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ERIK GARTZKE Email: [email protected] Web: erikgartzke.com Department of Political Science Social Sciences Building, Rm. 362 9500 Gilman Drive #0521 La Jolla, CA 92093-0521 Permanent Employment University of California, San Diego Professor, 2014 – Associate Professor, 2007 – 2014 Columbia University Associate Professor, 2003 – 2007 Assistant Professor, 2000 – 2003 The Pennsylvania State University Assistant Professor, 1997 – 2000 Visiting Positions and Courtesy Appointments Columbia University Adjunct Senior Research Scholar, 2015 – University of Essex Professor, 2013 – 2014 ´ Ecole des Affaires Internationales (Sciences Po) Distinguished Visiting Faculty, Spring 2012 University of California, Santa Barbara Visiting Associate Professor, Spring 2011 Dartmouth College Visiting Scholar, 2004 – 2005 Education Ph.D. Political Science, University of Iowa, Iowa City, Iowa, August 1997 M.A. Political Science, University of Iowa, Iowa City, Iowa, December 1994 M.A. Asian Studies, Seton Hall University, S. Orange, New Jersey, May 1991 B.A. History, University of San Francisco, San Francisco, California, May 1988 Grants and Awards 26. Office of Naval Research, U.S. Dept. of Defense (Minerva), 2015. “An Empirical Approach to Cross Domain Deterrence.” $237,691. 25. Project on Advanced Systems and Concepts for Countering WMD (PASSC), funded by the Defense Threat Reduction Agency, 2014. “Predicting Proliferation.” $126,597. 24. Nominated – University of Essex Students’ Union Students’ Choice Awards, Best Module, Conflict and Cooperation, 2014. 23. Nominated – University of Essex Students’ Union Students’ Choice Awards, Best Lecturer, 2014. 22. Office of Naval Research, U.S. Dept. of Defense (Minerva), 2013–2016 (+2017–2018). “De- terring Complex Threats: The Effects of Asymmetry, Interdependence, and Multi-polarity on International Strategy,” ca. $5.3 million. 1
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Page 1: ERIK GARTZKE Department of Political Science Social ...1).pdf · 39. \The Determinants of Nuclear Force Structure." With Je rey Kaplow and Rupal Mehta. 2014. Journal of Con ict Resolution,

ERIK GARTZKEEmail: [email protected]

Web: erikgartzke.com

Department of Political ScienceSocial Sciences Building, Rm. 3629500 Gilman Drive #0521La Jolla, CA 92093-0521

Permanent Employment

University of California, San Diego Professor, 2014 –Associate Professor, 2007 – 2014

Columbia University Associate Professor, 2003 – 2007Assistant Professor, 2000 – 2003

The Pennsylvania State University Assistant Professor, 1997 – 2000

Visiting Positions and Courtesy Appointments

Columbia University Adjunct Senior Research Scholar, 2015 –University of Essex Professor, 2013 – 2014

Ecole des Affaires Internationales (Sciences Po) Distinguished Visiting Faculty, Spring 2012University of California, Santa Barbara Visiting Associate Professor, Spring 2011Dartmouth College Visiting Scholar, 2004 – 2005

Education

Ph.D. Political Science, University of Iowa, Iowa City, Iowa, August 1997M.A. Political Science, University of Iowa, Iowa City, Iowa, December 1994M.A. Asian Studies, Seton Hall University, S. Orange, New Jersey, May 1991B.A. History, University of San Francisco, San Francisco, California, May 1988

Grants and Awards

26. Office of Naval Research, U.S. Dept. of Defense (Minerva), 2015. “An Empirical Approachto Cross Domain Deterrence.” $237,691.

25. Project on Advanced Systems and Concepts for Countering WMD (PASSC), funded by theDefense Threat Reduction Agency, 2014. “Predicting Proliferation.” $126,597.

24. Nominated – University of Essex Students’ Union Students’ Choice Awards, Best Module,Conflict and Cooperation, 2014.

23. Nominated – University of Essex Students’ Union Students’ Choice Awards, Best Lecturer,2014.

22. Office of Naval Research, U.S. Dept. of Defense (Minerva), 2013–2016 (+2017–2018). “De-terring Complex Threats: The Effects of Asymmetry, Interdependence, and Multi-polarityon International Strategy,” ca. $5.3 million.

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21. Academic Senate Research Award, 2013-2014. “An International Survey Experiment of theDemocratic Peace.” (with Scott Desposato), $29,727.

20. International Studies Association Venture Research Workshop Grant, 2012-2013. “Interde-pendence, Networks and International Governance.” (with Han Dorussen and Oliver West-erwinter), $17,000.

19. UC Institute on Global Conflict and Cooperation (IGCC) NSSC faculty grant, 2012–2013.“Nuclear Alliance Politics: Exploring the Credibility of Nuclear Umbrellas.” $35,670.

18. UC Institute on Global Conflict and Cooperation (IGCC) NSSC faculty grant, 2012–2013.“Building the Next Wave of Nuclear Security Cadre.” $14,300.

17. Academic Senate Research Award, 2010. “War, Peace, and Nuclear Weapons.” $10,565.

16. IICAS-WUN Grant for Collaborative Research on, 2008-2009. “Prosperity, Productivity,Democracy, and War.” (with Dominic Rohner, University of York), $10,900.

15. “AJPS Best Paper Award” for an article published in the American Journal of PoliticalScience in 2007 (title: “The Capitalist Peace”).

14. “Best Paper in International Relations Award” for a paper presented at the 2007 Midwest Po-litical Science Association conference (title: “Dyadic Difference and the Democratic Peace”).

13. “Honorable Mention” for best article published in the European Journal of InternationalRelations in 2006 (title: “Identity and Conflict: Ties that Bind and Differences that Divide”).

12. Social Science Research Seed Grant, Institute for Social and Economic Research and Policy,Columbia University, 2004. “International Commitment Problems.” $4,000.

11. Summer Fellow, Council Research Grant, Columbia University, 2003. “Research on Interna-tional Commitment.” $3,000.

10. Faculty Research Grant, Center for International Business Education, Columbia University,2002. “Global Markets and Global Credibility.” $3,500.

9. Social Science Research Seed Grant, Institute for Social and Economic Research and Policy,Columbia University, 2002 [renewed 2003]. “International Relations Speakers Series.” (withTanisha Fazal and Page Fortna), $10,000.

8. Social Science Research Seed Grant, Institute for Social and Economic Research and Policy,Columbia University, 2002. “Globalization and International Security.” $3,000.

7. Hettlemen Summer Fellow, Council Research Grant, Columbia University, 2002. “Researchon Information, Bargaining, and War.” $3,500.

6. Postdoctoral Fellow, 2000-2001, Mershon Center, Ohio State University. Fellowship Nominee,2001, Center for Advanced Study in the Behavior Sciences, Stanford, CA.

5. Salvatori Fellow, The Heritage Foundation, June 1998.

4. Roy C. Buck Award, 1998, presented by the College of Liberal Arts, Pennsylvania StateUniversity for best published article by non-tenured faculty. Article: “Kant We All JustGet Along?: Opportunity, Willingness, and the Origins of the Democratic Peace.” AmericanJournal of Political Science 42(1):1-27.

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3. F.E. Peacock Award, 1996, presented by the International Studies Assoc. - Midwest for thebest graduate student paper. Paper: “Temporal Inference and the Hot Hand: A CriticalAnalysis of Enduring Rivalries.”

2. Carl Beck Award Runner-Up, 1995, presented by the International Studies Association forthe best graduate student paper. Paper: “War in a Perfect World: A Simple RubinsteinModel.”

1. Carl Beck Award Winner, 1994, presented by the International Studies Association for thebest graduate student paper. Paper: “Congress and Back Seat Driving: Modeling the WarPowers Resolution with Information Theory.”

Research

Books and Edited Volumes

2. Nonproliferation Policy and Nuclear Posture: Causes and Consequences for the Spread ofNuclear Postures. With Neil Narang and Matthew Kroenig, eds. 2016. New York: Routledge.

1. Causes and Consequences of Nuclear Proliferation: A Quantitative-Analysis Approach. WithRobert Rauchhaus and Matthew Kroenig, eds. 2011. New York: Routledge.

Refereed Articles and Book Chapters

49. “Cross-Domain Deterrence and Cybersecurity: The Consequences of Complexity,” in NationalSecurity and Cybersecurity, ed. Damien van Puyvelde. New York: Routledge. Forthcoming.

48. “Coercion through Cyberspace: The Stability-Instability Paradox Revisited.” With Jon R.Lindsay, in The Power to Hurt: Coercion in Theory and Practice, ed. Kelly Greenhill andPeter J. P. Krause. New York: Oxford University Press, Forthcoming.

47. “Debating the Democratic Peace in the International System.” With Alex Weisiger. 2016.International Studies Quarterly. Forthcoming.

46. “Networked International Politics: Complex Interdependence and the Diffusion of Conflictand Peace.” With Han Dorussen and Oliver Westerwinter. 2016. Journal of Peace Research,53(3): 283–291.

45. “The Complex Structure of Commercial Peace: Contrasting Trade Interdependence, Asym-metry and Multipolarity.” With Oliver Westerwinter. 2016. Journal of Peace Research,53(3): 325–343.

44. “The Bar Fight Theory of International Conflict: Regime Type, Coalition Size, and Victory.”With Christopher J. Fariss and Benjamin A. T. Graham. 2015. Political Science Researchand Methods, Forthcoming.

43. “Climate and Conflict: Whence the Weather?” With Tobias Bohmelt. 2015. Peace Eco-nomics, Peace Science, and Public Policy, 21(4):445–451.

42. “Weaving Tangled Webs: Offense, Defense, and Deception in Cyberspace.” With Jon R.Lindsay. 2015. Security Studies, 24(2):316-348.

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41. “One Effect to Rule Them All? A Comment on Quantifying the Influence of Climate on Hu-man Conflict.” With Halvard Buhaug, Jonas Nordkvelle, Thomas Bernauer, Tobias Bhmelt,Michael Brzoska, Joshua W. Busby, Antonio Ciccone, Hanne Fjelde, Nils Petter Gleditsch,Jack A. Goldstone, Havard Hegre, Helge Holtermann, Jasmin S.A. Link, Peter Michael Link,Paivi Lujala, John O’Loughlin, Clionadh Raleigh, Juergen Scheffran, Janpeter Schilling, ToddGraham Smith, Ole Magnus Theisen, Richard S.J. Tol, Henrik Urdal, Nina von Uexkull. 2014.Climatic Change, 127(3):391–397.

40. “Nuclear Posture, Nonproliferation Policy, and the Spread of Nuclear Weapons.” WithMatthew Kroenig. 2014. Journal of Conflict Resolution, 58(2):395–401.

39. “The Determinants of Nuclear Force Structure.” With Jeffrey Kaplow and Rupal Mehta.2014. Journal of Conflict Resolution, 58(2):481–508.

38. “Under Construction: Development, Democracy, and Difference as Determinants of the Sys-temic Liberal Peace.” With Alex Weisiger. 2014. International Studies Quarterly, 58(1):130–145.

37. “The Myth of Cyberwar: Bringing War on the Internet Back Down to Earth.” 2013. Inter-national Security, 38(2):41–73.

• Reprinted in Robert J. Art and Kelly M. Greenhill, eds. 2015. The Use of Force:Military Power and International Politics, 8th. ed. New York: Rowman & Littlefield.

36. “Permanent Friends?: Dynamic Difference and the Democratic Peace.” With Alex Weisiger.2013. International Studies Quarterly, 57(1):171–185.

35. “Still Looking for Audience Costs” With Yonatan Lupu. 2012. Security Studies 21(3):391–397.

34. “Fading Friendships: Alliances, Affinities and the Activation of International Identities.”With Alex Weisiger. 2012. British Journal of Political Science, 43(1):25–52.

33. “Trading on Preconceptions: Why World War I Was Not a Failure of Economic Interdepen-dence.” With Yonatan Lupu. 2012. International Security, 36(4):115–150.

• Reprinted in World War I: A Batch from International Security. MIT Press.

32. “Could Climate Change Cause Peace.” 2012. Journal of Peace Research, 49(1): 177–192.

• Reprinted in Richard A. Matthew, ed. 2014. Environmental Security. New Delhi:SAGE.

31. “The Logic of Nuclear Patronage: A Comment.” 2012. In Adam N. Stulberg and MatthewFuhrmann, eds. The Nuclear Renaissance and International Security. pp. 282-298. PaloAlto, CA: Stanford University Press.

30. “The Political Economy of Imperialism, Decolonization, and Development.” With DominicRohner. 2011. British Journal of Political Science 41(3):525–556.

29. “Multilateralism and Democracy: Response to Keohane, Macedo and Moravcsik.” WithMegumi Naoi. 2010. International Organization 65(3):589–598.

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28. “International Crises and the Capitalist Peace.” With J. Joseph Hewitt. 2010. InternationalInteractions 36(2):115–145.

27. “The Common Origins of Democracy and Peace.” 2010. In Stephen W. Hook, ed. DemocraticPeace in Theory and Practice. Kent, OH: Kent State University Press, pp. 61-78.

26. “A Strategic Approach to Nuclear Proliferation” With Matthew Kroenig. 2009. Journal ofConflict Resolution 53(2):151–160.

25. “Bargaining, Nuclear Proliferation, and Interstate Disputes” With Dong-Joon Jo. 2009. Jour-nal of Conflict Resolution 53(2):209–233.

24. “International Organizations Count: What Statistics Tells Us About IOs.” With Emilie M.Hafner-Burton and Jana von Stein. 2008. Journal of Conflict Resolution 52(2):175–188.

23. “Globalization, Economic Development, and Territorial Conflict.” 2006. In Miles Kahler andBarbara Walter, eds. Territoriality and Conflict in an Era of Globalization, Miles Kahler andBarbara Walter, eds. New York: Cambridge University Press. pp. 156-186.

22. “Determinants of Nuclear Weapons Proliferation.” With Dong-Joon Jo. 2007. Journal ofConflict Resolution 51(1):167–194.

21. “The Capitalist Peace.” 2007. American Journal of Political Science 51(1):166–191.

• Awarded “Best Article” in AJPS in 2007.

20. “Identity and Conflict: Ties that Bind and Differences that Divide.” With Kristian S. Gled-itsch. 2006. European Journal of International Relations 12(1): 53–87.

• Awarded “Honorable Mention” for best article in EJIR in 2006.

19. “Mistaken Identity: A Reply to Hegre.” With Quan Li. 2005. Conflict Management andPeace Science 22(3):225–233.

18. “Probabilistic Causality, Selection Bias, and the Logic of the Democratic Peace.” WithBranislav L. Slantchev and Anna Alexandrova. 2005. American Political Science Review99(3):459–462.

17. “Do Intergovernmental Organizations Promote Peace?” With Charles Boehmer and TimothyNordstrom. 2004. World Politics 57(1):1–38.

16. “Why Democracies May Actually Be Less Reliable Allies.” With Kristian S. Gleditsch. 2004.American Journal of Political Science 48(4):775–795.

15. “All’s Well That Ends Well: A Reply to Oneal, Barbieri and Peters.” With Quan Li. 2003.Journal of Peace Research 40(6):727–732.

14. “War, Peace, and the Invisible Hand: Positive Political Externalities of Economic Globaliza-tion.” With Quan Li. 2003. International Studies Quarterly 47(4):561–586.

13. “Testing War In the Error Term.” With Damon Coletta. 2003. International Organization57(2):445-448.

12. “Measure for Measure: Concept Operationalization and the Trade Interdependence – ConflictDebate.” With Quan Li. 2003. Journal of Peace Research 40(5):555–574.

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11. “Globalization and Peace: How Economic Integration Can Reduce the Incidence of Interna-tional Conflict.” 2003. In Nils Petter Gleditsch, Gerald Schneider, and Katherine Barbieri,eds. Globalization and Armed Conflict. Boulder, CO: Rowman and Littlefield. pp. 123-142.

10. “The Classical Liberals Were Lucky: A Few Thoughts about Interdependence and Peace.”2003. In Edward D. Mansfield and Brian M. Pollins, eds. Economic Interdependence andInternational Conflict: New Perspectives on an Enduring Debate. Ann Arbor, MI: Universityof Michigan Press. pp. 96-110.

9. “Democracy and the Preparation for War: Does Regime Type Affect States’ Anticipation ofCasualties?” 2001. International Studies Quarterly 45(3):467–484.

8. “Investing in the Peace: Economic Interdependence and International Conflict.” With QuanLi and Charles Boehmer. 2001. International Organization 55(2):391–438.

• Reprinted in David A. Baldwin, ed. 2012. Key Concepts in the New Global Economy.Cheltenham: Edward Elgar Publishing.

• Reprinted in Marc L. Busch and Edward D. Mansfield, ed. 2007. The WTO, EconomicInterdependence, and Conflict. Cheltenham: Edward Elgar Publishing.

• Reprinted in Edward D. Mansfield, ed. 2005. International Conflict and the GlobalEconomy. Cheltenham: Edward Elgar Publishing.

7. “Preferences and the Democratic Peace.” 2000. International Studies Quarterly 44(2):191-210.

6. “War is in the Error Term.” 1999. International Organization 53(3):567–587.

5. “Hot Hand: A Critical Analysis of Enduring Rivalries.” With Michael W. Simon. 1999.Journal of Politics 61(3):777–798.

4. “Thinking Globally or Acting Locally?: Determinants of the GATT Vote in Congress.” WithJ. Mark Wrighton. 1998. Legislative Studies Quarterly 23(1):33–55.

3. “Kant We All Just Get Along?: Opportunity, Willingness, and the Origins of the DemocraticPeace.” 1998. American Journal of Political Science 42(1):1–27.

2. “Political System Similarity and the Choice of Allies: Do Democracies Flock Together, orDo Opposites Attract?” With Michael W. Simon. 1996. The Journal of Conflict Resolution40(4):617–635.

1. “Congress and Back Seat Driving: An Information Theory of the War Powers Resolution.”1996. Policy Studies Journal 24(2):259–286.

Non-refereed Articles and Book Chapters

17. “Windows on Submarines: The Dynamics of Deception in the Cyber and Maritime Domains,”With Jon R. Lindsay in Maritime Cyber Security: Threats, Vulnerabilities, and Consequences,ed. Nicole Drumhiller and Fred Roberts. Forthcoming.

16. “Empirical Implications of Bargaining Theory: An Agenda for Research.” With Paul Poast.In William Thompson, ed. The Oxford Encyclopedia of Empirical International RelationsTheory, Oxford: Oxford.

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15. “Nukes with Numbers: Empirical Research on the Consequences of Nuclear Weapons forInternational Conflict.” With Matthew Kroenig. 2016. Annual Review of Political Science,19:397–412.

14. “Interdependence, Development and Interstate Conflict.” 2015. In Robert A. Scott andStephen M. Kosslyn, eds. Emerging Trends in the Social and Behavioral Sciences. Hoboken,NJ: Wiley.

13. “The Free Trade Peace.” 2014. In Tom G. Palmer, ed. Peace, Love, and Liberty: War is NotInevitable. Washington, DC: Jameson Books, pp. 50-61.

12. “An Apology for Numbers in the Study of National Security . . . if an apology is really nec-essary.” 2014. H-Diplo/ISSF Forum no. 2: “What We Talk About When We Talk AboutNuclear Weapons.” url: http://issforum.org/ISSF/PDF/ISSF-Forum-2.pdf, pp. 77-90.

11. “Trade and War.” 2014. With Jack Zhang. In Lisa Martin, ed. Handbook of the Politics ofInternational Trade. Oxford: Oxford.

10. “Datasets and Quantitative Research in the Study of International Organizations.” 2013.With Christina Schneider. In Routledge Handbook of International Organization. New York,NY: Routledge, pp. 41-53.

9. “International Conflicts.” 2012. With Zane Kelly. In Gerard Caprio, ed. Handbook ofSafeguarding Global Financial Stability: Political, Social, Cultural, and Economic Theoriesand Models. Maryland Heights, MO: Elsevier. pp. 69-91.

8. “Security in an Insecure World.” February 9, 2011. CATO Unbound.url: http://www.cato-unbound.org/.

7. “Power Shuffle: Will the Coming Power Shuffle Be Peaceful?” 2009 Current History. Novem-ber. pp. 374-380.

6. “Production, Prosperity, Preferences and Peace.” 2008. In Peter Graeff and Guido Mehlkop,ed. Capitalism, Democracy, and the Prevention of War and Poverty. London: Routledge,pp. 31-60.

5. “Free Markets and Peace: An International Overview.” 2006. Liberal Institute, FriedrichNaumann Foundation, Occasional Paper 36, 16 September.

4. “Capitalist Peace or Democratic Peace.” 2005. Institute of Public Affairs Review, Instituteof Public Affairs, 57(4):13-16.

3. “The Capitalist Peace.” 2005. Fraser Forum, Fraser Institute, (Nov):11-12.url: http://www.fraserinstitute.ca/.

2. “Economic Freedom and Peace” 2005. In James Gwartney, Robert Lawson and Erik Gartzke,eds. Economic Freedom of the World: 2005 Annual Report. pp. 29-44.

1. “Future Depends on Capitalizing on Capitalist Peace.” 2005. Cato Institute, Oct. 18.url: http://www.cato.org/.

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Book reviews

12. The Invisible Hand of Peace: Capitalism, The War Machine, and International RelationsTheory, by Patrick J. McDonald. 2009 Political Science Quarterly. 125(1):177-178.

11. Dangerous Alliances: Proponents of Peace, Weapons of War, by Patricia A. Weitsman. 2004.Journal of Peace Research 42(5):650.

10. The Democratic Peace and Territorial Conflict in the Twentieth Century, by Paul K. Huthand Todd L. Allee. 2004. Political Science Quarterly 119(2):347-349.

9. When the Stakes are High: Deterrence and Conflict among Major Powers, by Vesna Danilovic.2003. Political Science Quarterly 118(3):514-516.

8. All International Politics is Local: The Diffusion of Conflict, Integration, and Democratiza-tion, by Kristian Skrede Gleditsch. 2003. International Studies Review 5(3):371-373.

7. The Power-Conflict Story: A Dynamic Model of Interstate Rivalry, by Kelly M. Kadera.2003. Journal of Peace Research 40(1):131.

6. Causes of War: Power and the Roots of Conflict, by Stephen Van Evera. 2002. Journal ofPolicy and Management 21(4):709-711.

5. State Learning and International Change, by Andrew Farkas. 2002. American PoliticalScience Review 96(1):259-260.

4. Disarmed Democracies: Domestic Institutions and the Use of Force, by David P. Auerswald.2001. Journal of Politics 63(4):1289-1291.

3. Nations at War: A Scientific Study of International Conflict, by Daniel S. Geller and J.David Singer. 1998. Political Science Quarterly 113(4):742-743.

2. Paths to Peace: Is Democracy the Answer?, Miriam Fendius Elman, ed. 1999. AmericanPolitical Science Review 93(2):481-482.

1. Interests, Institutions, and Information: Domestic Politics and International Relations, byHelen V. Milner. 1999. H-Net Reviews. url: http://www.h-net.msu.edu/reviews/.

Blog Posts and Short Articles

5. Hey, China, this is why democracies beat autocracies in a fight. (So back off the South ChinaSea.) The Monkey Cage. The Washington Post. 15 December 2015. url: www.washingtonpost.com

4. What world war I can tell us about international commerce and war today. The MonkeyCage. The Washington Post. 7 April 2014. url: www.washingtonpost.com

3. How Putin needs to play nice with markets. The Monkey Cage. The Washington Post. 7March 2014. url: www.washingtonpost.com

2. Making Sense of Cyberwar. Policy Brief. Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs,January 2014. url: belfercenter.hks.harvard.edu

1. Fear and War in Cyberspace. Lawfare Blog. 1 December 2013. url: www.lawfareblog.com

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Papers Under Revision, Review, or In Preparation

33. “Small and Constrained vs. Large and Insular?: Country Size and the Liberal Peace.” WithKristian S. Gleditsch. Invited to revise and resubmit, Journal of Peace Research.

32. “Power, Parity and Proximity: How Distance and Uncertainty Condition the Balance ofPower.” With Alex Braithwaite. Invited to revise and resubmit, World Politics.

31. “Blame it on the Weather: Seasonality in Interstate Conflict.” Invited to revise and resubmit,British Journal of Political Science.

30. “To Conquer or Compel: War, Peace, and Economic Development.” With Dominic Rohner.Invited to revise and resubmit, Journal of Conflict Resolution.

29. “Nuclear Proliferation Dynamics and Conventional Conflict.” Invited to revise and resubmit,Journal of Conflict Resolution.

28. “Oil, Blood, and Strategy: How Petroleum Influences Interstate Disputes.” With Indra deSoysa and Tove Grete Lin. Invited to revise and resubmit, International Studies Quarterly.

27. “How Economic Development Influences Battle Deaths.” Invited to revise and resubmit,Journal of Conflict Resolution.

26. “The Ties That Bias: Specifying and Operationalizing Components of Dyadic Dependence.”With Kristian S. Gleditsch. Invited to revise and resubmit, Political Geography.

25. “Trust in Tripwires: Deployments, Costly Signaling and Extended General Deterrence.” WithKoji Kagotani. Under Review.

24. “No Humans Were Harmed in the Making of this War: On the Nature and Consequences of‘Costless’ Combat.” Under Review.

23. “Windows on Submarines: Cyber Vulnerabilities and Opportunities in Cyberspace.” WithJon R. Lindsay. Under review.

22. “Drafting Disputes: Military Labor, Regime Type and Interstate Conflict.” Under review.

21. “Deterrence Across Domains.” With Jon R. Lindsay. In preparation.

20. “Offense, Defense and the Structure of Nuclear Forces: The Role of Nuclear Platform Di-versification in Securing Second Strike.” With Jeffrey M. Kaplow and Rupal N. Mehta. Inpreparation.

19. “Drones and their Drawbacks: The Effects of RPVs on Escalation and Instability in Pakistan.”With James Walsh. In preparation.

18. “The Influence of Seapower on Politics: Domain- and Platform-Specific Attributes of MaterialCapabilities.” With Rex Douglass and Jon R. Lindsay. In preparation.

17. “Nukes in Cyberspace: Potential Pitfalls of Cyberwar in a Thermonuclear World.” With JonR. Lindsay. In preparation.

16. “Offense, Defense, and Reconnaissance: How ”Spy” Satellites Inhibit Interstate Disputes.”With Brian R. Early. In preparation.

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15. “Being There: U.S. Troop Deployments, Force Posture and Alliance Reliability.” With KojiKagotani. In preparation.

14. “Knowing Unknowns: The Effect of Uncertainty on Interstate Conflict.” With Jeffrey M.Kaplow. In preparation.

13. “The Determinants of Uncertainty in International Relations.” With Jeffrey M. Kaplow. Inpreparation.

12. “Mining Cyberspace: Latency and its Effects on Cyber Conflict.” With Martin Libicki andJon R. Lindsay. In preparation. item “Sleeping Giant or Paper Tiger?: Latent Potential,Current Capabilities and Conventional Interstate Conflict.” With Matthew Kroenig. Inpreparation.

11. “Make Two Democracies and Call me in the Morning: Endogenizing Democracy in the Demo-cratic Peace.” With Daina Chiba. In preparation.

10. Erik Gartzke and Rupal Mehta. 2013. “Helping Those Who Can Help Themselves: A Logicof Sensitive Nuclear Assistance.” In preparation.

9. “Deploying Democracy: Political Transition and the US Military Abroad.” With AlexanderCooley. In preparation.

8. “Strategy and International Regime Complexity: Nuclear Weapons Free Zones as Cross-Cutting Commitments.” With Atsushi Tago. In preparation.

7. “The Relevance of Bargaining in International Politics.” In preparation.

6. “Interdependence Really is Complex.” In preparation.

5. “Dissatisfied States.” In preparation.

4. “Balancing, Bandwagoning, Bargaining and War.” With Kristian S. Gleditsch. In prepara-tion.

3. “Inducing Indivisibility.” With Damon Coletta. In preparation.

2. “How ‘Democratic’ is the Democratic Peace?: A Survey Experiment of Foreign Policy Pref-erences in Brazil and China.” With Scott Desposato and Clara Suong. In preparation.

1. “Nuclear Capabilities and Conventional Conflict.” In preparation.

Selected Conference Presentations

37. Erik Gartzke and Blake McMahon. 2013. “Losing Streak: Assessing and Interpreting Endur-ing Rivalries.” Paper to be presented at the Midwest Political Science Association Conference,Chicago, IL, April 11-14.

36. Erik Gartzke, Jeffrey Kaplow and Rupal Mehta. 2013. “Nuclear Deterrence and the Capa-bilities of Nuclear Forces.” Paper to be presented at the International Studies AssociationConference, San Francisco, CA, April 3-6.

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35. Erik Gartzke and Jonathan N. Markowitz. 2013. “Anarchy is Sometimes What States Make ofIt.” Paper to be presented at the International Studies Association Conference, San Francisco,CA, April 3-6.

34. “The Myth of Cyberwar.” Paper presented at the Annual Meetings of the InternationalStudies Association, San Diego, CA, April 1-4, 2012.

33. “The Determinants of Nuclear Force Structure” Paper presented at the Peace Science Society(International) Conference, Los Angeles, CA, October 14-15, 2011.

32. “A Socio-Rationalist Theory of Alliance Formation.” Paper presented at the American Po-litical Science Association Conference, Seattle, WA, September 1-4, 2011.

31. “Disaggregating IGOs.” Paper presented at the Political Economy of International Organi-zations Conference, Zurich, Switzerland, January 27-29, 2011.

30. “Small and Constrained vs. Large and Insular?: Country Size and the Liberal Peace.” Pa-per presented at the American Political Science Association Conference, Washington DC,September 2-5, 2010.

29. “Dissatisfied States.” Paper presented at the Midwest Political Science Association Confer-ence, Chicago, IL, April 22-25, 2010.

28. “International Crises and the Capitalist Peace.” Paper presented at the European Consortiumfor Political Research, Potsdam, Germany, September 10-12, 2009.

27. “Proliferation Dynamics and Conventional Dispute Behavior.” Paper presented at the AnnualMeetings of the International Studies Association, New York, NY, February 15-18, 2009.

26. “UNbiased: A Logic of Security Council Action.” Paper presented at the Annual Meetingsof the International Studies Association, New York, NY, February 15-18, 2009.

25. “Alliances, Reputation, and International Politics” Paper presented at the Annual Meetingsof the Peace Science Society (International), Claremont, CA, October 24-26, 2008.

24. “A Logic of Commitment in International Relations.” Paper presented at the Jan TinbergenPeace Science Conference, Amsterdam, Netherlands, June 30-July 2, 2008.

23. “Who Joins Intergovernmental Organizations?” Paper presented at the Annual Meetings ofthe International Studies Association, San Francisco, CA, March 26-29, 2008.

22. “Dissatisfied States” Paper presented at the Annual Meetings of the Peace Science Society(International), Columbia, SC, November 2-4, 2007.

21. “Dyadic Difference and the Democratic Peace” Paper presented at the Annual Meetings ofthe Midwest Political Science Association, Chicago, IL, April 12 - 15, 2007.

• Awarded “Best Paper in International Relations” for a paper presented at the 2007Midwest Political Science Association conference.

20. “Bargaining, Nuclear Proliferation, and Interstate Disputes” Paper presented at the AnnualMeetings of the International Studies Association, Chicago, IL, February 28 - March 3, 2007.

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19. “The Essential Irrelevance of Power in International Relations” Paper presented at the An-nual Meetings of the American Political Science Association, Philadelphia, PA, August 31 -September 3, 2006.

18. “The Crisis Behavior of International Organizations” With Charles R. Boehmer, Joseph J.Hewitt, and Timothy Nordstrom. Paper presented at the Annual Meetings of the Interna-tional Studies Association, San Diego, CA, March 22-25, 2006.

17. “Make Two Democracies and Call me in the Morning: Endogenizing Democracy in the Demo-cratic Peace.” With Havard Hegre. Paper presented at the Third ECPR General Conference,Budapest, September 8-10, 2005.

16. “The Crisis Behavior of Liberal Dyads: Is it Really Democracy that Produces Peace?” WithJ. Joseph Hewitt. Paper presented at the Annual Meetings of the Network of European PeaceScientists (NEPS), Amsterdam, Netherlands, June 27-29, 2005.

15. “Peace by the Numbers: Disaggregating IGOs in Time and Space.” With Timothy Nordstromand Charles Boehmer. Paper presented at the Annual Meetings of the International StudiesAssociation, Honolulu, HI, March 1-5, 2005.

14. “How Economic Development Diminishes Battle Deaths.” Paper presented at the AnnualMeetings of the International Studies Association, Honolulu, HI, March 1-5, 2005.

13. “Peace Through Greed: Globalization, Information, and Interstate Conflict.” Paper pre-sented at the Annual Meetings of the International Studies Association, Honolulu, HI, March1-5, 2005.

12. “The Ties That Bias: Specifying and Operationalizing Components of Dyadic Dependence.”With Kristian S. Gleditsch. Paper presented at the Annual Meetings of the Peace ScienceSociety (International), Houston, TX, November 12-14, 2004.

11. “Inducing Indivisibility.” With Damon Coletta. Paper presented at the Annual Meetings ofthe American Political Science Association, Philadelphia, PA, August 27–September 1, 2003.

10. “Perceptions and International Politics: The Role of History in Alliance Signaling.” Paperpresented at the Annual Meetings of the American Political Science Association, Boston, MA,August 26-September 1, 2002.

9. “Rethinking Rational Deterrence Theory.” Paper presented at the International Studies As-sociation, New Orleans, LA, March 24-27, 2002.

8. “Losing Streak: Assessing and Interpreting Enduring Rivalries.” Paper presented at theAnnual Meetings of the American Political Science Association, August 30-September 2,2001.

7. “The Utility of Utility Indexes: An Introduction to Measures of National Preference.” Paperpresented at the Uppsala Conference on Conflict Data, Uppsala, Sweden, June 8-9, 2001.

6. “War, Bargaining, and the Military Commitment Problem.” Paper presented at the PoliticalEconomy of Conflict Conference, Yale University, New Haven, CT., March 23-24, 2001.

5. “Two-Level Liberalism: The Logic of Costly Contests and Determinants of the DemocraticPeace.” Paper presented at the Annual Meetings of the International Studies Association,February 20-25, 2001.

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4. “Balancing, Bandwagoning, Bargaining, and War: Signaling and Selection Among Third-Party Joiners.” With Kristian S. Gleditsch. Paper presented at the Annual Meetings of theInternational Studies Association, February 20-25, 2001.

3. “Do Intergovernmental Organizations Promote Peace?” With Charles Boehmer and TimothyNordstrom. Paper presented at the Peace Science Society (International), Yale University,New Haven, CT., October 27-29, 2000.

2. “Rethinking Rationalist Deterrence Theory.” Paper presented at the Annual Meetings of theMidwest Political Science Association, Chicago, IL. April 27-30, 2000.

1. “An Information Theory of Dictatorship, Democracy and Development.” Paper presented atthe Annual Meeting of the American Political Science Association, Atlanta, GA, September2-5, 1999.

Professional Activities

Disciplinary and Association Activities

1. Editorial Board, American Journal of Political Science. 2014 –.

2. Editor, International Studies Quarterly. 2013 – 2014.

3. Council Member, Midwest Political Science Association. 2011 – 2014.

4. Member, Robert H. Durr Prize Committee, Midwest Political Science Association. 2006.

5. Treasurer, Scientific Study of International Processes, International Studies Association. 2003– 2005.

Conference Organizing

25. “Pacific Peace Science Conference, Second Annual Meeting,” Seoul, Korea 1-2 July, 2017.

24. “The Political Economy of Power Projection,” University of Southern California, 11-14 Novem-ber, 2016.

23. PSSI Workshop: “Empirical Implications of Bargaining Theory II,” South Bend, IN, 20October, 2016.

22. “Pacific Peace Science Conference, First Annual Meeting” Kyoto, Japan, 2-3 July, 2016.

21. “A New Look at the 21st Century Cross Domain Deterrence Initiative,” Elliott School, Wash-ington DC, 19-20 May, 2016.

20. “Social Media in Forecasting Conflict,” UCSD, 10 May, 2016.

19. “Cross Domain Deterrence Retreat II,” Anza-Borrego Reserve, CA, 28-30 January, 2016.

18. “Cross Domain Deterrence Retreat I,” Sedgwick Reserve, CA, 25-27 September, 2015.

17. “Cross Domain Deterrence Coding Workshop,” Durham, NC, 16-17 July, 2015.

16. “Empirical Implications of Bargaining Theory,” Princeton, NJ, 14-15 May 2015.

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15. “Cross-Domain Deterrence,” La Jolla, CA, 6-7 November 2014.

14. PSSI Workshop: “Empirical Implications of Bargaining Models,” Philadelphia, PA, 9 Octo-ber, 2014.

13. ECPR Research Seminars, “International Institutions and Public Opinion in Interstate Con-flict,” 8-11 July, 2014.

12. Section Head (International Relations), Annual Meeting of the European Political ScienceAssociation. 19-21 June, 2014.

11. “Interdependence, Networks, and International Governance,” (co-organized with Han Dorussenand Oliver Westerwinter), San Francisco, CA, April 2, 2013.

10. “Pacific Security: Modeling, Counting, Estimating,” San Francisco, CA, April 1, 2013

9. “The Consequences of Nuclear Posture, Policy, and Strategy,” (co-organized with MatthewKroenig), La Jolla, CA, March 31, 2012.

8. Section Head (International Relations), Annual Meeting of the European Political ScienceAssociation (co-organized with Han Dorussen). 2012.

7. “The Politics of Nuclear Weapons in the 21st Century” (co-organized with Matthew Kroenig),Washington, DC, December 15-16, 2011.

6. “Quantitative Approaches to Nuclear Weapons Proliferation” (co-organized with MatthewKroenig), Chicago, Il, September 2, 2007.

5. Section Head (Liberalism and Peace), Sixth Pan-European International Relations Confer-ence, September 12 - 15, 2007.

4. Section Head (Conflict Processes), Annual Meeting of the Midwest Political Science Associ-ation, April 12 - 15, 2007.

3. “Toward a New Science of International Organizations,” (co-organized with Emilie Hafner-Burton and Jana von Stein), Philadelphia, PA, August 30, 2006.

2. “Intergovernmental Organizations in Action,” (co-organized with Emilie Hafner-Burton andJana von Stein), La Jolla, CA, April 26 - 27, 2006.

1. Section Head (International Politics), Annual Meeting of the Midwest Political Science Asso-ciation, April 25 - 28, 2002.

Invited Briefings and Testimony

• “America’s Changing Strategic Environment,” National Intelligence Council, Washington,DC. 30 September, 2016.

• “New Modes of Deterrence,” Representatives of the British Ministry of Defense, 17 November,2016.

• “Briefing,” Vice Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, General Paul J. Selva, Pentagon,Arlington, VA, 4 December, 2015. Also briefed members of the J5 Staff separately.

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• “Defense Science Board Task Force on Deterring, Preventing, and Responding to the Threator Use of Weapons of Mass Destruction,” Washington DC, 9 September, 2015.

• “National Academy of Sciences Committee on Improving the Proliferation Risk Assessmentin Nuclear Fuel Cycles,” Stanford, CA, 17 April, 2012.

Invited Conferences and Workshops

79. “Cross Domain Deterrence Seminar III,” Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, 15-16November, 2016.

78. “Internet Measurement and Political Science,” Center for Applies Internet Data Analysis,UCSD, 7-8 September, 2016.

77. “Academic Exchange,” Israel, 3-10 July, 2016.

76. “East Asia Security Workshop,” Kobe, Japan, 29-30 June, 2016.

75. “Israel under the Shadow of Conflict: A Reappraisal of Current Processes and of FutureRepercussions,” Hebrew University, 29 May-2 June, 2016.

74. “Advancing American Security: The Future of U.S. Foreign Policy,” Charles Koch Institute,17-18 May, 2016.

73. “California Consensus,” Joan B. Kroc School of Peace Studies, 13 March, 2016.

72. “Kobe Sakura Meeting,” Kobe, Japan, 23-25 March, 2016.

71. “Strategic Use of Offensive Operations in Cyberspace,” Stanford University and U.S. CyberCommand, Palo Alto, CA, 3-4 March, 2016.

70. “Nuclear Studies Research Initiative Review Meeting,” Austin, TX, 25-26 February, 2016.

69. “The Political Economy of Risk,” Houston, TX, 12-13 February, 2016.

68. “Cyber Deterrence Symposium,” Elliott School of International Affairs, George WashingtonUniversity, Washington DC, 3 December, 2015.

67. “Cross Domain Deterrence Seminar II,” Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, 17 Novem-ber, 2015.

66. “Tools, Methods, and Approaches to Study Chinas Energy Policy and Energy Economy,”Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, 11 November, 2015.

65. “Methodological Conflict Research,” University of Haifa, Israel, 5-6 November, 2015.

64. “Experts Meeting on Peace and Sustainability,” Teachers College, New York City, 23 October,2015.

63. “Extended Deterrence,” Washington DC, 16-17 September, 2015.

62. “United States Strategic Command Deterrence Symposium,” La Vista, NE, 29-30 July, 2015.

61. “Economic Interdependence and War,” (Copeland) CATO, Washington DC, 12 May, 2015.

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60. “Nuclear Studies Research Initiative,” Airlie Center, Warrenton, VA, 30 April-3 May, 2015

59. “Conference on Forecasting and Early Warning of Conflict,” Oslo Peace Research Institute(PRIO), 22-24 April, 2015.

58. “Kobe Sakura Meeting,” Kobe, Japan, 8-10 April, 2015.

57. “EMC Chair Symposium: Maritime Power and International Security,” U.S. Naval War Col-lege, Newport, RI, 25-26 March, 2015.

56. “Workshop on Nuclear Forces and Nonproliferation,” Woodrow Wilson International Centerfor Scholars, Washington, DC, 8 December, 2014.

55. “Project on Advanced Systems and Concepts for Countering Weapons of Mass DestructionSemi-Annual Workshop,” Center for Strategic and International Studies, Washington, DC, 5December, 2014.

54. “Cross Domain Deterrence Seminar,” Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, 18-19 Novem-ber, 2014.

53. “West Coast International Relations of Asia Workshop,” University of Southern California,3 November, 2014.

52. “Deterrence and Assurance in the New European Security Environment,” RAND, 23 October,2014.

51. “Models of Bargaining and Behavior: Applications to the Energy Sector,” KAPSARC, DukeUniversity, Durham, NC, 29-30 September, 2014.

50. “Cybersecurity Workshop,” Centre of Excellence for National Security, S. Rajaratnam Schoolof International Studies, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore, 2-4 July, 2014.

49. “KUBEC International Relations Research Seminar,” Brussels, Belgium, 22-23 June, 2014.

48. “Historical Analysis for Defense and Security Symposium,” Plymouth, UK, 21-22 May, 2014.

47. “Workshop on East Asian Security,” Kobe University, Japan, 8-11 May, 2014.

46. “Field Experiments in International Relations,” Princeton University, 2-3 May, 2014.

45. “Forecasting International Events,” Toronto, Canada, 25 March, 2014

44. “Nuclear Studies Research Initiative,” Austin, TX, 17-19 October, 2013.

43. “Network Workshop,” George Washington University, September 2013.

42. “Violence, Capitalism, and Liberty,” Liberty Fund. Indianapolis, IN, 17-19 May, 2013.

41. “Workshop on Security in East Asia,” Kobe University, Japan, 18-19 April, 2013.

40. “UK-Japan Research Collaboration Workshop,” Kobe University, Japan, 15-17 April, 2013.

39. “Rich Region, Strong States: The Political Economy of Security in Asia,” UC San Diego, 4-5November, 2012.

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38. “Rethinking Climate Change, Conflict and Security,” University of Sussex, UK, 18-19 Octo-ber, 2012.

37. “Field Experiments in International Relations,” Dear Valley Resort, Park City, UT, 21-22September, 2012.

36. “NSYSU-UCSD Joint Symposium,” National Sun Yat-Sen University, Kaohsiung, Taiwan,20-23 May, 2012.

35. “The Political Economy of Regional Transitions,” Concordia University, Montreal, 7-8 May,2012.

34. “Jonathan Caverley Book Conference,” Northwestern University, Evanston, Il, 2 March, 2012.

33. “Program on Strategic Stability Evolution (POSSE),” Washington, DC, 12-13 December,2011.

32. “Environmental Politics,” Niehaus Center for Globalization and Governance, Princeton, NJ,2-3 December, 2011.

31. “Peace through Governance,” One Earth Future Foundation, Louisville, CO, 1-2 December,2011.

30. “Interdependence and Pacific Security,” The Eurasia Group, Washington, DC, 3 March, 2011.

29. “Climate Change and Security,” 250th Anniversary Conference organized for The Royal Nor-wegian Society of Sciences and Letters, Trondheim, 21-24 June, 2010

28. “Spring Fellowship Conference,” The Miller Center of Public Affairs, University of Virginia,6-7 May, 2010.

27. “War and Trade,” Yale-Princeton conference, sponsored by the Niehaus Center for Global-ization and Governance, Princeton, NJ, 16-17 April, 2010.

26. “Three Young Scholars IR Workshop,” The Center for the Study of Democratic Institutions,Vanderbilt University, Nashville, TN, 2 April, 2010.

25. “The Renaissance in Nuclear Power.” Atlanta, 31 January - 1 February, 2010.

24. “Measuring Freedom: The Future of International Governance.” Friedrich Naumann Stiftung,Potsdam, Germany, 10-12 December, 2008.

23. “Nonproliferation and the Nuclear Renaissance.” University of California, Institute for GlobalConflict and Cooperation, Public Policy and Nuclear Threats. Livermore, CA, 28-29 Febru-ary, 2008.

22. “Civil Freedoms Index.” Liberty Fund. Atlanta, GA, 24-25 January, 2008.

21. “Social Science Modeling and Information Visualization Symposium.” Department of De-fense/Department of Homeland Security. Arlington, VA, 23-25 January, 2008.

20. “Humanitarianism and Interest: Whose Liberty in American Foreign Policy?” Liberty Fund.Indianapolis, IN, 7-10 June, 2007.

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19. “Democracy and Peace?: Historical Links and Implications for World Order.” Eighth AnnualSymposium on Democracy. Kent State University, Ohio, 2 - 3 May, 2007.

18. “Symposium on Liberal Peace in Honor of Erich Weede.” Dresden, Germany, 9 - 11 March,2007.

17. “Working Group on Peacekeeping Operations.” Yale University, New Haven, CT, 1 - 2December, 2006.

16. “Peace and Freedom: International Perspectives.” Friedrich Naumann Stiftung, Potsdam,Germany, 15 - 17 September, 2006.

15. “Toward a New Science of International Organizations,” Philadelphia, PA, 30 August, 2006.

14. “Intergovernmental Organizations in Action,” La Jolla, CA, 26-27 March, 2006.

13. “Democracy, Technology, and War: Changing Norms and Strategies after the Cold War,”Cornell University, Ithaca, NY, 17-18 September, 2004.

12. “Selection in International Relations,” Binghamton University, Binghamton, NY, 2-3 April,2004.

11. “Globalization, Territoriality, and Conflict,” University of California, San Diego, CA, 16-18January, 2004.

10. “New Directions in Alliance Research,” Texas A&M University, College Station, TX, 25-26April, 2003.

9. “Ending International Violence,” Columbia University, New York, NY, 11-12 April, 2003.

8. “Information, Learning, and Linkages in World Politics,” Duke University, Durham, NC,20-22 February, 2003.

7. “Globalization, Territoriality, and Conflict,” University of California, San Diego, CA, 17-18January, 2003.

6. “Strategic Surprise,” Strategic Assessment Group, Central Intelligence Agency, Rossyln, VA,30-31 October, 2001.

5. “Identifying Wars: Systematic Conflict Research and Its Utility in Conflict Resolution andPrevention,” Uppsala University, Sweden, 8-9 June, 2001.

4. “The Political Economy of Conflict,” Yale University, New Haven, CT, 23-24 23-24 March,2001.

3. “Junior Researchers in International Relations II,” La Jolla, CA, 2001.

2. “Junior Researchers in International Relations,” La Jolla, CA, 2000.

1. “Economic Interdependence and Political Conflict,” Mershon Center, Ohio State University,Columbus, OH, September, 2000.

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Invited Presentations

2016 University of Illinois-Champaign Urbana, 7 October; Strategic Multi-Layer Assessment, 24August; RAND Santa Monica, 26 April; University College London, 18 January.

2015 New York University Abu Dhabi, 12 November; Hebrew University, Jerusalem, 9 November;University of St. Galen, Switzerland, 21 October; Strategic Multi-Layer Assessment, 15September; UCSD–Osher Lifelong Learning Institute, 18 August.

2014 University of St. Galen, Switzerland, 24 September; Nanyang Technological University, Sin-gapore, 7 July; National University Singapore, 2 July; Oslo Peace Research Institute (PRIO),29 May; University College London, 5 March.

2013 University of Essex, 15 October; University of Rochester, 9 April.

2012 London School of Economics, 16 October; University of Warwick, 15 October; Oxford Univer-sity (Nuffield), 11 October; Committee on Proliferation Risk (National Academy of Sciences),11 May; University of Konstanz, 18 April; Oslo Peace Research Institute (PRIO), 28 March;University of Oslo, 27 March; Swiss Economic Institute (KOF), 20 March; University of NorthTexas, 23 January; Stanford University, 13 January.

2011 American University, 14 December; University of Wisconsin, 14 November; University ofCalifornia, Los Angeles (Burkle Center), 12 April; University of Chicago (PIPES), 10 March;University of Iowa, 9 March; University of Southern California, 16 February.

2010 University of Pennsylvania, 4 March; Temple University, 3 March; University of North Texas,27 January; Texas A&M University, 25 January.

2009 University of Southern California, 11 November; University of California, Los Angeles, 10November; Center for Comparative and International Studies, Zurich, 17 September; SwissFederal Institute of Technology (ETH), 15 September.

2008 University of California, Berkeley, 30 September; IICAS, UCSD, 11 July; University of Buf-falo, SUNY, 7 April; University of California, Berkeley, 3 March.

2007 Vanderbilt University, 20 April; The Ohio State University, 11 January.

2006 University of California, San Diego, 12 December; Department of International Affairs, Uni-versity of Georgia, 6 December; University of Maryland, College Park, 16 November; OlinInstitute for Strategic Studies, Harvard, 6 November; Texas A&M University, 1 November;United States Air Force Academy, 24-25 October; Rutgers University, 11 October; ColumbiaUniversity Applied Statistics Seminar, 4 October; Peace Research Institute of Frankfurt, 18September; University of Iowa, 3 August; USAID, Washington D.C., 27 June; Oxford Uni-versity, Nuffield College, 17 February; Essex University 16 February; Cambridge University,14 February.

2005 First Wave 2 December; Concordia University, 20 May; Aoyama-Gakuin University, 25 April;University of Tokyo, 22 April; Tokyo University of Foreign Studies 21 April; Rice University,22 March; University of California, Berkeley, 19 January.

2004 Notre Dame University, 19 November; Uppsala University, Sweden, 10 November; Universityof Trondheim, Norway, 9 November; Oslo Peace Research Institute (PRIO), 8 November.

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2003 Olin Institute for Strategic Studies, Harvard, 15 December; University of Wisconsin – Madi-son, 20 November; Princeton University, 23 September; Texas A & M University, 24 April;Yale University, 15 April; Emory University, 6 March.

2002 New York University, 15 April; University of California, San Diego, February.

2001 University of Michigan, February.

2000 University of Pittsburgh, October.

1999 Harvard University, November; Columbia University, November.

1998 The Program on International Politics, Economics, and Security (PIPES), University ofChicago, November.

1997 Yale University, November; The Pennsylvania State University, October; University of North-ern Iowa, October.

Manuscript Reviewer

American Journal of Political Science, American Political Science Review, Asian Politics and Pol-icy, British Journal of Political Science, Cambridge University Press, Conflict Management andPeace Science, Climatic Change, Congressional Quarterly Press, Cooperation and Conflict, De-fense and Peace Economics, Democracy and Security, Economics and Politics, Energy Policy, En-vironment, Development and Sustainability, European Journal of International Relations, EuropeanSecurity, European Union Politics, Foreign Policy Analysis, Global Policy, Governance, Group De-cision and Negotiation, International Interactions, International Journal of Conflict Management,International Organization, International Relations, International Relations of the Asia-Pacific, In-ternational Security, International Studies Perspectives, International Studies Quarterly, Interna-tional Studies Review, International Theory, Israeli Science Foundation, Issues and Studies, Journalof Conflict Resolution, Journal of East Asian Studies, Journal of Peace Research, Journal of Poli-tics, Journal of the Japanese and International Economies, Korean National Research Foundation,Latin American Politics and Society, Longman, Millennium, National Science Foundation, OxfordUniversity Press, Perspectives: Review of International Affairs, Perspectives on Politics, PoliticalAnalysis, Political Psychology, Political Research Quarterly, Politics and Policy, Polity Press, Pres-idential Studies Quarterly, Rationality and Society, Review of International Organizations, Reviewof International Studies, Risk Management, Routledge, Security Studies, Social Problems, SocialScience Computer Review, Sociological Inquiry, University of Michigan Press, Virginia Social Sci-ence Journal, World Politics

Memberships

American Political Science Association (section: Conflict Processes), European Political ScienceAssociation, International Political Economy Society, International Studies Association (sections:Peace Studies, Scientific Study of International Processes), Midwest Political Science Association,Network of European Peace Scientists, Peace Science Society.

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Teaching and Service

Courses Taught

• University of California, San Diego, 2007 – : Graduate: International Organization,International Relations Theory, Quantitative International Relations, Security Studies. Un-dergraduate: Introductory International Relations, Theories of Peace, U.S. Foreign Policy,Weapons of Mass Destruction. UC Santa Barbara, Spring 2011 (visiting): International Re-lations Theory (graduate). Sciences Po, Spring 2012 (visiting): The Political Economy ofWar and Peace (graduate). University of Essex, 2013-2014 (visiting): Graduate: ConflictResolution and Peace. Undergraduate: Introduction to International Relations, Conflict andCooperation.

• Columbia University, 2001 – 2007: Graduate: Game Theory and Political Theory, Topicsin International Relations Theory. Undergraduate: Globalization, Senior Honors Seminar,Theories of Peace.

• The Pennsylvania State University, 1997 – 2001: Graduate: Game Theory, Quanti-tative Political Research. Undergraduate: International Political Economy, Introduction toInternational Relations.

Department and University Service

• University of California, San Diego, 2007 – : UCSD Academic Senate Representa-tive Assembly, 2014– ; UC Institute on Global Conflict and Cooperation Steering Committee,2010-2013; Graduate Admissions Committee, Spring 2009, 2010, 2016; IR Field Coordinator,2008-2011; Project on International Affairs Speaker Series Faculty Coordinator, 2008-2011;Institute for International, Comparative, and Area Studies Research and Travel Grant Com-mittee 2010; Diversity Search Committee, Fall 2010; International Relations Search Com-mittee, 2008-2009 (Chair); Third-year Graduate IR Workshop, Fall 2007; Dissertation Com-mittees (Date, Placement): Megan Becker (2015, USC); Jeff Kaplow (2015, William andMary); Blake McMahon (2015, Air University); Cameron Brown (2014, AIPAC); JonathanMarkowitz (2014, USC); Rupal Mehta (2014 co-chair, UNL); Christopher Fariss (2013, Penn-sylvania State University); Yonatan Lupu (2012, George Washington University); BenjaminA.T. Graham (2012, USC); Neil Narang (2011, UC Santa Barbara); Ulrich H.K. Pilster (2011University of Essex, SHAPE), Gabriele Ruoff (2009 ETH Zurich, CIS); Sam Seljan TBD;Anita Kellogg (UCLA TBD).

• Columbia University, 2001 – 2007: Dissertation Proposal Review Committee, 2002-2006;International Political Economy Search Committee, 2005-2006; GSAS Travel Fellowship Com-mittee, 2004; Graduate Admissions Committee, 2001–2002; Dissertation Committees (Date,Placement): Mary McCarthy (2007, Drake University); Jason Dempsey (2007, US Army);Robert Trager (2006, UCLA); Zachary Shirkey (2006, Hunter College); Havard Hegre (De-fense: University of Oslo 2004, University of Oslo), Jeff Stacey (2004, Tulane University);Benjamin Judkins (2004, University of Utah); Ekaterina Papagianni (2002, UN High Com-missioner); Julian Schofield (2001, Concordia University).

• The Pennsylvania State University, 1997 – 2001: Undergraduate Teaching Commit-tee, 1999-2000; IPE Search Committee, 1997-1998; Dissertation Committees (Date, Place-ment): Dong-Joon Jo (2003, Seoul National University); Charles Boehmer (2002, University

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of Texas, El Paso); David Sacko (2002, US Air Force Academy); Timothy Nordstrom (2000,University of Mississippi); Tom Beech (1999, Bemidji State University).

Military Service

U.S. Army (Reserve): Enlisted (1988): E4 (Corporal) Combat Engineer (21B).Officer (1992): 1st Lt. Infantry, Honorable discharge (2001).

United States Navy: Naval Academy (1984 - 1987), Parachutist Badge.

References

Available upon request.

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