Based in Washington, D.C.
Rome 416
Former professor and chair of the Political Science Department at Brown University, where he was director of the Global Security Program of the Thomas J. Watson Jr. Institute of International Studies, the Center for Foreign Policy Development and the International Relations Program; was professor of political science at the University of Minnesota and director of its Center for International Studies; served as vice president of the International Studies Association and program chair of three ISA international meetings; was editor of the International Studies Quarterly; was a Fulbright Fellow in Belgium and Austria, and a senior fellow at the United States Institute of Peace and the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars; main research focuses on the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe; Ph.D., political science, Stanford University
Building Security in Post-Cold War Eurasia: The OSCE and U.S. Foreign Policy (1999); The Negotiation Process and the Resolution of International Conflicts (1996); Unity and Disintegration in International Alliances, co-author (1973, 1984); "The Debate in the U.S." in Obama and the Bomb: The Vision of a World Free of Nuclear Weapons (2011); "International Organizations and Non-State Actors, Russia and Eurasia: The OSCE" in Russia in Eurasia: External Players and Regional Dynamics (2010); "Constituting a Reunified Cyprus: A View From the USA" in Journal of Balkan and Near Eastern Studies (2009); "Negotiation Risk: Controlling Biological Weapons" in Negotiation Risk: International Talks on Hazardous Issues (2009); "The OSCE Role in European and Transatlantic Security: Does It Have a Future?" in The United States and Europe in a Changing World (2009); "Strategic Arms Control Negotiations: SALT and START" in Containing the Atom (2002); "Bargaining and Problem-Solving: Two Perspectives on International Negotiation" in Turbulent Peace: The Challenges of Managing International Conflict (2001); "Disintegrating States: Separating Without Violence" in Preventive Negotiation: Avoiding Conflict Escalation (2001)
2012 Fall
2012 Fall
