Faculty and Staff
Full-Time Faculty
Camila Paez Bernal
Asst Professor - Educator, A&S School of Public and International A
5112 CLIFTCT
Jeffrey Layne Blevins
Professor of Journalism & Public and International Affairs, A&S Journalism
5144 CLIFTCT
Brian (Bri) Calfano
Department of Journalism & School of International and Public Affairs , A&S Journalism
5149 CLIFTCT
Brian Calfano (Ph.D., N. Texas) is a Professor of Journalism and directs UC's Digital Broadcast News Certificate.
A working TV reporter with multiple EMMY nominations, Calfano is repped by CBK Media Management. His stories have appeared on Spectrum News 1, WKRC Cincinnati (Local12), Fox 2 St. Louis, Fox 4 Kansas City, Ozarks Fox, KOLR, KNWA, and KLBK, among others. In the last five years, he has received more than a dozen awards from the Broadcast Educator Asso., Missouri Broadcasters, Ohio AP, SPJ, and The Press Club of Cleveland. WABC-TV New York featured portions of his documentary work in its 75th anniversary celebration in August 2023. In 2022, Calfano established the Journomentary project. He is the director and executive producer of the award-winning 2024 documentary Al Primo & His Eyewitness News Revolution. The documentary made its New York City premiere at WABC in May. In 2023, Calfano created the first higher education partnership with the broadcast video management platform Latakoo.
In total, Dr. Calfano has over 100 peer-reviewed publications across the social sciences. These include the books God Talk: Experimenting with the Religious Causes of Public Opinion (Temple), A Matter of Discretion: The Political Behavior of Catholic Priests (Rowman and Littlefield), Human Relations Commissions (Columbia), and Exploring the Public Effects of Religious Communication on Politics (Michigan).
Coverage of his academic work includes The Washington Post/Monkey Cage, Nieman Lab (Harvard), Newsweek, and The London School of Economics Blog. Research grantors include HUD, NSF, APSA, The Scripps Howard Foundation, and the SSSR.
Kimberly Horn Conger
Assoc Professor - Educator, A&S School of Public and International A
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Ashley M Currier
Professor, A&S School of Public and International A
5118 CLIFTCT
Ashley Currier is a sociologist who studies lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) organizing in Côte d’Ivoire, Liberia, Malawi, Namibia, and South Africa.
Anita Dhillon
Asst Professor, A&S School of Public and International A
5139 CLIFTCT
Her research focuses on two key environmental factors (the influence of state and local political environments, and the management of organizational human capital), and how they interact to affect organizational outcomes. Her research has been published in International Public Management Journal, State Politics and Policy Quarterly, and the Journal of Nonprofit and Public Affairs.
Lauren Forbes
Asst Professor, A&S School of Public and International A
5136 CLIFTCT
Brendan R Green
Associate Professor, A&S School of Public and International A
5138 CLIFTCT
- Subject of a New York Times Article, “There’s a Big Lie Your History Teacher Told Your About Nuclear Weapons,” The Interpreter, July 19, 2017.
- Winner, 2018 Outstanding Article in International History and Politics, American Political Science Association.
“Correspondence: The Limits of Damage Limitation,” International Security, Vol. 42, No. 1 (Summer 2017). With Austin Long.
- A response to Charles L. Glaser and Steve Fetter, “Should the U.S. Reject MAD? Damage Limitation and U.S. Strategy towards China,” International Security, Vol. 41, No. 3 (Summer 2016).
“Primacy and Proliferation: Why Security Commitments Don’t Prevent Nuclear Weapons’ Spread,” in Trevor Thrall and Benjamin Friedman, eds., The Case for Restraint in U.S. Foreign Policy (New York: Routledge). Forthcoming, 2018.
“Signaling with Secrets: Evidence on Soviet Perceptions of U.S. Counterforce Developments in the Late Cold War,” in Erik Garzke and Jon Lindsay, eds., Cross-Domain Deterrence (Oxford: Oxford University Press, forthcoming 2018). With Austin Long.
“Stalking the Secure Second Strike: Intelligence, Counterforce, and Nuclear Strategy,” Journal of Strategic Studies, No. 1-2 (February 2015), pp. 38-73. With Austin Long.
- Winner, 2014 Amos Perlmutter Prize for best article by untenured professors in the Journal of Strategic Studies.
- Review: Andrew L. Ross, H-Diplo/ISSF, October 9, 2015.
- Nominated for APSA’s 2015 Alexander L. George Article Award for Qualitative and Multi-Method Research.
- Nominated for APSA’s 2016 Outstanding Article Award in International History and Politics.
Correspondence: “Debating American Engagement: the Future of U.S. Grand Strategy,” International Security, Vol. 38, No. 2 (Fall 2013). With Benjamin Friedman and Justin Logan.
- Response to Brooks, Ikenberry, and Wohlforth, “Don’t Come Home America: The Case against Retrenchment,” International Security, Vol. 37, No. 3 (Winter 2012/2013).
“Two Concepts of Liberty: U.S. Cold War Grand Strategies and the Liberal Tradition,” International Security, Vol. 37, No. 2 (Fall 2012).
- Nominated for APSA’s 2013 Alexander L. George Article Award for Qualitative and Multi-Method Research.
- Review: Paul C. Avey, H-Diplo/ISSF, April 12, 2013.
- Colloquy with Douglas MacDonald, H-Diplo/ISSF, May 4 and May 15, 2013.
Editor, U.S. Military Innovation after the Cold War: Creation without Destruction (New York: Routledge, 2009). With Harvey Sapolsky and Benjamin Friedman.
- The Missing Transformation. With Harvey Sapolsky and Benjamin Friedman. In Creation Without Destruction.
- Technology and the RMA. With Benjamin Friedman and David Burbach. In Creation Without Destruction.
- The RMA and the Second Inter-war Period. With Harvey Sapolsky and Benjamin Friedman. In Creation Without Destruction.
Richard J Harknett
Director, SPIA, A&S School of Public and International A
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Ivan Dinev Ivanov
Associate Professor Educator, A&S School of Public and International A
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Dr. Ivanov served as Director of Undergraduate Studies (2015-2019) and works with students interested in research on international institutions, global governance and European affairs. He was awarded the 2012 Sarah Grant Barber Outstanding Faculty Advisor Award at the University of Cincinnati. Updated information about his course offerings and office hours is available here. Please visit the SPIA's advising webpage for list of other advisors and office hours. More information about academic programs and requirements is available on the Undergraduate Advising Portal.
Dr. Ivanov supervises the Internship for Academic Credit Program. If you are interested to complete academic credit for your internship, visit the Internship for Academic Credit page for more information. Note that students need to obtain permission to register for POL 4090 (offered in the Fall) and provide documentation related to their internship.
Dr. Ivanov leads a study abroad program on International Institutions and Global Governance (POL 2097) which takes students to Brussels and the Hague. The program will be offered again in Spring 2021 via the University Honors Program. For up-to-date information please visit the program's webpage.
Please, visit his webpage if you need a letter of recommendation or click here for detailed instructions. Master students who need a thesis supervisor or reader for their MA theses or professional papers should click here for more information about my rules and expectations.
Dr. Ivanov won the May 2017 e-Learning Champion award for his use of Echo 360 lecture capture and engagement software in the POL 1080 Introduction to International Relations. His article on the use of Echo 360 in large enrollment classes can be accessed here and its findings are summarized here. In 2023, he published a study on "Resilience and Vulnerabilities Related to Russia’s Invasion of Ukraine: The Emergence of a New Club of NATO and EU Members." The article can be accessed here.
Laura D. Jenkins
Professor of Political Science, Faculty Affiliate WGSS and Asian Studies , A&S School of Public and International A
5140 CLIFTCT
Her book Religious Freedom and Mass Conversion in India (Penn Press 2019) won the Hubert Morken Best Book Prize from the Religion and Politics Section of the American Political Science Association (APSA). A study of mass conversions to Christianity, Buddhism, and Judaism and ongoing efforts to prevent conversions, Jenkins reveals how "religious freedom" arguments and laws have actually undermined the religious freedom of women, lower castes, and religious minorities.
Jenkins' book Identity and Identification in India: Defining the Disadvantaged (Routledge, 2003, 2009) examines competing demands for affirmative action on the basis of caste, religion, class, and gender and the ways the government identifies recipients through the courts, census, and official certificates. Her research as a Fulbright New Century Scholar in South Africa and India resulted in Affirmative Action Matters: Creating Opportunities for Students Around the World, co-edited with Michele S. Moses (Routledge 2014).
In her articles, she analyzes religious freedom and conversion, competing minorities’ claims for affirmative action, colonial and contemporary government anthropology, the role of social science in anti-discrimination law, reserved legislative seats for women, and the role of culture and the arts in sustainable development.
Jenkins' book chapters examine anti-Muslim political communication in the US and India, religious family laws, mass religious conversion as protest, comparative affirmative action, minority rights, historically Dalit colleges, anxious secularism, women and development, regulation of religion, and methodological diversity in political science.
In addition to two Fulbrights, Dr. Jenkins has received fellowships from the Dartmouth Humanities Center and the United States Institute of Peace.
Religious Freedom and Mass Conversion in India. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2019.
Hubert Morken Best Book Award
APSA Religion and Politics Section
Affirmative action matters: Creating opportunities for students around the world. (with Michele S. Moses). New York: Routledge, 2014.
Identity and Identification in India: Defining the Disadvantaged. London and New York: RoutledgeCurzon 2003, reissued in paperback by Routledge 2009.
Albert W Klein
Doctor or Colonel, A&S School of Public and International A
5117 CLIFTCT
Andrew Lewis
Associate Professor, A&S School of Public and International A
5131 CLIFTCT
Professor Lewis's book The Rights Turn in Conservative Christian Politics: How Abortion Transformed the Culture Wars (Cambridge, 2017), was the winner of the 2018 Humbert Morken Award for the best book in Religion and Politics from the American Political Science Association. He is also the co-author of The Full Armor of God: The Mobilization of Christian Nationalism in American Politics (Cambridge Elements, 2023), along with many peer-reviewed social science articles. Professor Lewis has authored op-eds at The New York Times, The Atlantic, The Washington Post, FiveThirtyEight, Vox, and is a frequent contributor to national media outlets.
A dedicated teacher, in 2022 Professor Lewis was awarded the A. B. Dolly Cohen Award for Excellence in Teaching by the Office of the Provost at the University of Cincinnati.
As of July 2023, Professor Lewis is serving as the Interim Executive Director of the Portman Center for Policy Solutions. He is also currently the Co-Editor-in-Chief of the political science journal Politics and Religion.
Amy C Lind
School of Public and International Affairs, A&S School of Public and International A
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Dr. Lind's areas of scholarship and teaching include international political economy, feminist international relations, comparative politics (Latin America/Global South), development and postcolonial studies, social movements, human rights. and feminist, decolonial, and queer studies. She has lived, worked, and conducted research in Latin America for over 40 years, including in Ecuador, Peru, Bolivia, Venezuela, Mexico, and Chile. She is the author of Gendered Paradoxes: Women’s Movements, State Restructuring, and Global Development in Ecuador (Penn State University Press, 2005), and editor of four volumes, including Development, Sexual Rights and Global Governance (Routledge, 2010) and Feminist (Im)mobilities in Fortress(ing) North America: Rights, Citizenships and Identities in Transnational Perspective (Ashgate Publishing, 2013, co-edited with Anne Sisson Runyan, Patricia McDermott and Marianne Marchand). Her forthcoming book, Constituting the Nation: Resignifying Nation, Economy and Family in Postneoliberal Ecuador (with Christine Keating), addresses the cultural, economic, and affective politics of Ecuador's postneoliberal Citizen Revolution. She has held distinguished visiting professor positions in Ecuador, Bolivia and Switzerland and has delivered invited lectures at institutions around the world. Currently she is Co-Editor-in-Chief of the International Feminist Journal of Politics (2022-2025). She also serves on the Advisory Board of the Consortium of Humanities Centers and Institutes (2019-2025).
Michael Evan Loadenthal
Asst Professor - Research, A&S School of Public and International A
5119 CLIFTCT
Dinshaw Mistry
Professor, International Affairs & Asian Studies
Head, Department of Asian, East European, and German Studies,
A&S School of Public and International A
4215 CLIFTCT
He specializes in international relations, security studies, Asian security, and technology and politics. Within these fields, his research covers two main areas: nuclear and missile proliferation, and South Asian security and US foreign policy in the region.
Dr. Mistry is author of two major books and co-author / editor of a third. The first, Containing Missile Proliferation, is a comprehensive study of the Missile Technology Control Regime (MTCR) and its impact on 14 missile programs; it also analyzes the supply-side approach to nonproliferation. The second, The US-India Nuclear Agreement, offers the most detailed analysis of nuclear negotiations with India; it highlights the impact of domestic politics on nuclear diplomacy. The third is an edited volume, Enduring and Emerging Issues in South Asian Security, where he authored the leading chapters on US foreign policy interests in South Asia, ranging from strategic issues to democracy and development, and regional challenges in these areas.
His additional writings appear in journals such as International Security, Security Studies, Asian Survey, Political Science Quarterly, Asian Security, Journal of Global Security Studies, and Arms Control Today, and in the International Herald Tribune, New York Times, and Washington Post.
His current research projects examine regional nuclear issues and the global arms control regime; the new dimensions of missile proliferation and missile defense; and US foreign policy in South Asia and its implications for Asian security.
Stephen T Mockabee
Associate Professor, A&S School of Public and International A
5132 CLIFTCT
Thomas G. Moore
Associate Professor, School of Public and International Affairs, A&S School of Public and International A
5115 CLIFTCT
David Niven
Associate Professor, A&S School of Public and International A
5116 CLIFTCT
Jeongmin Oh
Asst Professor, A&S School of Public and International A
5142 CLIFTCT
Prior to joining the SPIA at the UC, Jeongmin Oh was an Assistant Professor in the Department of Political Science at Arkansas State University. He served as a First Lieutenant at the Republic of Korea Army conducting security operations as a platoon leader at General Outpost (GOP) along the Demilitarized Zone (D.M.Z).
Rebecca Sanders
Assistant Director, School of Public and International Affairs , A&S School of Public and International A
5135 CLIFTCT
I am an Associate Professor of Political Science and the Assistant Director of the School of Public and International Affairs (SPIA) at the University of Cincinnati. I also direct the interdisciplinary International Human Rights Certificate and am affiliate faculty with the Department of Women's, Gender, and Sexuality Studies.
My research agenda addresses pressing global challenges at the intersection of international human rights, international security, and public health. I am especially interested in how societies grapple with rights tradeoffs in real and perceived emergencies and the dynamics of rights advancement and retrenchment.
Alexander John Thurston
Assoc Professor, A&S School of Public and International A
5133 CLIFTCT
William P Umphres
Assistant Professor-Educator, A&S School of Public and International A
5134 CLIFTCT
Professor Umphres earned his Ph.D from the University of Virginia, where his dissertation addressed the legitimacy of the use of religious and non-shared reasons and justifications in political discourse. He has published in prominent journals such as “Constellations” and “Political Theory.” His publications engage questions about how democratic processes of debate and deliberation can yield inclusive outcomes that uphold democratic norms of equality and self-government. His current research project builds on this work, deploying a systems-focused view of democratic deliberation to articulate a normative case for the importance of silence, listening, and the ceding of deliberative space amongst historically privileged groups.
In the classroom, Professor Umphres teaches courses in the History of Political Thought, Law and Society, Constitutional Law, and Courts and Judicial Politics. In these classes, he invites students to explore the theoretical and historical underpinnings of central aspects of the American Legal and Constitutional regime. Core ideas like human nature, the purpose of politics, freedom, equality and inequality, free speech, the nature and purpose of punishment, freedom of religion, freedom from religion, separation of powers, and executive privilege are examined in detail. Problems of racial and gender inequality, mass incarceration, access to goods such as healthcare, basic income, and courts are discussed and debated. Throughout, these theoretical concepts are tied back to specific manifestations in the American political context. Students are encouraged to apply these ideas to their lives as citizens.
Rina Williams
Associate Dean for Social Sciences; Professor of Political Science; Affiliate Faculty, Women's, Gender and Sexuality Studies, Sociology, and Asian Studies, A&S College of Arts and Sciences
155A ARTSCI
Gregory H. Winger
Assistant Professor, A&S School of Public and International A
5113 CLIFTCT
He has authored several works on these subjects in publications such as Foreign Affairs, Foreign Policy Analysis, and Armed Forces & Society. He is the recipient of numerous prestigious awards including the World Politics and Statecraft Fellowship from the Smith Richardson Foundation and the Liefur Erikisson Scholarship. He has also held research fellowships with esteemed institutions including the Center for Small State Studies at the University of Iceland, the Institute for Human Sciences in Vienna, and as a Fulbright Fellow in the Philippines.
Johnathan Noah Wolff
Asst Professor, A&S School of Public and International A
CLIFTCT
Visting Assistant Professors
Kristen Elizabeth Aanstoos
Asst Professor - Visiting, A&S School of Public and International A
5111 CLIFTCT
Dr. Aanstoos has a Ph.D. in Political Science at the University of California, Irvinea, an MA in Conflict, Security, and Development from King's College London, and a BSFS in International Politics from Georgetown University. Previously, she worked as a Foreign Service Officer with the U.S. Department of State, where she served in Hong Kong, Doha, and Washington, DC.
Jacob Christopher Holt
Asst Professor - Visiting, A&S School of Public and International A
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Staff
Stephanie Ellis
Program Director, Center for Cyber Strategy and Policy, A&S School of Public and International A
5115A CLIFTCT
Brent Toshio Nakagama
Evajean S ONeal
Business Administrator, School of Public and International Affairs
5118A CLIFTCT
Princess B Tucker
Program Coordinator, A&S School of Public and International A
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Adjunct Faculty
Leah Merchant Dean
Ph.D. Student, Junior Research Associate, A&S SPIA Adjuncts
Crosley Tower
Jenn Dye
Asst Dean, Law Jones Center for Race, Gend, Soc Jus
320 COLLAW
With a Ph.D. in political science, J.D., and graduate certificate in Women's, Gender, and Sexuality Studies, Dr. Dye's earlier research focused on marginalized communities, access to resources, and the resulting relationship to political power and structures. Her more recent research focuses on race and gender and how these impact identity, agency, and political power, looking at systems and structures within soceity. Dr. Dye has taught the following courses: Introduction to American Politics, International Relations, Introduction to Women's Studies, Women and Politics, International Human Rights, Criminal Justice Policy and Legislative Advocacy, and Political and Legal Processes.
Robert B Nestheide
Associate Professor - Adjunct Ann, CC HIST/PS/PHIL
CC Snyder Addition
Bruce I Petrie
Adjunct Assistant Professor, A&S SPIA Adjuncts
Crosley Tower
Manisha Sinha
Assoc Professor - Adj, A&S SPIA Adjuncts
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Kristina M. Teater
Ph.D. Candidate, A&S SPIA Adjuncts
Crosley Tower
Kristina’s research concentration is in comparative politics and international relations with a focus on the intersection of religion and politics. Her dissertation, In Search of Rights: The Use of Transnational Advocacy Networks in Response to Restrictions on Religion is a comparative analysis of Christian minorities in India and Malaysia and their use of transnational advocacy networks in response to state-imposed limits on religious practice. Her research is generously supported by a dissertation fellowship from the Taft Research Center. Kristina’s broad research interests include identity politics, international law, social movements, and human rights.
David Michael Zimov
Assoc Professor - Adj, A&S SPIA Adjuncts
5119 CLIFTCT
David served the people of the United States as a career Senior Foreign Service Officer at the U.S. Department of State from 1997-2019, and he now provides advice and training to governments, companies, and individuals around the world. He is also an Adjunct Professor of international relations at the University of Cincinnati.
David served as U.S. Consul General in Mexico, on the staff of the National Security Council under President George W. Bush/and Intelligence Officer in the White House Situation Room, as Counselor for Economic Affairs at the U.S. Embassy in Rome, Coordinator for Counterterrorism for Africa, deputy Political Counselor in Bogota Colombia, Director of Policy Planning for the Western Hemisphere, Political Military Affairs Officer in Panama, and Consular Officer in Colombia. He is the reicpient of numeous Superior Honor and other awards from the U.S. and other governments.
David also worked in international business for a leading security corporation, and has been a visiting professor and lecturer at numerous universities, military acadamies, and war colleges. He holds a Bachelor's Degree in finance from the University of Cincinnati, a Master's Degree from the University of Alabama, and Ph.D. from the London School of Economics and Political Science of the University of London. He speaks Spanish and Italian.
SPIA Coops
Affiliate Faculty
Charles R Doarn
Professor, Environmental and Public Health Sciences; Director of Telemedicine; Director, Space Research Institute for Discovery and Exploration, Office of Research, COM EH Emeriti Faculty
He received his undergraduate degree in Biological Sciences (Microbiology) from The Ohio State University in 1980 and an MBA from the University of Dayton in 1988. Additional training includes the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) Aircraft Mishap Investigation Course, Ashburn, VA; and Advanced Program Management at NASA’s Wallops Flight Facility, VA.
As the Editor-in-Chief of the Telemedicine and e-Health Journal (since 2005), Doarn is a recognized leader in telemedicine and telehealth as a scholar and teacher, having published 10 books, over 450 manuscripts, editorials, federal reports and 55 book chapters. Doarn is an editor of several books, including the 4th edition of Space Physiology and Medicine: Evidence to Practice (ISBN 978-1-4939-6650-9); an editor of A Multinational Telemedicine System for Disaster Response: Opportunities and Challenges. NATO Publication (ISBN 978-1-61499-727-6); an editor of Engineering, Life Sciences, and Health/Medicine Synergy in Aerospace Human Systems Integration. The Rosetta Stone Project. NASA SP-2017-633. (ISBN 978-1-62683-044-8); and Telemedicine, Telehealth, and Telepresence: Principles, Strategies, Applications and New Directions. Editors. R Latifi, CR Doarn, RC Merrell. Springer, New York. ISBN 978-3-030-56916-7. 2021.
Professor Doarn is a fellow of the ATA (where he serves as chair of the College of Fellows) and the Aerospace Medical Association, a member of the International Academy of Astronautics (IAA), an Honorary NASA Flight Surgeon, recipient of the Astronaut’s award - the Silver Snoopy - for his work in telemedicine for NASA worldwide, and received NASA’s Exceptional Public Service Medal (2024). Professor Doarn was recognized by the ATA with the 2016 Individual Leadership Award for his efforts nationally and internationally in telemedicine and in the 2023 with the ATA CEO Special Recognition Award. He and his co-authors were recognized with the IAA’s 2018 Luigi Napolitano Book Award in the Life Sciences.
Kimberly Downing
Administrative Official III, Acad Aff Institute for Policy Research
260D USQUARE
Eric Rademacher
Administrative Official III, Acad Aff Institute for Policy Research
260E USQUARE
Emeriti Faculty
Barbara A Bardes
School of Public and International Affairs
Stephen E Bennett
Emeritus Faculty, School of Public and International Affairs
Anne Sisson Runyan
Professor, School of Public and International Affairs and Faculty Affiliate, Department of Women's, Gender, and Sexuality Studies, School of Public and International Affairs
5111 Childrens Hospital Bldg R
She founded and coordinated the Political Science doctoral concentration in Feminist Comparative and International Politics, formerly headed the UC Department of Women’s Studies (currently known as the Department of Women’s, Gender, and Sexuality Studies for which she also served as a graduate director and affiliate faculty member), and served as the Interim Faculty Chair and Director of the Charles Phelps Taft Research Center at UC where she is also served as a Taft Research Center Fellow. She previously founded and directed women’s studies programs at the State University of New York (SUNY) at Potsdam and at Wright State University (WSU) where she held tenured appointments in political science and chaired the SUNY Potsdam Politics Department. She has also taught in Canada and Europe, including serving as a Fulbright Visiting Research Chair in North American Integration at York University in Toronto and a Visiting Scholar and Inaugural Fellow of the Research Centre on International Political Economy at the University of Amsterdam, and studied and guest-lectured in many parts of the world. A pioneer of the field of feminist international relations, she has been a recipient of the Society for Women in International Political Economy Mentor Award and the Eminent Feminist International Relations Scholar Award from the Feminist Theory and Gender Studies Section (which she helped found and led) of the International Studies Association (ISA), and has served as a Vice President of ISA, currently chairing its Research Workshop Grant Committee. Her authored, co-authored, and co-edited books include Global Gender Politics (next edition in progress), Global Gender Issues (4 editions), Gender and Global Restructuring/s (2 editions, third forthcoming December 2024), and Feminist (Im)Mobilities in Fortress(ing) North America with another monograph in progress on Indigenous women resisting nuclear colonialism, and she has published widely in the fields of feminist world politics and transnational feminisms. She has served on a range of editorial boards and was an associate editor of the International Feminist Journal of Politics for which she organized and hosted its fifth annual conference and guest-edited two special issues. In addition to her experience leading a major humanities research center funded by a substantial endowment yielding a $1.3 million annual budget as well as four academic departments and programs offering graduate and undergraduate degrees, she has been a leader in several professional organizations, including ISA, the National Women’s Studies Association (NWSA), and the American Association of University Professors (AAUP). She was awarded the AAUP Georgina M. Smith Award in 2020 for her contributions to raising the status of academic women through her union, scholarly, campus, and professional association work. She has also won multiple external and internal grants and fellowships; completed a $1.5 million capital campaign for UC Women’s Studies; directed or co-directed several collaborative research, international exchange, curricular, and conference projects; and chaired and/or served on countless campus and faculty union governance bodies. She has taught a range of graduate and undergraduate courses particularly in the areas of feminist global political economy and security studies, feminist political and international relations theory and methods, and transnational feminism at multiple institutions as well as chaired and/or served on many MA and PhD committees. For her achievements as a feminist scholar, leader, administrator, teacher, and mentor, she has rec
James A. Stever
Professor, School of Public and International Affairs
Howard B Tolley
Professor Emeritus of Political Science Adjunct Professor of Law, School of Public and International Affairs
Ohio State Employment Relations Board (SERB), Roster of Neutrals, Fact Finder, Conciliator