Resident Members and Affiliates (continued)
Annette Baker Fox
Senior Research Scholar
(Ph.D, University of Chicago, 1941)
Fox is the former Director of the Canadian Studies Pro¬gram (1977-1984) at the Institute. She has been a re¬search scholar at Columbia since 1963 and previously at the Yale Institute of International Studies and the Princeton Center of International Studies. In addition to courses given at Columbia, Fox has taught at Hunter College, Sarah Lawrence, and the University of Toronto. Fox is the widow of the first Director of the Institute, William T.R. Fox, with whom she co-authored NATO and the Range of American Choice (Columbia University Press, 1967).
Her other publications include:
Freedom and Welfare in the Caribbean: A Colonial Dilemma (Harcourt Brace, 1949), The Power of Small States: Diplomacy in World War II (University of Chi¬cago Press, 1959), The Politics of Attraction: Four Middle Powers and the United States (Columbia University Press, 1977), and about thirty articles in various schol¬arly journals.
Current Research:
A project examining the Canadian government’s suc¬cessful diplomatic methods for preserving its policy in¬dependence from the United States.

|
|
Lewis Henkin
University Professor Emeritus
(L.H.D, Yeshiva University, 1963)

Henkin was an officer with the State Department (1945-1957) before teaching law at the University of Pennsylvania (1957-1962). He joined the Columbia faculty in 1963 and has been a University Professor since 1979. He is the author of The Age of Rights (Columbia University Press, 1990) and Foreign Affairs and the U.S. Constitution (Oxford University Press, 1996), among other titles.
Current Research:
“Study of War from Law to Meta¬phor,” examining the implications for constitutional law, as well as for international law, of the changing concepts and uses of the term war.
|
|
Robert Jervis
Adlai E. Stevenson Professor of International Politics
(Ph.D, University of California at Berkeley, 1968)

Jervis is the Deputy Chair of the Political Science Department and has been a member of the faculty since 1980. He has also taught at the UCLA (1974-1980) and Harvard (1968-1974). In 2000-2001, he served as the President of the American Political Science Association. Jervis is co-editor of the Cornell University Press Studies in Security Affairs and the member of numerous editorial review boards for scholarly journals. His publications include Perception and Misperception in International Politics (Princeton University Press, 1976), The Meaning of the Nuclear Revolution (Cornell University Press, 1989), System Effects: Complexity in Political and Social Life (Princeton University Press, 1997), several edited volumes, and numerous articles in scholarly journals. His American Foreign Policy in a New Era will be published by Routledge in February 2005.
Recent Publications:
"Security Studies: Ideas, Policy, and Politics." In Edward Mansfield and Richard Sisson, editors, The Evolution of Political Knowledge. Columbus: Ohio State University Press, 2004.
"Understanding the Bush Doctrine," Political Science Quarterly 118 (Fall 2003).
"The Compulsive Empire." Foreign Policy 137 (July/ August 2003).
"Political Science Perspectives on the Origins of World War II." In Robert Boyce and Joseph A. Maiolo, editors, The Origins of World War Two. London: Palgrave, 2003.
"Realism, Neoliberalism, and Cooperation: Understanding the Debate." In Colin Elman and Miriam Fendius Elman, editors, Progress in International Relations Theory. Cambridge: MIT Press, 2003.
Current Research:
A book on international politics and American foreign policy in the post 9/11 era, linking broad structural changes with an analysis of the Bush Doctrine and the war on terrorism. In addition, a number of projects dealing with the impact of the Cold War on American and Soviet societies, the challenges of deterrence under the new circumstances, and, in connection with having received the Lasswell Award for Lifetime Achievement from the International Society for Political Psychology, a paper on political psychology and the nature of beliefs. His long-run project is a book on signaling and perception in politics, bringing together two subjects which, while logically tightly linked, have been studied quite separately in the past.
|
Yotam Margalit
Description coming soon
|
|
Kimberly Marten
Professor of Political Science, Barnard College
(Ph.D, Stanford University, 1991)
Marten has been on the faculty of the Barnard College Political Science Department since 1997. She is currently the chair of the Barnard College Political Science Department. She served as the Associate Director of Columbia's Harriman Institute from 2002-4. Before coming to Barnard, she taught at Ohio State University, and was a post-doctoral fellow at Stanford University's Center for International Security and Arms Control. She was a visiting scholar at both Harvard University's Olin Institute for Strategic Studies and the Nakasone Institute for International Policy Studies in Tokyo.
She has published three books. The first,
Engaging the Enemy: Organization Theory and Soviet Military Innovation (Princeton University Press, 1993) received the Marshall Shulman Prize from the American Association for the Advancement of Slavic Stud¬ies. The second, Weapons, Culture, and Self-Interest: Soviet Defense Managers in the New Russia (1997), and third (see recent publications) were both published by Columbia University Press. She has also written numer¬ous book chapters, journal articles, op eds, and policy memoranda, and completed two contract projects for the
U.S. Department of Defense.
Recent Publications:
Enforcing the Peace: Learning from the Imperial Past.
New York: Columbia University Press, 2004.
"Getting It Right in Haiti This Time Around." International Herald Tribune, Mar. 26, 2004.
Current Research:
Marten's current research focuses on two different topics: (1) the politics and civil-military relations of peace and stability operations; and (2) Russian and Chinese investment in the oil complex and pipelines of post-Soviet Central Asia.
|
Lincoln Mitchell
Assistant Professor
(Ph.D, Columbia University, 1996)
Lincoln Mitchell joined Columbia University in January of 2006 as the Arnold A. Saltzman Assistant Professor in the Practice of International Politics. Before joining Columbia, Lincoln was a practitioner of political development. His work has primarily been in the areas of political party development and elections. In addition to serving as Chief of Party for the National Democratic Institute (NDI) in Georgia from 2002-2004, Lincoln has worked on political development issues in Azerbaijan, Bahrain, Bangladesh, Bosnia-Hercegovina, Bulgaria, Kyrgyzstan, Palestine and Russia. Lincoln also worked for years as a political consultant in New York City advising and managing domestic political campaigns.
Current Research:
Lincoln’s current research includes work on democratic transitions in the former Soviet Union and on the role of democracy promotion in American foreign policy. Lincoln’s views on political development and political campaigns have been seen on New York One, Fox Cable, MSNBC, The New York Times, The Daily News, The New York Post, New York Newsday, El Diario and numerous publications and television programs in Georgia.
Lincoln earned his Ph.D from Columbia University’s department of political science in 1996.
|
|
Next Page |
|