department of political science - College of Liberal Arts, CSULB

Transcription

department of political science - College of Liberal Arts, CSULB
CALIFORNIA STATE UNIVERSITY, LONG BEACH SPRING 2010
DEPARTMENT OF
POLITICAL SCIENCE
NEWSLETTER
GREETINGS from THE CHAIR
Dear Alumni, Students, Faculty, and Friends,
It has been many years since we’ve been in touch
through a department newsletter. As the first decade of
the new millennium draws to a close, we want to reach
out and let you know what we’ve been up to, and to find
out more about the paths you’ve taken.
As I end my first year as department chair, I wish to
recognize the service of our prior chair, Charles Noble,
who led the department with immeasurable competence,
savvy, and good cheer for nine years. We are deeply
grateful for his stewardship.
Similarly, I wish to thank our top-notch administrative
assistants for their invaluable support. Nancy St. Martin
As I started to work on this newsletter, I came upon
has been with us since 1988, and has served the univerone that was sent out by former department chair
sity even longer. Amelia Marquez joined the department
Ron Schmidt in 1985. I found that although much has
in the spring of 2000, and is thus marking the end of her
changed since that time (including Dr. Schmidt’s beard first decade with us. Student assistant Kristen Taylor
and long hair), the department’s commitment to political came on board in the spring of 2009. Words cannot sufunderstanding and engagement has remained constant. ficiently convey how much we appreciate their service
to the department.
In terms of curriculum, the department re-vamped its
undergraduate major requirements in 2007. Among
I hope that all of you are well, and I encourage you to be
the most significant changes are the creation of three
in touch to let us know about your activities and accomgeneral concentrations (Law, Politics, and Policy;
plishments. Above all, I hope that you have continued
Theory; and Global Politics); a new required course on to work to better the world around us by studying and
the Foundations and Scope of Political Science (POSC actively participating in politics.
300); and a requirement that all majors take at least one
“practicum” course that involves hands-on experience
With warm regards,
outside the classroom. These courses include traditional Teresa Wright, Chair
internships, simulations (such as Moot Court and Model
United Nations), and service-learning courses (such as
Women in Political Theory and Comparative Political
Movements).
Fifteen years ago, the department had eighteen tenured
and tenure-track faculty, only one of whom was a womINSIDE THIS ISSUE
an. Today, we have sixteen tenured and tenure-track
faculty, six of whom are women. The past few years
have also seen a number of other transitions. We are sad
Faculty publications and activities
2-4
to note the passing of former faculty members Edwin
Faculty in memoriam
4
Roberts, Leroy Hardy, and George Kacewicz. We also
remember retired faculty members Sudershan Chawla,
Alumni Notes
4-5
Ira Cohen, Robert Delorme, Robert Hayes, Alain MarStudents News
5
sot, Hans Ridder, Paul Schmidt, Christian Soe, Jay Stevens, Thomas Trombetas, and Don Urquhart. Marking
Clubs and Events
5-6
simultaneous renewal, since 2006 we have welcomed
Model united Nations
6
four new tenure-track faculty to our ranks.
Moot Court
7
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- DEPARTMENT OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
FACULTY PUBLICATIONS AND ACTIVITIES
Mary Caputi (Political Theory; Ph.D.,
Cornell University) was named the University’s Outstanding Professor for 2009-2010.
Dr. Caputi’s recent publications include: A
Kinder, Gentler America: Melancholia and the
Mythical 1950s (University of Minnesota Press,
2005) and “The Parergonal Politics of Barack
Obama,” Philosophy and Social Criticism 36
(forthcoming). At present, she is working on
a book manuscript on “Feminism and Power:
the Need for Critical Reasoning” and an edited
volume entitled, “Tracing Derrida: Deconstruction Across the Liberal Arts.” In spring 2009,
Dr. Caputi taught a course at the University of
Venice Ca Foscari while on sabbatical in Italy.
Christopher Dennis (American Politics;
Ph.D., University of Georgia) has recently
published: “Constituents’ Economic Interests
and Senator Support for Spending Limitations”
(with Marshall H. Medoff and Michael Magnera), Journal of Socio-Economics 37:6 (2008)
and “The Impact of Politics on the Distribution
of State and Local Tax Burdens” (with William
H. Moore and Tracey Somerville), Social Science Journal 44:2 (2007).
Larry N. George (International Relations;
Ph.D. Princeton University) has recently published: “American Insecurities and the Ontopolitics of US Pharmacotic Wars” in Francois
Debrix and Mark Lacy, eds., Insecure States
(Routledge, 2009) and “Hares in the Garden
of Souls: Leo Strauss, Neoconservatism, and
the Betrayal of Zetetic Political Philosophy”
in Richard King, ed., Political Theory and the
Legacy of Leo Strauss (proceedings of the 2006
Nottingham conference on “The Legacy of Leo
Strauss”), forthcoming.
Cora Goldstein (Comparative Politics; Ph.D.
University of Chicago) has recently published:
Capturing the German Eye: American Visual
Propaganda in Occupied Germany (University
of Chicago, 2009); “2003 Iraq, 1945 Germany
and 1940 France: Success and Failure in Military Occupations,” Military Review
forthcoming); and “A Strategic Failure: American Information Control Policy in Occupied
Iraq,” Military Review (March-April 2008).
Liesl Haas (Comparative Politics; Ph.D. University of North Carolina) has recently published: Feminist Policymaking in Chile (Pennsylvania State University Press, forthcoming)
and “Gender Equality Policies in Latin America” (with Merike Blofield), in Merike Blofied,
ed., The Great Gap: Inequality and Politics
of Redistribution in Latin America (Pennsylvania State University Press, forthcoming). In
2008-2009, Dr. Haas was awarded a Fulbright
Research grant to study the impact of gender
quotas on policymaking, which she pursued
while on sabbatical in Costa Rica.
Richard Haesly (Comparative Politics; Ph.D.
University of North Carolina) While on sabbatical in Costa Rica in 2008-2009, Dr. Haesly
worked with Dr. Haas on a new project entitled
“My Neighbor’s Keeper: Religious Identity,
Community Membership and the Creation of
Policy Preferences.” The project was awarded
an APSA Small Grant award in 2009-2010.
POSC MA students Donnie Bessom and Brittany Conrad are assisting with the research for the
project. Dr. Haesly also serves as the department’s Internship Advisor, and recently joined
the L.A. County Sheriff’s Department Education Based Incarceration Initiative Curriculum
Committee.
William Leiter (Public Law; Ph.D. University
of Chicago) will soon publish Affirmative Action in Antidiscrimination Law and Policy: An
Overview and Synthesis, Second Edition (with
Samuel Leiter) (State University Press of New
York, forthcoming).
Larry Martinez (International Relations;
Ph.D. University of Santa Barbara) is the department’s Model United Nations coordinator,
and has led study abroad courses in Kazakhstan.
Recent publications include: “Science in Service of Power: Space Exploration Initiatives as
Catalysts of Regime Evolution,” Air and Space
Law (Netherlands: Kluwer) (Fall 2007) and
Larry Martinez, et al., “Commercialization of
Democracy: The Rise of the Political Industrial
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- DEPARTMENT OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
Complex,” in Caroline Robertson-von Trotha,
ed., Globale Handlungsfelder: Medien - Politik
– Bildung (Universitätsverlag Karlsruhe, 2006).
Charles Noble (American Politics; Ph.D.
University of California, Berkeley) has recently published: “From Neoconservative to New
Right: American Conservatives and the Welfare
State,” in Michael Thompson, ed., Confronting
the New Conservatism: The Rise of the Right
in America (New York University Press, 2007).
He also has contributed numerous pieces to
Le Multilatéral, Le Devoir, Libération, and the
“Blogue” on American electoral politics hosted
by the Centre d’Études et de Recherches Internationales at the Université de Montréal. In the
summers of 2008 and 2009 he co-taught courses at the Université de Montréal. On sabbatical
in spring 2010, he is working on a manuscript
entitled, “L’Autre République.”
Amy Cabrera Rasmussen (American
Politics; Ph.D. Yale University, MA and BA
CSULB) serves as an undergraduate advisor for
the department, and is the faculty advisor to the
PSGSA. She is working on a book manuscript
entitled, “Constructing Health: Reproductive
and Sexual Health, Identity, and Agenda-setting
in the United States.” Dr. Cabrera Rasmussen
is on the Executive Council of the organized
section on Race, Ethnicity, and Politics for the
American Political Science Association, and
since 2008 has participated in the California
Forum for Diversity in Graduate Education.
Lewis Ringel (Public Law; Ph.D. University
of Maryland) is the director of the department’s Moot Court program and Legal-Judicial
Apprenticeship. Recent publications include:
“Making Moot Court Matter: How to Get the
Most Out of Moot Court Simulations,” Academy of Criminal Justice Sciences Today 34:2
(June 2009).
Gerry Riposa (American Politics; Ph.D. University of California, Riverside) is the Dean of
the College of Liberal Arts at CSULB.
Ron Schmidt (American Politics; Ph.D. University of California, Riverside) has recently
published: Ronald Schmidt et al., Newcomers,
Outsiders, and Insiders: Recent Immigrants
and Racial Politics in the United States in the
Early Twenty-First Century (University of
Michigan Press, 2010); Ronald Schmidt et al.,
“Acculturation Orientations and Social Relations Between Immigrant and Host Community
Members in California” Journal of Cross Cultural Psychology 40:3 (May 2009); “Immigration, Diversity, and the Challenge of Democratic
Legitimacy,” in R. Jeffrey Lustig, ed. California’s Constitutional Crisis, and Reclaiming the
Public Good (Berkeley: Heyday Books, 2010);
“English Hegemony and the Politics of EthnoLinguistic Justice in the US,” in M. Rafael
Salaberry, ed., Language Allegiances and Bilingualism in the US (Bristol, UK: Multilingual
Matters, 2009); and “Vers un pluralisme culturel
viable: le rôle de la migration internationale”
(“Toward a Viable Cultural Pluralism: The Role
of International Migration”), in François Crépeau, Delphine Nakache, and Idil Atak, eds., Les
migrations internationales contemporaines: Une
dynamique complexe au cœur de la globalization (Les Presses de l’Université de Montréal,
2009).
Serena Simoni (International Relations; Ph.D.
University of Southern California) has recently
published: “Transatlantic Relations: A Theoretical Framework” in Joyce Kaufman and Andrew
Dorman, eds., The Future of Transatlantic Relations: Perceptions, Policy and Practice (Stanford University Press, forthcoming).
Barry Steiner (International Relations; Ph.D.
Columbia University) has recently published:
“Diplomatic Mediation as an Independent Variable,” International Negotiation 14:1 (2009) and
“To Arms Control or Not: A Focused Comparison,” Contemporary Security Policy (forthcoming).
Kevin Wallsten (American Politics; Ph.D.
University of California, Berkeley) has recently
published: “Agenda Setting and the Blogosphere: An Analysis of the Relationship between
Mainstream Media and Political Blogs,” Review
of Policy Research 24:6 (Dec. 2007); “Political
Blogs: Transmission Belts, Soapboxes, Mobilizers, or Conversation Starters?” Journal of
Information Technology and Politics 4:3 (April
2008); “Gay Rights” (with Patrick Egan
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- DEPARTMENT OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
and Nathaniel Percily), in Nathaniel Percily, Jack
Citrin, and Patrick Egan, ed., Public Opinion and
Constitutional Controversy (Oxford University
Press, 2008); and “’Yes We Can’: How Online
Viewership, Blog Discussion, Campaign Statements and Mainstream Media Coverage Produced
a Viral Video Phenomenon,” Journal of Information, Technology and Politics (May 2010).
Jason Whitehead (Public Law; Ph.D. University of Southern California, JD Willamette University, BA CSULB) is the pre-law advisor for the
department and the university, and serves as the
faculty advisor to the Undergraduate Law Review
at CSULB. Dr. Whitehead has recently published: “Wallace v. Jaffree,” in Mel Urofsky, ed.,
The Public Response to Controversial Supreme
Court Decisions (CQ Press, 2006). He has also
completed a book manuscript entitled, “Judicial
Values: Judging, Politics, and the Rule of Law”
and an article entitled, “The Road Less Traveled:
New Institutionalism, Critical Legal Studies and
the Constitutive Theory of Law.”
Amy Widestrom (American Politics; Ph.D.
Syracuse University) has recently published:
“Buffalo, NY, 1854 - 1877,” “Buffalo, NY,
1877-1896” and “St. Louis, MO, 1941-1952,”
in Richardson Dilworth, ed., Cities in American
History: a Reference Guide (CQ Press, forthcoming); and “Political Parties and Elections”
(with Jeffrey M. Stonecash), “The Legislature,
M. Stonecash), and “The Economy, Taxes, and
Policy Constraints in New York” (with Stephanie
Lundquist), in Jeffrey M. Stonecash, ed., Governing New York State (5th Edition) (SUNY Press,
2006). In 2008 – 2009, Dr. Widestrom worked for
the Senate Committee on Banking, Housing, and
Urban Affairs as an American Political Science
Association Congressional Fellow. She recently
joined the L.A. County Sheriff’s Department
Education Based Incarceration Initiative Curriculum Committee.
Teresa Wright (Comparative Politics, Ph.D.
University of California, Berkeley) has recently
published: Accepting Authoritarianism: StateSociety Relations in China’s Reform Era (Stanford University Press, 2010); “Sources of Social
Support for China’s Current Political Order: The
‘Thick Embeddedness’ of Private Capital Hold-
ers” (with Christopher McNally), Communist and
Post-Communist Studies (forthcoming); “StateSociety Relations in Reform-Era China: A Unique
Case of Post-Socialist State-led Late Development?” Comparative Politics 40(3) (April 2008);
“Tenuous Tolerance in China’s Countryside,”
in Peter Gries and Stanley Rosen, eds., Chinese
Politics: State, Society, and the Market (Routledge, 2010); and “Organization, Mobilization,
and Comparative Perspectives on Opportunity:
Student Movements in China and Taiwan,” in
Kevin O’Brien, ed., Popular Protest in China
(Harvard University Press, 2008).
Faculty in memoriam
We are sad to note the loss
of beloved professor Edwin
Roberts (Political Theory;
Ph.D. University of
California, Riverside), who
passed away in 2005. Dr.
Roberts was promoted to
Full Professor earlier that
that year. Along with his
outstanding teaching, Dr. Roberts earned
scholarly acclamation for his publication of
The Anglo-Marxists: A Study in Ideology and
Culture (Rowman and Littlefield, 1997). Dr.
Roberts’ family has established a scholarship in
his name, which is awared yearly to a Political
Science major.
PAGE 5
- DEPARTMENT OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
Alumni Notes
Alfredo Carlos (MA, 2008) is working on his Ph.D.
in Political Science at U.C. Irvine.
Tracey Somerville (MA, 2005) is a Political Science
instructor at Moorpark College.
Sun Young Kwak (MA, 2002) is working on her
Ph.D. at USC.
Kristin Hallak (BA, 2008) is in her second year at
UCLA law school.
Abdul-Qayum Mohmand (MA, 1998) received his
Ph.D. in Political Science at Utah State University and
is now Chair of Social Sciences and Humanities at the
American University of Afghanistan, in Kabul.
Gary Gomez (BA, 2006) received his law degree
at the University of Wisconsin, and is now a Deputy
District Attorney in Wisconsin.
Jessica Martinez (BA, 2009) is a Case Assistant at
the Habeas Corpus Resource Center in San Francisco.
Katie Kruger (MA, 2008) is working on her Ph.D. at
the University of Maryland.
Jalyn Wang (BA, 2004) is an Assistant District Attorney in San Diego. She judged the finals of the 2008
and 2009 Western Regional Moot Court Tournaments.
Cliff Dorsey (MA, 2006) coaches Moot Court at
Westwood College and is in his first year at Southwestern School of Law.
Amy Cucinella (BA, 2003) is an attorney and works
in the Civil Rights/Liberties Division of the DHS.
Thomas Hartnett (BA, 2004), Kirsten Brown (BA,
2004), Bejamin Koegel (BA, 2003), Robert Cardenas (BA, 2006), Michael Garcia (BA, 2003), Stephen Boyett (BA, 2006) and Matthew Meuse (BA,
2006) are all new lawyers.
Cory Scott (BA, 2008) is a lawyer, and has externed
for a federal judge in Los Angeles.
Audrey Mink (BA, 2004) is a lawyer, and has clerked
for a federal judge in Texas.
Holly Buchanan (BA, 2005) earned her JD and will
be interning with the U.S. State Department’s Political
and Specialized Agencies Section at the US Mission to
the UN in Geneva.
Erik Aho (BA, 2007) is in his third year of law school
at the New York Law School. He works in the Man-
hattan DA’s office.
Michael Santos (BA, 2006) is in his third year at
Thomas Jefferson School of Law.
Jillian Martins (BA, 2008) is in her second year at
Hastings School of Law.
Lindsay Nelson (BA, 2008) is in her second year at
Southwestern School of Law.
Ted McNamara (BA, 2009) is in his first year at
the University of Miami School of Law. He judged a
round of the 2010 American Collegiate Moot Court
Association National Tournament.
Melissa Sanchez (BA, 2009) has a paralegal certificate from UCLA.
Estee Sepulveda (BA, 2005) is working on his MA at
George Washington University.
Lisa Herbst (BA, 2002) earned her MPA at USC, and
is working in China.
Michaelyn Thomas (BA, 2007) works for Boeing and
has judged several Moot Court tournaments.
Stephanie Crahen (BA, 2006; MA, 2009) is a field
representative for Congresswoman Jane Harman.
Erin Adam (BA, 2008) is in her first year at the
University of Washington law school, and has been
accepted into the Ph.D./J.D. program at the University
of Washington.
Ruben Escobedo (BA, 2008) is working on his law
degree at Chapman University.
Students News
Mandy Finlay (BA, 2010) has been admitted to
Georgetown law school.
Marcus Hill (BA, 2010) has been admitted to the MA program at Illinois State University with a full scholarship, a teaching assistantship, and a monthly stipend for work as a forensics coach.
Kelly Liptan (MA, 2010) is working full-time as
an analyst intern with the U.S. Government Accountability Office, focusing on northern border security issues.
PAGE 6- DEPARTMENT OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
clubs and events
O
n March 26, 2009, the department sponsored a memorial lecture in honor of former POSC chair and professor
Leroy Hardy. The keynote speaker was Pulitzer Prize winning
journalist and author Bill Boyarsky, who delivered a talk entitled, “Leroy Hardy and Reapportionment in California.”
The newly-formed, student-led Political Theory Roundtable
meets Tuesdays at 5pm at the Coffee Bean on campus. Contact:
Michael Mermelstein ([email protected])
The Political Science Student Association (PSSA) meets every
other Tuesday at 5pm in SSPA 106 to discuss current political events and issues, view documentary films, and plan future
events. Many PSSA members participated in the on-campus
budget protests of March 4, 2010, and in late March some joined
anti-war demonstrations in Hollywood. Contact: Ben Levin
([email protected]) or Dr. Ed Kaskla (ekaskla@aol.
com)
Dr. Cora Goldstein and 2009 Outstanding Graduating Senior Jessica Martinez.
The Political Science Graduate Student Association (PSGSA)
meets twice monthly. Since 2008, it has sponsored an MA orientation and workshops on “how to apply to a doctoral program,”
“the realities of getting a Ph.D.,” and “how to get a job.” Contact: Dr. Amy Rasmussen ([email protected]).
At the 2009 annual Pi Sigma Alpha awards banquet, honors were given to: Jessica Martinez (Outstanding Graduating
Senior), Megan Blash (Outstanding Graduate Student), Hannah Grady (John T. Amendt Academic Achievement), Andrew
Kress (Political Science Alumni Scholarship), Amanda Finlay
(Edwin Roberts Scholarship), EdgarGutierrez (Robert Delorme Scholarship), and Katie Kitchens, Saul Rodriguez, Milton
Sanabria, and Candace Walsh (Zarrabi Scholarship for International Education). The 2010 awards banquet will be held on April
30.
Dr. Charles Noble and 2009 Outstanding Graduate Student Megan Blash.
PAGE 7 -
DEPARTMENT OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
Model UNited nations
M
UN goes to Kazakhstan: In May-June 2009, Dr. Larry Martinez organized a study abroad course that took nine CSULB MUN students to Kazakhstan and a MUN mini-conference at the UNESCO Central Asian Cluster
Office in Almaty, Kazakhstan. The CSULB MUN students
participated in POSC 395i, “Politics and Cultures Along the
Silk Road,” which commenced its tour at the crossroads of
the Silk Road, Istanbul, Turkey. The students participated
in an academic conference hosted by Sabanci University on
“Pluralism and Politics in Turkey.” They then flew on to
Larry Martinez (third from left) with the MUN delegation
in Almaty, Kazakhstan.
Almaty, Kazakhstan, where they joined their Kazakh partner students in a jointly-taught course at the Kazakh
stan Institute for Management, Economics and Strategic Research (www.kimep.kz). The mini-conference held at
UNESCO in Almaty was the culmination of the four-week experience along the Silk Road. Dr. Martinez is orga
nizing the 2010 delegation to Kazakhstan; applicants (anyone can apply, including alumni) are urged to consult
www.csulb.edu/~politico.
Far West Conference: CSULB’s Model United Nations team hosted the Model United Nations of the Far West (MUNFW) in April 2010. The conference, held in San Francisco, CA, was led by Alexandra (Alex) Lohman and Alexandra (Ali) Carter as co-Secretaries-General. Model United Nations attempts to model the inter-
national workings of the United Nations. Delegates, who come from an array of domestic and international colleges, meet together and represent different coutries CSULB MUN Team during the Diplomats’ Banquet of the
Model United Nations of the Far West Conference (MUNfrom all over the world, attempting to address and solve
FW).
pressing international issues. Alex and Ali were selected last April to run this year’s conference, which was its
60th anniversary year. Conference participants discussed issues of international economics through a simulation of the Group of 20 on issues of international law within the simulation of the International Court of Justice.
Other topics for discussion included natural disaster risk reduction, international maritime piracy, and the effects of nuclear energy on the environment and agriculture.
PAGE 8 -
DEPARTMENT OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
Moot Court
A
t the CSULB-hosted 2010 8th annual Western Regional Collegiate Moot Court Tournament, which was
attended by 34 teams from around the country, five CSULB teams and one hybrid team of CSULB and
Chapman University students advanced from Friday to Saturday’s elimination rounds, earning automatic bids
to the national finals at Florida International University School of Law in Miami, Florida. The five automatic
bids represent a record for CSULB. The CSULB team of Timothy Appelbaum and Reema Abboud, which
finished third, became the first CSULB team since 2003-4 to advance to the semi-finals. Appelbaum and Abboud are just the second and third students in CSULB history to earn multiple bids to the national tournament
and they are the only two CSULB students to earn multiple automatic bids to the national tournament. Also
earning automatic bids were Jillian Ewan/Ryan King, Richard Bosanko/Kyle Bourne, Ashlie Brillault/Jose
Reynoso, and Katie McHale, whose teammate is Chapman University’s Kyle Lee.
Four CSULB students won top orator awards. These include Jose Reynoso (2nd), Jillian Ewan (3rd), Matthew Gunter (7th), and Ashlie Brillault (9th). Additionally, Appelbaum and Abboud were awarded prizes of
$250 each by the Long Beach Bar Association for their performance as CSULB’s top team.
At the national finals in Florida, the teams of Appelbaum/Abboud, Reynoso/Brillaut and McHale/Lee advanced to elimination rounds. This is the 3rd straight year that CSULB teams have reached the elimination
rounds. Unfortunately, all three teams were eliminated in 2-1 decisions. Reema Abboud and Timothy Appelbaum were two of just three CSULB students to advance to two elimination rounds at the national tournament. Timothy Appelbaum was named the 4th best in the nation. He is only the second CSULB orator award.
Long Beach Bar Association, President Maria Rohaidy came to campus to formally congratulate Timothy Appelbaum and Reema Abboud for their accomplishments, acknowledging their achievement with a student and a one-year membership in the bar
association.
Lewis Ringel (left), Director of CSULB’s Moot Court Program, with
Abboud, Appelbaum, and Rohaidy (right).
PAGE 9 -
DEPARTMENT OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
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