MacMillan; Princeton

University Press; Routledge Press; Rowman & Littlefield; Yale

University Press

American Academy in Berlin, Carnegie Corporation; Council on

Foreign Relations; Grawemeyer World Order Award; Independent

Institute; Institute for Humane Studies; MacArthur Foundation;

National Science Foundation; Social Sciences and Humanities

Research Council of Canada; Swiss National Science Foundation;

United Kingdom Economic and Social Research Council

Memberships American Political Science Association

Council on Foreign Relations

International Studies Association

Panel Chair American Political Science Association (2004, 2007, 2010, 2015)

Midwestern Political Science Association (2003, 2002, 1999)

International Studies Association (2004, 2007, 2010, 2014, 2015)

Brussels Forum (2007)

Panel Discussant American Political Science Association (1999, 2012, 2015).

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International Studies Association (1999, 2002, 2004, 2008, 2009,

2013).

Midwestern Political Science Association (2000, 2003).

Roundtable American Association for the Advancement of Slavic Studies (2002)

Participant American Political Science Association (2005, 2008, 2009, 2010,

2013, 2014, 2015)

Comic-Con (2012)

Conference on World Affairs (1998)

Council on Foreign Relations (2004)

International Political Economy Society (2010)

International Studies Association (2008, 2008, 2010, 2012, 2013,

2016)

Public Choice Society (2005)

Board/committee Editorial Board, Journal of Global Security Studies (2014-present).

memberships

Editorial Board, International Studies Quarterly (2013-present)

Editorial Board, Perspectives on Politics (2009-present)

Global Advisory Board, Global Summitry (2014-present)

Advisory Board, Chicago Council on Global Affairs (2013-

present)

Pearson Custom Publishing Editorial Board, Among Nations:

Readings in International Relations (2008-present)

Legatum Prosperity Index academic advisory board (2008-2016)

Contributing Editor, Foreign Policy (2009-2014)

Senior Editor, The National Interest (2008-2012)

Council on Foreign Relations Academic Outreach Committee

(2003-2010)

Maurice Greenberg Center for Geoeconomic Studies, Council on

Foreign Relations (2008-2010)

American Academy in Berlin Selection Committee (2009)

APSA Task Force on U.S. Standing in World Affairs (2008-2009)

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Commitment to Global Development Index Advisory Board,

Center for Global Development (2003-2005)

Cfr.org editorial advisory board member (2006-2009)

Other activities Jury member, Lionel Gelber Prize (2012-2014)

Jury member, Estoril Prize, 2011

Jury member, Peter R. Weitz Prize, German Marshall Fund (2006-2008)

British-American Project Regional Nomination Co-Chair (2004-2005)

Civic Education Project alumni interviewer (1995-2003)

Presentations

Conference presentations:

ACM Conference on Computer Supported Cooperative Work (2004)

American Political Science Association (1996, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003,

2004, 2005, 2006, 2010, 2013, 2014)

Central and East European International Studies Association (2003)

European Consortium on Political Research (2001)

International Studies Association (1997, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2004, 2005, 2006,

2007, 2010, 2014)

International Political Economy Society (2006)

Japanese Association of International Relations (2009)

Midwestern Political Science Association (1998, 2002)

Western Political Science Association (1996)

Selected official presentations and testimony:

“The System Worked: Global Economic Governance during the Great Recession,”

World Bank, June 2014.

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“The Creeping Militarization of American Foreign Policy,” Army War College,

Carlisle, PA, April 2013.

“U.S. Debt to China: Implications and Repercussions.” US-China Economic and

Security Review Commission, Washington, DC, February 2010.

“A World of Muddling Through: The Sketchy Future of Global Financial Governance.”

National Intelligence Council, Washington, DC, November 2009.

“The Political Economy of the Great Recession.” College of International Security

Affairs, National Defense University, Washington, DC, September 2009.

“Revisiting Hegemonic Stability: The Long-Term Geopolitical Implications of the

Current Financial Crisis.” National Intelligence Council, Washington, DC, December

2008.

“Sovereign Wealth Funds and the (In)security of Global Finance.” U.S. House

Financial Services Committee, Washington, DC, September 2008.

“The Foreign Policy Implications of Sovereign Wealth Funds,” U.S. Senate Committee

on Foreign Relations hearings on Sovereign Wealth Funds: Foreign Policy

Consequences in an Era of New Money, Washington, DC, June 2008.

“The Future Impact of Sovereign Wealth Funds.” National Intelligence Council,

Washington, DC, February 2008.

Selected keynote addresses

“So Now You Care about International Political Economy,” ISSS/ISAC conference,

Providence, RI, October 2010.

“Power Politics in an Era of Globalization,” convocation address, Broome Community

College, Binghamton, NY, March 2007. Previously presented at the Phi Theta Kappa

Honors Society, Jackson, MS, February 2006.

Selected invited talks

“Does Military Power Attract Foreign Investment?” Yale University, New Haven, CT,

May 2014. Previous versions presented at MIT, Cambridge, MA, March 2014; and

American University, January 2014.

“The Irony of Global Economic Governance: The System Worked.” SAIS,

Washington, DC, October 2013. Previous versions presented at Chicago Council of

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Global Affairs, Chicago, IL, April 2013; Boston College, Newton, MA, March 2013;

Oxford University, Oxford, UK, November 2012; Council on Foreign Relations,

Washington, DC, November 2012; Ohio State University, Columbus, OH, November

2012; University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada, October 2012; and Fudan University,

Shanghai, China, May 2012.

“The Ambiguous Benefits of American Military Primacy,” Cato Institute, Washington,

DC, October 2013. Previous versions presented at University of Texas at Austin,

Austin, TX, May 2013; University of Connecticut, Storrs, CT, Tobin Project, Beverly,

MA, December 2012.

“Grading the G-20,” Fudan University, Shanghai, China, September 2011.

“Myths and Realities about Economic Security,” Tobin Project, Washington, DC,

September 2011.

“Is there an Exceptional American Approach to Global Economic Governance?”

Peking University, Beijing, China, June 2011.

“An Unclean Slate: Global Governance in Hard Times.” Cornell University, Ithaca,

NY, April 2011.

“American and Chinese Grand Strategies.” Foreign Policy Research Institute,

Philadelphia, PA, April 2011.

“The Global Economy in a Post-Hegemonic World,” SAIS, Washington, DC, October

2010.

“The Political Economy of the Great Recession,” McKinsey Strategy Conference,

Munich, Germany, October 2009.

“Little Bang for the Buck: China’s Financial Leverage in World Politics.” Presented at

the LBJ School of Government, Austin, TX, November 2009. Previous version

presented at the PIPES seminar, University of Chicago, Chicago, IL, March 2009.

“The Tragedy of the Global Institutional Commons.” Presented at the Graduate

Institute of Geneva, February 2009. Previous versions presented at Duke University,

January 2009; the University of Pittsburgh, March 2008; University of Virginia,

November 2007; McGill University, Montreal, Canada, September 2007; the PIPES

seminar, University of Chicago, Chicago, IL, May 2007; the Mershon Center for

International Studies, The Ohio State University, Columbus, OH, January 2007.

Selected public lectures:

“Metaphor of the Living Dead,” TEDx, Binghamton University, Binghamton, NY,

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February 2013.

“Foreign Policy after the 2012 Election,” Chatham House, London, UK, November

2012.

“Theories of International Politics and Zombies,” ZomBcon, Seattle, WA, October

2010.

“The Economic Crisis and National Security,” National Security Forum, Air War

College, Montgomery, AL, May 2010.

“The Foreign Policy of Barack Obama,” Royal Irish Academy, Dublin, Ireland, January

2009.

Teaching

Undergraduate courses

The Political Foundations of Economic Prosperity (Fall 2013, Fall 2014, Spring 2016,

Spring 2017))

American Foreign Policy (Fall 1997, Fall 1998, Fall 2001)

International Organization (Spring 1998)

Introduction to International Relations (Spring 1999)

Globalization and Its Discontents (Fall 1999, Spring 2003)

U.S. Foreign Economic Policy (Winter 2004)

Power, Identity and Resistance – Liberalism and Its Critics (Winter 2002, Winter

2005)

Power, Identity and Resistance – The Market and Its Critics (Fall 2003)

Graduate courses

The Art and Science of Statecraft (Spring 2007, Fall 2009, Fall 2011, Fall 2015)

The Politics of Statecraft (Spring 2008, Spring 2010, Spring 2012, Spring 2016)

Causes of War (Fall 1998)

Classics of International Relations Theory (Winter 2002, Fall 2004, Spring 2007,

Spring 2009, Fall 2010, Spring 2014, Spring 2015, Fall 2016)

Dissertation Prospectus Seminar (Spring 2002, Spring 2003)

Field Seminar in Comparative Politics and International Relations (Fall 2008, Spring

2010, Spring 2012)

Global Political Economy (Fall 1997, Fall 1999, Fall 2001, Winter 2004, Fall 2006,

Fall 2008, Fall 2009, Spring 2011, Fall 2012, Spring 2014, Fall 2016)

Global Governance (Fall 2003)

Seminar in International Relations Theory (Spring 1998)

Seminar on International Relations and International Law (Spring 2008, Spring 2009)

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Short courses

The Foundations of Economic Prosperity, Great Courses, The Teaching Company

Global Political Economy, University of Basel Law Faculty, Summer 2009

American Foreign Policy, Institut Barcelona D’estudis Internacionales, Summer 2009

Globalization, Institute for Humane Studies, Summer 2007