International Relations

Pandya

Sonal S. Pandya (PhD, Harvard) is an associate professor of Politics at the University of Virginia. A scholar of international political economy, her research analyzes the influence of politics on global production, and links between globalization and ethnocentrism.

Owen, IV

John M. Owen IV is Amb. Henry J. and Mrs. Marion R. Taylor Professor of Politics, and a Senior Fellow at the Institute for Advanced Studies in Culture and the Miller Center for Public Affairs. From January through June 2024 he is an Academic Visitor at Nuffield College, University of Oxford.

Lynch

His current research interests include Russian foreign policy, Russian politics in comparative perspective, and relationships between international order and political development. In 2006, he received an All-University Teaching Award. Courses offered include: Russian Foreign Policy, Russian Politics, American-Russian Relations, Domestic Politics & American Foreign Policy.

Leblang

David Leblang is the Ambassador Henry J. Taylor and Mrs. Marion R. Taylor Endowed Professor of Politics. He is the Randolph Compton Professor of Public Affairs at the University’s Miller Center of Public Affairs where he Director of Policy Studies.  He currently serves as Interim Associate Dean for Student Experience and Strategic Initiatives in the College of Arts and Sciences.  Leblang is a scholar of political economy with research interests in global migration and in the politics of financial markets.

Furia

Peter Furia is an Associate Professor on the General Faculty and the Global Studies-Security and Justice Program.

His research addresses public opinion and comparative foreign policy and utilizes web and survey data to test claims about group identity and inter-group enmity in international relations. His other interests include mass-elite relations in democracies, the patriotism-cosmopolitanism debate and the history of international political thought.

Copeland

Dale Copeland is Professor of international relations, with a focus on IR theory (security studies and international political economy).  His research interests include the origins of economic interdependence between great powers; the logic of reputation-building; bargaining and coercion theory; the interconnection between trade, finance, and militarized behavior; and the impact of the rise and decline of economic and military power on state behavior.   His most recent book is Economic Interdependence and War (Princeton UP, 2015), which was the winner of the International Studies A

Alexander

My research began with a focus on the conditions of democratic consolidation in advanced industrial countries, especially in Western Europe. My first book — The Sources of Democratic Consolidation (Cornell University Press, 2002) — argued that the key right-of-center political movements formed long-term commitments to democracy only when their political risks in democracy became relatively low as left agendas moderated across time.

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