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The listing below identifies each faculty member, their field of research, and a brief description of their recent publications. To communicate with any, simply click on their email address or their name to visit their website.
MICHAEL COMBS : Professor Ph.D., Washington University (St. Louis), 1978. Fields: Judicial Politics and Constitutional Law, Black Politics, Urban Politics. He is a former president of the National Conference of Black Political Scientists. Recent publications include Civil Liberties and the Constitution: Cases and Commen-taries (Prentice Hall, 1999, with Lucius J. Barker, Twiley W. Barker, Jr., Kevin Lyles, and H. W. Perry), "Race or Place? Emerging Public Perspectives on Urban Education," PS 30: 1997: 454-458 (Sigelman, Combs, Welch and Bledsoe), and "Police Brutality and Public Perceptions of Racial Discrimination: A Tale of Two Beatings", Political Research Quarterly, December 1997 (Welch, Combs, Sigelman, Bledsoe). He received the 1996 Liberty Bell Award from the Lincoln Bar Association, as well as the Recognition Award for Contributions to Students sponsored by the University of Nebraska-Lincoln Parents' Association and Teaching Council, January 1992, 1993, and 1995. mcombs1@unl.edu
JOHN COMER : Professor Ph.D., The Ohio State University, 1971. Fields: Public Opinion, Political Parties and Interest Groups John Comer is co-author of American Government (Wadsworth, 1996), an introductory textbook in American government. Current research interest focuses on the activities and effectiveness of interest groups in state legislatures. He is also in the process of revising Quantitative Methods in Public Administration, an introductory text in research methods and statistics. jcomer1@unl.edu
DAVID FORSYTHE : Charles J. Mach Distinguished Professor Ph.D., Princeton University, 1968. Fields: International Human Rights, International Law & Organization, American Foreign Policy, International Relations. In addition to over 100 publications on different aspects of International Relations, David Forsythe is the author of: Human Rights and Comparative Foreign Policy, (United Nations University Press, 2000; edited); The United States and Human Rights, (University of Nebraska Press, 2000; edited); Human Rights and Diversity: Area Studies Revisited, (University of Nebraska Press, 2004; edited with Patrice McMahon); The Humanitarians: The International Committee of the Red Cross, (Cambridge University Press, 2005), Human Rights in International Relations, (Cambridge University Press, 2000, translated into Chinese, Turkish, Korean, and Bulgarian; 2nd edition 2006); The United Nations and Changing World Politics, (Westview Press, 5th ed. 2006; with 3 other authors), and American Foreign Policy in a Globalized World, (Routledge, 2006; edited with two others). He is the General Editor of the Human Rights Encyclopedia (Oxford University Press, forthcoming, 4 volumes). In the fall of 2003 the Mid-West Section of the International Studies Association presented him with the Quincy Wright Distinguished Scholar Award in honor of his lifetime professional achievements. He is widely regarded as having been among the first to help establish the study of human rights and humanitarian affairs in the disciplines of political science and international relations. For this and other roles the Human Rights Section of the American Political Science Associated named him a Distinguished Scholar in 2007. dforsythe1@unl.edu
DANA GRIFFIN : Assistant Professor Ph.D., University of Minnesota, 2009 Fields: Political Decision-making, Biopolitics, Public Opinion, Political Psychology Dana Griffin was awarded a National Science Foundation Dissertation Research Improvement Grant for her work on political decision-making. Her current research explores how people use information to make political choices. Using computer-based experiments, she examines potential similarities and potential differences in decision-making tendencies between elected officials and everyday citizens. In addition to decision-making, she is also interested in political psychology, emotion, and biophysical measurement. dgriffin3@unl.edu
JOHN GRUHL : Professor Ph.D., University of California-Santa Barbara, 1976. Fields: Judicial Process, Constitutional Law, Civil Liberties, Criminal Justice. His research on American government includes journal articles on Supreme Court issues, such as "The Impact of Term Limits for Supreme Court Justices," in Judicature (Sept.-Oct. 1997), and he recently co-authored book (with Susan Welch) entitled Affirmative Action and Minority Enrollments in Medical and Law School (University of Michigan Press, 1998). He has also co-authored two widely used textbooks, American Government (6th ed., 1996) and Understanding American Government (4th ed., 1997), both published by West and co-authored by Susan Welch, Michael Steinman, and John Comer. John Gruel has won campus teaching awards twice and the university's highest teaching award in 1997. He is a charter member of the university's Academy of Distinguished Teachers, and is the Chief Undergraduate Adviser and Honors Adviser for the Department. jgruhl1@unl.edu
JOHN HIBBING : Foundation Regents University Professor of Political Science Ph.D., University of Iowa, 1980. Fields: American Politics, especially legislative politics and public opinion; Biology and Politics, especially evolutionary psychology. Human behavior is the product of a fascinating interaction of environmental and genetic forces. In spite of this fact, political scientists have limited their attention almost exclusively to environmental variables. Hibbing’s current work, mostly with John Alford of Rice University, employs economic games, fMRIs, evolutionary theory, and behavioral genetics in order to identify the deeper biological causes of social and especially political behavior. Previously, he has edited the Legislative Studies Quarterly, served as President of the American Political Science Association’s Legislative Studies Section, received six National Science Foundation grants, co-authored Congress as Public Enemy and Stealth Democracy (with Elizabeth Theiss-Morse), won the Fenno Prize, and been a NATO Fellow in Science as well as a Senior Fulbright Fellow. jhibbing@unl.edu
ARI KOHEN : Schlesinger Assistant Professor of Social Justice and Assistant Professor of Political Science Ph.D., Duke University, 2004. Fields: Contemporary Political Theory, Human Rights, Ethnic Conflict, and Restorative Justice. Ari Kohen is the author of In Defense of Human Rights, published Spring 2007. Articles appeared recently in Human Rights Review (2005) and the Journal of Human Rights (2006). He was awarded the 2006 Irmgard Coninx Foundation Research Fellowship which included three months of study in Germany where he had an office at the Wissenschaftszentrum Berlin fur Sozialforschung. He is currently working on a book-length project, The Moral Hero and the Mortal Hero, as well as articles on both restorative justice and the death penalty. akohen2@unl.edu
PATRICE McMAHON : Associate Professor, Chair Graduate Studies Ph.D., Columbia University, 1998. Fields: International Security, International Relations, Comparative Politics. Patrice McMahon's research interests include the causes and effects of ethnic identity on international relations, transnational determinants of domestic policy, democracy promotion, and human rights. Her work has appeared in Political Science Quarterly, Democratization, and Problems of Post-Communism. Recently, she finished American Foreign Policy in a Globalized World, edited with David P. Forsythe and Andrew Wedeman (forthcoming, Routledge Press) and Taming Ethnic Hatred: Ethnic Cooperation and Transnational Networks in Eastern Europe (under review). pmcmahon2@unl.edu
SARAH MICHAELS : Professor Ph.D. University of Colorado, 1990 Fields: Water resources policy and governance, science-policy interface, Comparative environmental policy Sarah Michaels’ research interests are in water resources policy and governance, the interfaces between science-and policy, comparative environmental policy and regional governance. Her current research explores longitudinal changes in how science is considered in decision making about water resources, transboundary dimensions of source water protection, and how to improve water governance through policy transfer. Among her publications are journal articles in Environmental Science and Policy, Review of Policy Research, Environmental Management and Policy Studies Journal.
ROSS MILLER : Associate Professor Ph.D. University of California, Davis, 1994 Fields: International Conflict, American Foreign Policy, Research Methods, and Comparative Political Institutions. Ross’s fields of interest include international conflict, American foreign policy, research methods, political participation, and comparative political institutions. He is co-author of Before Norms: Institutions and Civic Culture (University of Michigan Press, 2004). His research is published in the Journal of Conflict Resolution, Political Research Quarterly, Comparative Political Studies, and the American Journal of Political Science. In addition to teaching and research in the general field of international relations in political science, Ross is also Director of International Studies major at UNL.
DONA-GENE MITCHELL : Assistant Professor Ph.D. University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 2008 Fields: Political Behavior, Public Opinion, Political Psychology. Dona-Gene Mitchell’s teaching and research interests involve American political behavior. Drawing heavily on relevant psychological perspectives while keeping the real world of politics in sight her work focuses on better understanding how and how well citizens use political information to inform their judgments. She is co-editor (with Jeffery J. Mondak) of the book Fault Lines: Why the Republicans Lost Congress, and her research also has appeared in the American Journal of Political Science. She co-hosted the Cline Conference on the 2006 Congressional Elections sponsored by the Cline Center for Democracy at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. Her current projects aim to enable improved assessment of the dynamics of opinion formation by exploring the interrelationships among information, campaigns and time.
DAVID RAPKIN : Associate Professor Ph.D., Florida State University, 1979. Fields: International Politics, International Political Economy. David Rapkin's research deals with world system theory and Japanese industrial policy. He is co-editor, with William Avery, of the International Studies Association's International Political Economy Yearbook. His recent publications include a chapter in William Thompson's 1999 edited book, Great Power Rivalries, entitled "The Emergence and Intensification of U.S.-Japan Rivalry in the Early Twentieth Century," as well as "Is International Competitiveness a Property of National Economies?" in the March Journal of International Political Economy 1,2. Rapkin co-authored two 1997 journal articles with Jonathan R. Strand, a department grad student: "Institutional Adjustment to Changed Power Distributions: Japan and the United States in the IMF." in Global Governance, and "The U.S. and Japan in the Bretton Woods Institutions: Sharing or Contesting Leader-ship?" in International Journal. Current research includes more on the US-Japan rivalry, including a conceptual paper on rivalry and another on the role of racial hostility in the development of the rivalry, the operation of weighted voting systems in multilateral institutions, and evolutionary approaches to world politics. drapkin2@unl.edu
KEVIN SMITH : Professor Ph.D., University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, 1994. Fields: Public policy, Public Administration, American Politics Kevin Smith is the author of The Case Against School Choice (M.E. Sharpe, 1994) and of numerous articles that have appeared in The Journal of Politics, Political Research Quarterly, Public Administration Review and other journals. He is currently finishing a book length manuscript on education and democracy. He received a College Award for Distinguished Teaching in 1998. ksmith1@unl.edu
ELIZABETH THEISS-MORSE : Professor, Department Chair Ph.D., University of Minnesota, 1989. Fields: Public opinion, political psychology, and political behavior. Elizabeth Theiss-Morse focuses her research on understanding American public opinion and how it relates to various aspects of democracy, including support for civil liberties, Congress, democratic processes, and the American people as a national group. She is the author or co-author of four Cambridge University Press books: Who Counts as an American? The Boundaries of National Identity (2009); Stealth Democracy (2002), coauthored with John Hibbing and named an "Outstanding Academic Title" by Choice magazine; Congress as Public Enemy (1995), co-authored with John Hibbing and winner of the Fenno Prize for the best book on legislative politics; and With Malice Toward Some (1995), co-authored with George Marcus, John Sullivan, and Sandra Wood and winner of the Best Book in Political Psychology award. She has received five National Science Foundation grants and is the winner of a distinguished teaching award. She is currently serving as chair of her department. etheissmorse1@unl.edu
ERIK TILLMAN : Assistant Professor Ph.D., Emory University: Atlanta, Georgia, 2005. Fields: Comparative Politics, European Politics, Political Behavior. Erik Tillman's research interests include comparative public opinion and voting behavior, European politics, and the effects of democracy on interstate behavior. He has published articles in the Journal of Politics and Comparative Political Studies. His current projects examine the link between the economy and voting behavior and the effects of European integration on the domestic electoral politics of its member states. etillman2@unl.edu
MICHAEL WAGNER : Assistant Professor Ph.D. Indiana University, 2006 Fields: Political Behavior, Public Opinion, Political Psychology, Media, Congress, Political Parties, and Presidency. Mike Wagner’s research and teaching interests encompass a wide range that focuses on the interplay between political elites and the public. He is published in the Annual Review of Political Science, American Politics Research, State Politics and Policy Quarterly and several edited volumes. Mike also has a co-authored book (with Ted Carmines and Jessica Gerrity), Congress in the Public Mind, under contract at Cambridge University Press. He was project director on the 2006 Congressional Election Study conducted by the Center on Congress at Indiana University. He is also the recipient of grants from the National Science Foundation and the Dirksen Congressional Center. Current projects include work on issue framing, campaign ads and election coverage (with Brian Schaffner), religion and politics (with Eric Zeemering), and issue preferences and ideological heterogeneity in the American electorate (with Ted Carmines and Mike Ensley). mwagner3@unl.edu
SERGIO WALS : Assistant Professor Ph.D., University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 2009 Fields: Political Behavior, Race and Ethnicity, Public Opinion, Political Psychology Sergio Wals is Assistant Professor of Political Science and Ethnic Studies (Latino and Latin American Studies) having joined the UNL faculty in 2009. He received his Licenciatura in Political Science from Instituto Tecnológico Autónomo de México (ITAM) and his M.A. and Ph.D. in Political Science from the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign. His research interests are in the area of political behavior, including public opinion and political psychology. His current research agenda focuses on topics related to race and ethnicity both in the United States and in Latin America. His dissertation, Immigrants’ Political Suitcases: A Theory of Imported Socialization is a study of how immigrants’ prior political experiences affect their political assimilation, attitudes and behaviors once in the United States. This project was distinguished with the Robert Ferber Dissertation Award presented annually by the University of Illinois. His research on the emergence of partisan attachments among immigrants to the United States is forthcoming in the Political Research Quarterly. swals2@unl.edu
ANDREW WEDEMAN : Associate Professor, Chair Asian Studies Ph.D., University of California, Los Angeles, 1994. Fields: Comparative Politics, Corruption, Chinese Politics He is the author of From Mao to Market: Local Protectionism, Rent-Seeking, and the Marketization of China, 1984-1992 and The East Wind Subsides: Chinese Foreign Policy and the Origins of the Cultural Revolution, plus a variety of articles on the political economy of corruption, both in China and elsewhere, as well as articles on central-provincial relations in China. He is currently writing a book (Double Paradox: Corruption and Development in Post-Mao China. His recent publications include articles in the Cambridge Review of International Affairs, Studies in Comparative International Development, Journal of Contemporary China, China Quarterly, The Journal of Developing Areas, and China Review, as well as several chapters in E. Terrence Gomez, ed.,Political Business in Asia and Woosang Kim, ed., Collective Security and Multilateralism in Post-Cold War East Asia. In 1997 and 2001 Andrew Wedeman was awarded Certificates of Recognition for Contributions to Students by the Parents Association and the Teaching Council of the University of Nebraska. During 2001-2, he spent a year as a visiting Fulbright Researcher at Taiwan National University. awedeman1@unl.edu
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