Dean E. McHenry, Jr. (Claremont Graduate University, Claremont, California)


Submitted:  Mon, March 1, 2010


Dean E. McHenry, Jr.
Professor of Political Science
Department of Politics and Policy
Claremont Graduate University
170 East Tenth Street 
McManus Hall, #228
Claremont, California  91711-6163 USA

phone:   909-621-8691
fax:     909-621-8545
e-mail:  Dean.McHenry@cgs.edu


Web: http://www.cgu.edu/pages/433.asp


Teaching in Africa:  Education Officer at Mpwapwa Secondary School,
Tanganyika in 1962 and 1963; Lecturer in Political Science at the
University of Dar es Salaam, 1969-1970 and 1974-1976;  Senior Lecturer in
Political Science at the University of Calabar, Nigeria, 1981-1982; 
Associate Professor in Political Science at the University of Dar es
Salaam, 1986-1987. 


Selected publications on Africa:  


BOOKS:

Limited Choices, The Political Struggle for Socialism in Tanzania 
(Boulder:  Lynne Rienner, 1994)

Tanzania's Ujamaa Villages, The Implementation of a Rural Development 
Strategy (Berkeley:  Institute of International Studies, University of 
California, 1979)


BOOK CHAPTERS:

"Political Parties and Party Systems," in Paul J. Kaiser and F. Wafula 
Okumu, eds., Democratic Transitions in East Africa (Aldershot, UK: Ashgate 
Publishing Ltd., 2004), pp. 38-63.


BIBLIOGRAPHY:  

Ujamaa Villages in Tanzania:  A Bibliography (Uppsala: Scandinavian 
Institute of African Studies, 1981)


ARTICLES: 

On cooperatives, communal production, elections, the use of sports in 
policy implementation, administration, underdevelopment theory, parties 
and the implementation of agricultural policy in Tanzania in many journals 
including Comparative Studies in Society and History, The Journal of 
Modern African Studies, The African Review, The Canadian Journal of 
African Studies, African studies Review, Tanzania Notes and Records and 
The Journal of Developing Areas;  On federalism, state creation and public 
corporations in Nigeria in Public Administration and Development, Publius 
and The Journal of Commonwealth and Comparative Politics