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M.A.
Eberhard-Karls-Universitaet Tuebingen, Germany
Ph.D. European University Institute, Florence/Italy
Courses:
PSC 124:
International Relations
PSC 300:
International Human Rights
PSC 350:
Transnational Politics
PSC 400:
Multicultural Europe in World Affairs
PSC 757:
Non-State Actors in World Affairs
Recent Publications:
"The New Transnationalism and Comparative
Politics," Comparative Politics,(co-author Mitchell A.
Orenstein), forthcoming 2006.
"Domestic and transnational perspectives on democratization", in International
Studies Review 6 (4) December 2004.
"Being (Almost) Like a State: Challenges and Opportunites of Transnational
Non-Governmental Activism", in: Margaret G. Hermann and Bengt Sundelius, eds.,
Comparative Foreign Policy Analysis. Theories and Methods, Prentice Hall 2003.
"International Relations", in: Adam and Jessica Kuper, eds., Social Science
Encylopedia, 3rd edition, Routledge 2003.
Vita Link:
http://faculty.maxwell.syr.edu/hpschmitz/
Research Interests:
Non-state actors in world affairs, transnational relations, comparative
democratization (Eastern Africa as regional focus) and human rights.
Current Research Projects:
Non-state actors in world affairs: The research explores the role of non-state
activism in global politics. While non-state actors play an increasingly visible
and important role in world affairs, their strategies and sources of influence
are still poorly understood. Scholars have identified the internal resources of
NGOs and movements, their external environment, and variation in the targets of
activism as crucial to explaining success or failure. Beyond the question of
specifying more clearly when and why non-state actors matter, the research
program also asks normative questions about the desirability of an increasing
role of non-state actors. Questions asked here relate to the potentially
detrimental effects of such activism on state capacities, the failure of many
transnational activists to understand local conditions, or the resource gap
between Northern and Southern NGOs. The research program is carried out in close
cooperation with the Moynihan Institute for Global Affairs, the Workshop on
Contentious Politics at Cornell University (Sidney Tarrow), and SUNY-Binghamton
(Benita Roth). Once a year, we organize a graduate workshop bringing together
students and faculty from the three campuses.
Comparative democratization: The research seeks to identify the respective role
and weight of domestic and international factors in determining the pace and
direction of domestic political change. Neither international factors, nor
domestic conditions alone are sufficient to explain successes and failures of
democratic regime change. My previous research has shown that outside
interventions for human rights and democracy have varying effects depending on
the opportunities exploited by domestic allies and opponents. Additional
research is necessary to identify more promising and subtle strategies of
outside intervention. The research bridges the still prevalent gap between
international relations scholarship and comparative politics. In particular, it
brings together recent research on transnational activism and the more
agency-centered field of democratization studies.
This page current as of: January 25, 2005 |