
Andrew Wender Cohen
Associate Professor of History
145 Eggers
Hall / Syracuse University Syracuse, NY 13244-1020
Tel. 315-443-4415
email:awcohe01@maxwell.syr.edu

Academic
Specialization
Modern United States History
Law, Political Economy, and the State
Social History and Class Formation
Education
-
University of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois –
Ph.D., History, awarded with Distinction, 1999.
Dissertation, “The Struggle for Order: Law, Labor, and Resistance to the
Corporate Ideal in Chicago, 1900-40.” George Chauncey, advisor.
M.A., History, 1992.
- Columbia College,
Columbia University, New York, New York –
A.B., History, 1990.
Experience
- Associate Professor – Department of History –
Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs – Syracuse University –
2005 to Present.
- Assistant Professor – Department of History –
Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs – Syracuse University –
1999 to 2005.
- J. Willard Hurst Fellow – Institute for Legal
Studies – U. of Wisconsin Law School – 1997 to 1999.
- Researcher – Public Citizen’s Congress Watch,
Washington, D.C. – 1991.
Books
- Contraband: The War on Smuggling and the Birth of
the American Century. W.W. Norton & Co., forthcoming.
- The Racketeer’s Progress: Chicago and the Struggle
for the Modern American Economy, 1900-1940. Cambridge University Press,
2004.
Articles—History
- "Labor and the Law." Encyclopedia of U.S. Labor
and Working Class History. Routledge, 2006.
- “The Racketeer’s Progress: Crime, Commerce, and
Law in Chicago, 1919-1929.” Journal of Urban History 29:5 (July 2003).
- “Obstacles to History? Modernization and the Lower
Middle Class in Chicago, 1900-1940.” The Middling Sorts: Explorations in
the History of the American Middle Class, ed. Burton Bledstein and
Robert Johnston. Routledge, 2001.
- “Business Myths, Lawyerly Strategies, and Social
Context: Ernst on Labor Law History.” Law and Social Inquiry 23:1
(1998).
- American Legal History Research Guide: University
of Chicago and Chicago Area Research Libraries and Archives. With
Richard Ross et al. Chicago: University of Chicago, 1994.
- “Teamsters,” “Material Service Corporation,”
“Labor Law.” Entries in Encyclopedia of Chicago History (University of
Chicago Press, 2005).
- Review. Lindberg, To Serve and Collect (1998) in
Law and and History Review 21:1 (Spring 2003): 241.
- Review. Robertson, Capital, Labor, & State (2000)
in Enterprise and Society 2:4 (2001): 850.
Publications—Current Events
- “Capitol Crimes: Sex, Violence, And Congressional
Scandals Through History.” Writ (Findlaw.com), 7/18/2001.
- “Why ‘Close Winners’ Seldom Stay Long in the White
House.” CNN.com, 12/5/2000.
- “Increasing the Size of Congress Could Limit
Campaign Spending.” CNN.com, 6/30/2000.
- They Love to Fly, and It Shows: An Analysis of
Privately Funded Travel by Members of Congress, 1989-90. With Michael
McCauley. Wash., D.C.: Public Citizen’s Congress Watch, 1991.
- PACking the Deck: How Political Action Committees
Give to Both Candidates. With Jason Hatch. Wash., D.C.: Public Citizen’s
Congress Watch, 1991.
Awards, Fellowships,
and Honors
- American Fellow, Radcliffe Institute for Advanced
Study, 2005-6.
- Fellowship, National Humanities Center, 2005-6
(Declined).
- Daniel Patrick Moynihan Award, Maxwell School of
Citizenship and Public Affairs, Syracuse University, 2005.
- John M. Olin Faculty Fellowship, National
Association of Scholars, 2002-3.
- National Endowment for the Humanities Fellowship,
Newberry Library, 2002-3 (declined)
- Appleby-Mosher Research Fellowship – Syracuse
University – 2000, 2001.
- J. Willard Hurst Fellowship for Legal History –
Institute for Legal Studies– 1997-9.
- Mellon Dissertation Fellowship – Andrew W. Mellon
Foundation – 1996-7.
- Guggenheim Dissertation Fellowship – Harry Frank
Guggenheim Foundation – 1996.
- Littleton-Griswold Fellowship– American Historical
Association – 1995.
- University Fellowship – University of Chicago –
1991 to 1995.
- Younger Scholars Fellowship – National Endowment
for the Humanities – 1989.
- Team of the Year (top U.S. partnership) – American
Parliamentary Debate Assn. – 1989.
- Quarterfinalist – World University Debate
Championships – 1989.
Papers,
Presentations, and Other Significant Work
- “Smuggling and Empire: International Trade and the
American State, 1870-1917.” Paper. American Society for Legal History
Annual Meeting. November 2006.
- “Smuggler's Nation: Gilded-age America Buys the
World, 1870-1917.” Invited Talk. Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study.
March 2006.
- “The Racketeer’s Progress.” Invited Talk. Kheel
Center, Cornell University School of Industrial and Labor Relations.
September 2004.
- “The Chicago Race Riots and Urban Legal Culture,
1911-1922.” Paper. American Society for Legal History Annual Meeting.
November 2003.
- Commentator. “Lessons for a Globalizing World?
Historical Experiences of Europe and the United States in Market
Integration.” Global Affairs Institute, Maxwell School of Citizenship
and Public Affairs, Syracuse University, January 2003.
- “Labor Racketeering and the De-Politicization of
Criminal Law.” Invited Talk. Law and the Disappearance of Class in 20th
Century America. University of Pennsylvania Law School. November 2002.
- “The Lessons of Sacco and Vanzetti for Today.”
Panel. Syracuse Social Movements Initiative. Syracuse University.
September 2002.
- “The Racketeer’s Progress: Crime, Commerce, and
Law in Chicago, 1919-1929.” Organization of American Historians Annual
Meeting. April 2002.
- Commentator. “Organized Labor and Organized Crime:
Cleaning House in the Building Service Employees’ Union.” Gotham Center
Conference on New York City History. October 2001.
- “Racketeering, Criminal Law, and the New Deal
Legal Order.” Invited Talk. Syracuse University Law School Faculty
Speakers Series. November 2000.
- “Rethinking the Modern Economy: The Building
Trades, Violence, and the Law in Chicago, 1900-1920.” Invited Talk.
Research Seminar. Center for the History of Business, Technology, and
Society. Hagley Museum and Library. May 2000.
- Roundtable discussion of J. Anthony Lukas’s Big
Trouble. North American Labor History Conference. October 1998.
- “State, Civil Society, and Labor Union Development
in Chicago, 1900-40.” Law and Society Association Annual Meeting. June
1998.
- “The Power of Provincialism and the Validity of
Local History.” Conference: Practicing Space, Time, And Place: The Next
Social History. University of Chicago. April 1998.
- “The Transformation of ‘Racketeering,’ 1927-35:
Crime, Market Regulation, and the Rise of the New Deal Order.” Social
Science History Association Annual Meeting. November 1995.
- “‘Unlawful and felonious, wicked, fraudulent, and
malicious’: Conspiracy Cases and the Regulation of Chicago’s Economy,
1900-35.” American Society for Law and History Annual Meeting. October
1995.
- “History and the Western Civilization Sequence.”
Panel Discussant. University of Chicago Core Retreat. June 1995.
- “Crime Stories: The Underground Economy and the
Social History of Crime in Cook County, Illinois, 1920-35.” Seminar
Paper. 1992.
- “Racial Segmentation in the Washington, D.C. Home
Rule Movement.” Paper for the National Endowment for the Humanities.
1989.
Service
- Editorial Board – Law and History Review – 2005-10
(five-year term).
- Program Committee – American Society for Legal
History Annual Meeting — 2006-7.
- Search Committee – Modern Middle East— Syracuse
History Department – 2006-7.
- Executive Committee – Syracuse History
Department—2004-5.
- Search Committee – Modern South Asia—Syracuse
History Department – 2004-5.
- Graduate Committee – Syracuse History Department –
2003-4.
- Maxwell 132 Course – Maxwell School, Syracuse
University – 2003.
- Roscoe Martin Fellowship Committee – Maxwell
School, Syracuse University – 2001.
- Freshman Forum Advisor – Syracuse College of Arts
and Sciences – 2000, 2003.
- Faculty Advisor – Phi Alpha Theta (Honor Society)
– 1999-2000.
References
- Alan Brinkley – Nevins Professor of History –
Columbia University.
- George Chauncey – Professor of History – Yale
University.
- Kathleen Conzen – Professor of History –
University of Chicago.
- Leon Fink – UIC Distinguished Professor –
University of Illinois, Chicago.
- Christopher Tomlins – Senior Fellow – American Bar
Foundation.


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