The Department of
Political Science
Graduate Studies
  Political Science homepage  > 

 

Program Requirements

Admissions and Financial Support

Frequently Asked Questions

Faculty

Graduate Courses

Teaching Opportunities

Research Facilities

Placement

Administration and Staff

Contact Us

Graduate School of Arts & Science

 

 
 
Name       Areas of Interest Dissertation Title  Links 

Ozlem
Elgun
 

International Conflict, Authoritarian Regimes, Civil-Military Relations, Research Design and Methodology, & Game Theory
Authoritarian Regimes and Their Conflict Behavior: Initiation, Duration and Outcomes
Home Page
CV
Email

K. Philipp
Fuerst
 

International Conflict, Crisis Communication, Alliances
Reassurance in Grand Strategy and Crisis Diplomacy
Home Page
CV
Email

Jessica
Harrell
 

American Politics, Public Opinion/Voting Behavior, Campaigns and Elections, and Gender Politics Gender and Congressional Campaign Strategies Home Page
CV
Email

Keisha
Haywood
 

African politics; separatism and secession; civil war; the African state; and, ethnic conflict and genocide. This Land is My Land: Why Violent Secessionist Groups Become Nonviolent Home Page
CV
Email

Jeffrey
Kucik
 

International and comparative political economy, institutional design and global economic governance, multinational firm behavior & politics of foreign investment. The Political Economy of Risk
and the Design of International Trade Institutions
Home Page
CV
Email

Joel D.
Moore

Comparative Political Economy, Economic Development, Political Institutions and Economic Governance in Developing Countries
Varieties of Capitalist Development Home Page
CV
Email

Ora John
Reuter

Comparative Politics, Party Systems, Democratization, Authoritarian Regimes, Russia and the former Soviet Union The Origins of Dominant Parties Home Page
CV
Email

Emily
Hencken
Ritter
 

Human rights institutions, law, & practices; international governance & judicial institutions; domestic institutions & human rights practices; international conflict and security; quantitative and formal methods

Explaining Human Rights Violations: Repression, Dissent, and the Role of Domestic & International Legal Institutions Home Page
CV
Email

Jane
Winzer
 

Political Economy & International Relations Expanding the Scope of Multilateral Regimes: The Uruguay Round of GATT Negotiations Home Page
CV
Email

 

 

Copyright © Emory University, Atlanta, Georgia
The Department of Political Science, 327 Tarbutton Hall, 1555 Dickey Drive, Atlanta, GA 30322, 404-727-6572 phone, 404-727-4586 fax
For web comments or questions, contact
polisci@emory.edu. Last update November 4, 2009