Association News Lijphart Nominated President-Elect The 1994 Nominating Committee, composed of Virginia Sapiro, University of Wisconsin-Madison, chair; Donna Bahry, University of California, Davis; James Ceaser, University of Virginia; I.M. Dest- ler, University of Maryland; Gary Orfield, Harvard University; and Michael Preston, University of Southern California, propose the following slate for Association of- ficers and Council members. President-Elect (1994-95): Arend Lyphart, University of California, San Diego Arend Lijphart Arend Lijphart is professor of political science at the University of California, San Diego. Before he joined the UC San Diego faculty in 1978, he was Professor of Interna- tional Relations at the University of Leiden in the Netherlands from 1968 to 1978 and taught at the Uni- versity of California, Berkeley, from 1963 to 1968. He served as Chairman of his Department in 1972-74, 1976-78 and 1979-80. He has also been a Visiting Professor at Harvard University and a Visit- ing Fellow of the Institute of Ad- vanced Studies, Australian Na- tional University, Canberra, of the Netherlands Institute for Advanced Study in Wassenaar and of the Sci- ence Center in Berlin. After receiv- ing his primary and secondary edu- cation in the Netherlands, he attended college and graduate school in the United States; he earned his Ph.D. from Yale Univer- sity in 1963. He was born in 1936; he is married and has two children. His field of specialization is com- parative politics and his research has focused on the comparative study of divided societies, demo- cratic institutions and electoral sys- tems. He is the author or editor of more than a dozen books, including Democracy in Plural Societies: A Comparative Exploration (1977); Democracies: Patterns of Majori- tarian and Consensus Government in Twenty-One Countries (1984); Power-Sharing in South Africa (1985); Parliamentary versus Presi- dential Government (1992); and Electoral Systems and Party Sys- tems: A Study of Twenty-Seven Democracies, 1945-1990 (1994). He has also written more than a hun- dred book chapters and articles in professional journals. He was the founding editor of the European Journal of Political Research (1971-75), and he has served on the editorial boards of several other professional journals such as the American Political Science Review, the British Journal of Political Sci- ence, Comparative Political Studies and Electoral Studies. He has served as Secretary and Vice President of the American Po- litical Science Association, Vice President of the International Stud- ies Association and Co-Chair of the Research Committee on Compara- tive Representation and Electoral Systems of the International Politi- cal Science Association. He re- ceived the Ralph J. Bunche Award of the American Political Science Association in 1979, and he was elected to the Royal Netherlands Academy of Sciences in 1980 and to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1989. He has also been a German Marshall Fund Fel- low, a Guggenheim Fellow and a Stein Rokkan Lecturer. Vice President (1994-95): F. Chris Garcia, University of New Mexico F. Chris Garcia F. Chris Garcia has been a pro- fessor of political science at the University of New Mexico since 1970. He has also served the Uni- versity as Vice President for Aca- demic Affairs, Provost and Dean of the College of Arts and Sciences. Garcia earned his B.A. and M.A. at the University of New Mexico and his Ph.D. at the University of California, Davis in 1972. He has written several books in his spe- cialty of public opinion and elec- toral behavior including Latino Voices (co-authored, 1992); La Causa Political: A Chicano Politics Reader (1974) and The Political Socialization of Chicano Children (1973). 290 PS: Political Science & Politics The Woodrow Wilson Department of Government and Foreign Affairs at The University of Virginia Congratulates Charles O, Jones 89th President of APSA Scholar, Friend, and Colleague (1981 -1988) Association News He is a past Secretary of the APSA's Executive Council, past President of the Western Political Science Association and member of Phi Beta Kappa, Phi Kappa Phi and Pi Sigma Alpha. Garcia has also served as an election analyst on KOAT-TV since 1973. Vice President (1994-95): Betty Glad, University of South Carolina Betty Glad Betty Glad is a Carolina Re- search Professor in the Department of Government and International Studies at the University of South Carolina and is president of the International Society for Political Psychology (1993-94) and co-chair of the Psycho-politics Research Group of IPSA. She also serves on the Advisory Committee on Histor- ical Diplomatic Documentation, U.S. Department of State. Her books include The Psychological Dimensions of War (editor and con- tributor, 1990); Key Pittman: The Tragedy of a Senate Insider (1986); Jimmy Carter: In Search of the Great White House (1980); Charles Evans Hughes and the Illusions of Innocence (1966). She has also been a National Endowment for the Hu- manities Senior Fellow, the president of the Presidency Research Group of the APSA, acting head of the De- partment of Political Science, Uni- versity of Illinois and a member of several editorial boards. She won a 292 "mentor of distinction" award from the Women's Caucus (1989). Her most recent articles include "The Psychological Presidency," in the Encyclopedia of the Ameri- can Presidency and "Political Psy- chology: Where Have We Been? Where Are We Going?" in William Crotty, ed., Political Science: Looking to the Future, vol. III. Vice President (1994-95): Catherine Kelleher, The Brookings Institution Catherine McArdle Kelleher is a Senior Fellow in the Foreign Policy Studies Program at the Brookings Institution. Her current project at Brookings, Germany Reborn, seeks to place German unification in the framework of changes in German foreign policy and European secu- rity in the 1980s and 1990s. Catherine Kelleher Kelleher was formerly the direc- tor of the Center for International Security Studies and a professor in the School of Public Affairs at the University of Maryland. She has taught at the National War College and at the Universities of Denver and Michigan. Kelleher served as a staff member for the National Secu- rity Council in the Carter Adminis- tration and was a research fellow at the International Institute for Stra- tegic Studies in London. She has served as a consultant to govern- ment and public sector organiza- tions and to several private founda- tions. Kelleher has published widely in the field of national security and arms control studies and has been active in the design and implemen- tation of programs to broaden edu- cation in this field. Her most recent publications include "Cooperative Security in Europe" in Janne E. Nolan, ed., Global Engagement: Cooperative Security in the 21st Century (1994); Management and Disposition of Excess Weapons Plutonium, contributing author, National Academy of Sciences, Committee on International Secu- rity and Arms Control (1994); "Co- operative Security in Europe: A New Order for the 1990s," in Stephen Szabo and Douglas Stuart, eds., Arnold Wolfers (1994); and "Soldiering On: U.S. Public Opin- ion on the Use of Force," Brook- ings Review (1994). Kelleher received her undergrad- uate training at Mount Holyoke College and her doctorate from the Massachusetts Institute of Technol- ogy. She is a member of the Coun- cil of the International Institute for Strategic Studies, is Vice-Chair of the Committee on International Se- curity and Arms Control of the Na- tional Academy of Sciences and is president of Women in Interna- tional Security (WHS). Secretary (1994-95): Loch Johnson, University of Georgia Loch Johnson PS: Political Science & Politics Association News Loch K. Johnson is a Regents Professor of Political Science at the University of Georgia and author of several books, including The Mak- ing of International Agreements, A Season of Inquiry, America's Secret Power, America as a World Power, and Runoff Elections in the United States (with Charles S. Bul- lock III). He has won the Certifi- cate of Distinction from the Na- tional Intelligence Study Center, the V.O. Key Award and, at the University of Georgia, the Josiah Meigs Award for Excellence in Teaching and the Creative Re- search Medal. Prior to joining the faculty at the University of Georgia in 1979, he was an APSA Congres- sional Fellow, taught at Ohio Uni- versity and served on various com- mittees in the U.S. Congress, including as staff director of the Subcommittee on Oversight, Per- manent Select Committee on Intel- ligence and as assistant to the Chairman, Senate Select Commit- tee on Intelligence. A native of New Zealand, he received his B.A. degree from the University of Cali- fornia, Davis and his Ph.D. degree from the University of California, Riverside. Council (1995-96): Timothy E. Cook, Williams College Timothy E. Cook is professor of political science at Williams Col- Timothy E. Cook lege, where he has taught since 1981. He is just finishing a three- year term as chair of the depart- ment. Cook received his B.A. in 1976 from Pomona College and his Ph.D. in political science from the University of Wisconsin in 1982. An American Political Science Association Congressional Fellow and a Guest Scholar at the Brook- ings Institution in 1984-85, he is the author of Making Laws and Mak- ing News: Media Strategies in the U.S. House of Representatives (1989). His articles on political communication in the United States, political socialization and representation in Congress have been published in the American Political Science Review, American Journal of Political Science, Jour- nal of Politics, Western Political Quarterly, Polity, Human Develop- ment and Journal of Health Policy, Politics and Law, as well as in nu- merous edited volumes. Cook was the first occupant of the Laurence Lombard Chair as visiting associate professor at the Joan Shorenstein Barone Center on the Press, Politics and Public Pol- icy at the Kennedy School of Gov- ernment at Harvard in 1989-90. He will also be a visiting professor in the political science department at Yale in the spring of 1995. He is currently working on two projects: writing a book tentatively entitled, Taking the Fourth Branch Serious- ly: The News Media as a Political Institution, and co-authoring a study of the actions and interac- tions of the news media, candidates and citizens in the 1992 presidential election. Within the Association, Cook helped to found the Gay and Les- bian Caucus and served as the chair of the Carey McWilliams Award Committee in 1992-93. Fields: American Government and Politics, Political Psychology, Legislative Studies, Communica- tions and Politics, Lesbian and Gay Politics. Council (1995-96): Susan A. Mac- Manus, University of South Florida Susan A. MacManus is professor of public administration and politi- cal science at the University of South Florida, Tampa. She is Presi- Susan A. MacManus dent of the Southern Political Sci- ence Association and sits on the editorial boards of the Journal of Politics, Public Administration Re- view, Policy Studies Journal, Jour- nal of Urban Affairs, Public Bud- geting and Financial Management and the International Journal of Public Administration, among oth- ers. Her work on intergovernmen- tal relations, budgeting and finance, state and local government, urban politics, and women and minorities has appeared in these journals, along with the American Journal of Political Science, Western Political Quarterly, American Politics Quar- terly, Urban Affairs Quarterly, State and Local Government Re- view and the National Civic Re- view. Her latest books are Reap- portionment and Representation in Florida: An Historical Collection (edited, 1991) and Doing Business With Government: Federal, State, Local and Foreign Government Purchasing Practices for Every Business and Public Institution (1992). She regularly serves as a media political analyst and con- sultant. Council (1995-96): Helen Milner, Columbia University Helen Milner is an associate pro- fessor in the Department of Politi- cal Science at Columbia University where she has been on the fac- June 1994 293 Association News ulty since 1986. She received her A.B. from Stanford University in 1980 and her Ph.D. from Harvard University in 1986. She is the re- cipient of many awards and honors, among them a Social Science Re- search Council Advanced Research Fellowship in Foreign Policy Stud- ies (1989-91); and the Sumner Prize for the exceptional thesis in inter- national law and peace at Harvard (1986). Milner is the author of Resisting Protectionism: Global Industries and the Politics of International Trade (1988) and edited The Politi- cal Economy of National Security: An Annotated Bibliography, ed. (1989); East West Trade and the Atlantic Alliance, ed. (1990); and The Library of International Politi- cal Economy, ed. (1993). She has contributed articles to a variety of books and journals including "In- ternational Firms, Regionalism and Domestic Politics," in Richard Stubbs and Geoffrey Underhill, eds., Political Economy and the Changing Global Order (1993); "International Theories of Cooper- ation among Nations: A Review Essay," World Politics (1992); and "The Assumption of Anarchy in International Relations: A Cri- tique," Review of International Studies (1991). Domestic Sources of Interna- tional Cooperation will be pub- lished in 1994 and she is currently at work on a number of other projects. Milner was the Acting Director of Columbia's Institute on Western Europe in the Spring of 1993 and has participated in professional ac- tivities ranging from Associate Edi- tor at Cambridge University Press (1991-present) to Member of the Rights and Responsibilities Com- mittee of the International Studies Association (1988-89). Council (1995-96), Mary P. Nichols, Fordham University Mary P. Nichols is professor of political science at Fordham Uni- versity, where she has taught since 1988. She also served as Visiting Professor for Honors Education at the University of Delaware and has Mary P. Nichols taught at St. John's College and Northern Illinois University. She received her B.A. from Newcomb College of Tulane University and her Ph.D. from the University of Chicago. She received the Leo Strauss Dissertation Award, presented by the American Political Science As- sociation, and has held several fel- lowships from the National Endow- ment for the Humanities and the H.B. Earhart Foundation. She has served on the Editorial Board of the American Political Science Re- view as a member of APSA's Com- mittee of Publications, and as the 1994 Program Chair of the Politics and Literature Section of the APSA. She currently serves on the Editorial Advisory Board of the Review of Politics. She has written Citizens and Statesmen: A Study of Aristotle's Politics (1992) and Socrates and the Political Community: An An- cient Debate (1987), and edited four editions of Readings in Ameri- can Government. Her numerous articles include "Rousseau's Influ- ence on Contemporary Educational Philosophy: Romantic or Authori- tarian?" in Law and Philosophy (1992); "Spiritedness and Philoso- phy in Plato's Republic," in Under- standing the Political Spirit (1988); "Aristotle's Defense of Rhetoric," The Journal of Politics (1987); "Kant's Teaching of Historical Progress and Its Cosmopolitan Goal," Polity (1986); "Rousseau's Novel Education in the Emile, " Political Theory (1985); "The Re- public's Two Alternatives: Philoso- pher-kings and Socrates," Political Theory (1984). She is currently the Co-Director of "Gender and Political Philoso- phy" at Fordham University and Director of Graduate Studies. Fields: Political Philosophy, Classical and Modern; Politics and Literature; and Women and Politi- cal Theory. Council (1995-96), David E. Price, U.S. House of Representatives Honorable David E. Price Congressman David E. Price is Democratic Representative of the Fourth District of North Carolina. He earned his B.A. from the Uni- versity of North Carolina in 1961 and got his B.D. (1964) and Ph.D. (1969) from Yale University where he was elected to Phi Beta Kappa. From 1963-67, he served Senator E.L. Bartlett (D-Arkansas) as a legislative aide and from 1973-86 was a professor of political science and public policy at Duke Univer- sity. Price is the author of several books including Bringing Back the Parties, The Commerce Commit- tees, Who Makes the Laws? and The Congressional Experience: A View from the Hill. 294 PS: Political Science & Politics Association News Council (1995-96). Theda Skocpol, Harvard University Theda Skocpol Theda Skocpol, professor of so- ciology, currently teaches at Har- vard University; she was previ- ously professor of sociology and political science at the University of Chicago. Her first book, States and Social Revolutions: A Compar- ative Analysis of France, Russia and China (1979), won the C. Wright Mills Award and the 1980 American Sociological Award for a Distinguished Contribution to Scholarship. Skocpol has served as the co-chair of the States and So- cial Structures Committee, origi- nally organized under the auspices of the Social Science Research Council and now located at the Russell Sage Foundation. For the past decade, Skocpol has been do- ing research on U.S. politics and public policies in comparative and historical perspective. In 1988, she published a co-edited collection on The Politics of Social Policy in the United States. Skocpol was a founding member and the 1991-92 president of the Politics and His- tory Section of the American Politi- cal Science Association. Her latest book is Protecting Soldiers and Mothers: The Political Origins of Social Policy in the United States (1992). This book has recently re- ceived five scholarly awards; the J. David Greenstone Award of the Politics and History Section of the APSA; the Best Book Award of the Political Sociology Section of the American Sociological Association; the 1993 Woodrow Wilson Founda- tion Award of the APSA, given an- nually for "the best book published in the United States during the prior year on government, politics or international affairs"; the 1993 Allan Sharlin Memorial Award of the Social Science History Associa- tion; and the 1993 Ralph Waldo Emerson Award of Phi Beta Kappa, given to honor a compre- hensive study that contributes sig- nificantly to "historical, philosophi- cal or religious interpretations of the human condition." Council (1995-96), Toni-Michelle C. Travis, George Mason University Toni-Michelle C. Travis Toni-Michelle C. Travis is assis- tant dean of the College of Arts and Sciences and associate profes- sor of government and politics at George Mason University. She earned her bachelor's degree at Bard College and her Ph.D. at the University of Chicago. She currently serves as first vice- president of the National Capital Area Political Science Association and President-elect of the Women's Caucus in Political Science. She also serves on the editorial boards of Women and Politics, Journal of Urban Affairs, and the Urban Affairs Quarterly. Her publications include: "Bos- ton: the Unfinished Agenda" in Race, Class and Cities, Rufus Browning, Dale Rogers Marshall and David Tabb, editors (1990); "Women as an Emerging Power Bloc: Ethnic and Racial Consider- ations" in Ethnicity and Women, edited by Winston A. Van Home (1986); "Black Women in the Con- tinuing Struggle for Equality" in Race, Sex and Policy Problems, edited by Marian Lief Palley and Michael Preston (1979). She is co- author with Karen Rosenblum of the forthcoming book on The Meaning of Difference. In the APSA, she has served on the Committee on the Status of Women, Committee on the Status of Blacks and the Leonard D. White Award Committee. She will be a section head for the Race, Gender and Ethnicity Section of the 1995 APSA meeting. Fields: Women and Politics. Urban and Ethnic Politics Council (1995-96), Eddie N. Wil- liams, Joint Center for Political and Economic Studies Eddie N. Williams Eddie N. Williams has been pres- ident of the Joint Center for Politi- cal and Economic studies since June 1994 295 Association News 1972. Located in Washington, D.C., the Joint Center is a national, nonprofit and nonpartisan research and public policy institution that conducts research and analyses on major policy issues that affect both black Americans and the nation as a whole. In 1992, the National Black Caucus of State Legislators gave Williams its "National Builder Award" for his outstanding contri- butions to the nation. In 1991, Washingtonian magazine named Williams one of 16 "Washingtoni- ans of the Year." Between 1968 and 1972, Williams was vice president for public affairs and director of the Center for Pol- icy Study at the University of Chi- cago. In the 1960s, he held several positions in the U.S. Department of State and on the U.S. Senate Com- mittee on Foreign Relations. For his leadership and exemplary service, Mr. Williams has received numerous honors and awards. In 1988, he received the prestigious MacArthur Foundation "genius award" for his work "in enabling black leaders, politicians and others to highlight the needs of the na- tion's poor and disenfranchised." In addition to honorary degrees from Bowie State University in Maryland and the University of the District of Columbia, Mr. Williams has been honored by numerous in- stitutions, including the Congres- sional Black Caucus, the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, and the University of Illinois, his alma mater. In 1986, the National Journal named him as one of the 150 people in the United States, outside the government, who have had the greatest impact on what the federal government does. Williams also is active in a num- ber of influential associations. To- gether with the heads of the Na- tional Urban League and the NAACP, he is one of the founding members of the Black Leadership Forum, a coalition of the most in- fluential national black public ser- vice organizations in the U.S., and he currently serves as its secretary- treasurer. He is on the boards of Indepen- dent Sector, National Opinion Re- search Center, National Endow- ment for Democracy, Riggs National Bank of Washington, Japan-America Society of Washing- ton, Public/Private Ventures, The Promus Companies, Inc. and Grumman Corporation He serves as chairman of the Board of Directors of the National Coalition on Black Voter Participa- tion and of the PEW Partnership for Civic Change. Continuing officers and council members for 1994-95 will be: President (1994-95): Sidney Verba, Harvard University Sidney Verba Sidney Verba is the Carl H. Pforzheimer University Professor at Harvard University. He previ- ously taught at Princeton, Stanford and the University of Chicago. At Harvard, he has served as chair of the department of government and Associate Dean of the Faculty for Undergraduate Education. He is currently director of the Harvard University Library. Verba earned his B.A. from Harvard and his Ph.D. from Princeton. For the APSA, he has served as vice president and as member of the council, as well as chair of the Program Committee for the Annual Meeting. He is the author or co-author of numerous books and articles in the fields of American and comparative government. These include Small Groups and Political Behavior (1961); The Civic Culture (1963); Caste, Race and Politics (1969); Participation in America (1972); The Changing American Voter (1976); Injury to Insult (1979); Par- ticipation and Political Equality (1979); Equality in America (1981); and Elites and the Idea of Equality (1985). Verba was awarded the APSA's Kammerer Award for the best book in American Politics (for Participa- tion in America) and the APSA's Woodrow Wilson award for the best book in government, politics or international affairs (for The Changing American Voter). He also received the APSA's James Madison Award for a career contri- bution to political science at the 1993 Annual Meeting. He is a member of the National Academy of Sciences and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. He has been the chair of the Social Science Research Coun- cil's Policy Committee and served on its Board of Directors. He has also been a member of the National Research Council's Commission on the Behavioral Sciences. He cur- rently chairs the Committee on In- ternational Cooperation and Con- flict of the National Academy of Sciences' National Research Coun- cil. He has been a Guggenheim Fel- low and a Fellow of the Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences. Verba is low to moderate in po- litical participation. He scored 3 on an overall additive scale of political activity for which the population mean is 2.12 (standard deviation = 1.74, n = 15055) but the mean for Ph.D.s is 3.79 (standard deviation 2.01, n = 163). Fields: American and Compara- tive Politics, Electoral Behavior and Public Opinion, Political Partic- ipation. Treasurer (1993-95): Susan C. Bourque, Smith College Susan C. Bourque is the Esther Booth Wiley Professor and chair of the department of government at Smith College, where she is also director of the Smith Project on Women and Social Change. She 296 PS: Political Science & Politics Association News Susan C. Bourque earned both her bachelor's degree and her Ph.D. at Cornell Univer- sity. She has served on the Executive Council and the Administrative Committee of the APSA, and is president of the Women in Politics Section. She has also served on the Executive Council of the Latin American Studies Association and the Association for Women in De- velopment. She is the author of four books: The Politics of Women's Education (with Jill K. Conway 1993); Learn- ing About Women (with Jill K. Conway and Joan W. Scott 1989); Women Living Change (with Donna R. Divine 1985); and Women of the Andes (with Kay B. Warren), for which she was awarded the Hamilton Prize. She is also the author of three mono- graphs, and numerous articles, book chapters and reviews. Her honors include: Fulbright- Hayes Fellowship and grants from the Ford, Rockefeller and Mellon foundations, and the Heinz Endow- ment. Fields: Comparative Politics, Latin American Politics, and Women and Politics. Council (1993-95): John A. Garcia, University of Arizona John A. Garcia is associate pro- fessor of political science at the University of Arizona. He com- pleted his five-year term as depart- ment head last year. He earned his bachelor's degree at the University of Texas-Austin; his Master's at the University of Houston; and his Ph.D at Florida State University. He has served on several APSA committees. More recently, he chaired the Ralph Bunche book award on cultural pluralism, as well as serving on the APSA Committee on the Status of Chicanos and Lati- nos. In addition, he has been on the executive councils of the Southwestern and Western Political Science Association, as well as re- gional associations and committees. He had also served on the editorial boards of Urban Affairs Quarterly, Journal of Politics, American Poli- tics Quarterly and Journal of the Southwest. In addition, he has served on CLEP committee for American Government, Advanced Placement committee on American Government and Comparative Poli- tics and the National Teachers Examination (social studies) com- mittee. Recent publications include: Lat- ino Voices: Perspectives on Politics of Mexican Americans, Puerto Ri- cans and Cubans (1992); "Expand- ing Disciplinary Boundaries: Black, Latino, and Racial Minority Group Politics in Political Science" (co- authored with Paula McClain) in A. Finifter (ed.). Political Science: The State of the Discipline II (1993); "The Chicano Movement and Politics of the 90's" in I. Ortiz and D. Maciel (eds.). Chicanos in the Contemporary Era: Latinos and Politics: A Research Bibliography (co-authored 1991); "Mexican Im- migrants, Mexican Americans and the American Political Culture" (co-authored) in Edmondson and Fixx (eds.). Immigration and Pub- lic Policy (1992); and "Latino Poli- tics in the United States" in E. Cashmore (ed.). Dictionary of Ra- cial and Ethnic Relations (1993). Additionally, he was one of the four coprincipal investigators of the Latino National Political Survey. Fields: Urban Politics and Pol- icy, Political Participation, Elec- toral Politics and Mobilization and Political Psychology and Sociology. Council (1993-95): Barbara Geddes, University of California, Los Angeles Barbara Geddes Barbara Geddes has taught at UCLA since 1984. She received her Ph.D. from the University of California, Berkeley, in 1986. She teaches Latin American politics, comparative revolution and re- search design. Her publications include Politi- cian 's Dilemma: Building State Ca- pacity in Latin America; A Game Theoretic Model of Reform in Latin American Democracies," APSR (1991); and "How the Cases You Choose Affect the Answers You Get: Selection Bias in Com- parative Politics," Political Analy- sis (1990). She has also written on public opinion in authoritarian re- gimes, the initiation of new demo- cratic institutions, the political costs of structural adjustment and methodology for comparative poli- tics. Awards include fellowships or research grants from the National Science Foundation, the Hoover Institution, and IRIS (Institutional Reform and the Informal Sector). She has served on the APSA Program Committee, the Franklin Burdette Pi Sigma Alpha Prize Committee and was chair of the Heinz Eulau Prize Committee. She is a member of the editorial boards June 1994 297 Association News of the American Journal of Politi- cal Science and Comparative Polit- ical Studies and of the steering committee of the Institute for Global Conflict and Cooperation. Council (1993-95): John Mark Hansen, University of Chicago Council (1993-95): Anne H. Hop- kins, University of Minnesota John Mark Hansen Mark Hansen is associate profes- sor of political science at the Uni- versity of Chicago, where he has taught since 1986. He received his B.A. from the University of Kan- sas in 1981 and his Ph.D. from Yale University in 1987. During this academic year, he is a fellow at the Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences. Hansen writes on interest groups, congressional politics, po- litical participation and political economy. He is the author of Gain- ing Access: Congress and the Farm Lobby, 1919-1981 (1991) and the co-author of Mobilization, Partici- pation and Democracy in America (1993). His articles have appeared in the American Political Science Review, International Organiza- tion, Studies in American Political Development and Public Opinion Quarterly. Fields: Political Parties and Inter- est Groups, Legislative Politics, Political Economy, Political Meth- odology. Anne H. Hopkins Anne H. Hopkins is a professor of political science and Vice Presi- dent for Arts, Sciences and Engi- neering at the University of Minne- sota. Before coming to Minnesota in 1990, she was at the University of Tennessee-Knoxville for 16 years, serving as a faculty member and later as vice provost. She also served as faculty member and de- partment chair at Hobart and Wil- liam Smith Colleges. Her B.A., M.A. and Ph.D. are from Syracuse University. Hopkins is past president of the Southern Political Science Associa- tion and has served on the editorial board of the Journal of Politics since 1982. She has also served on the editorial boards of Administra- tion and Society, American Politics Quarterly and the University of Tennessee Press. Her publications include: "Ob- servations of Gender, Political Sci- ence and the Academy (Journal of Politics, 1993); "Campaign Activi- ties and Local Political Organiza- tion in Nashville," chapter in Polit- ical Parties at Local Areas, William Crotty, ed. (1986); "State Campaign Fund Raising: Targets and Response" (with Ruth S. Jones), Journal of Politics (1985); Work and Job Satisfaction in the Public Sector (1983); "Perceptions of Discrimination by Public Em- ployees," Public Administration Review (1980); "Toward a Classifi- cation of State Electoral Change: A Note on Tennessee, 1837-1976" (with William Lyons), Journal of Politics (1980); "Opinion Publics and Support for Public Policy: A Comparative State Analysis," American Journal of Political Sci- ence (1974). Fields: Comparative State Poli- tics, Public Policy. Council (1993-95): Margaret Levi, University of Washington Margaret Levi Margaret Levi is professor of political science, University of Washington. She received her B.A. at Bryn Mawr College in 1968 and her Ph.D. at Harvard in 1974. Her books include Of Rule and Revenue, The Limits of Rationality (edited with Karen Cook), and The Contingencies of Consent. She is spending 1993-94 at the Center for Advanced Study in Behavioral Sci- ences (Palo Alto) and has also held visiting research appointments at the University of Essex, London School of Economics, European University Institute, the Maison des Sciences de l'Homme and the Australian National University. Her major area of interest is po- 298 PS: Political Science & Politics Association News litical economy. In particular, she applies the logic of rational choice to historical and comparative prob- lems of state-building, government action, compliance and consent. She is currently chairperson of the Organized Section on Political Economy (SOPE). Council (1993-95): Mamie E. Locke, Hampton University Mamie E. Locke Mamie E. Locke is assistant dean of the School of Liberal Arts and Education and associate pro- fessor of political science at Hamp- ton University. She earned the bachelor's degree at Tougaloo Col- lege and her master's and Ph.D. at Atlanta University. She currently serves as president of the National Conference of Black Political Scientists and is a member of the APSA 1993 program committee and the editorial board of PS. Her publications include "Sex- ism and Racism: Obstacles to the Development of Black Women in South Africa," in Feminist Visions: Toward a Transformation of the Liberal Arts Curriculum, Diane L. Fowlkes and Charlotte McClure, eds. (1984); "Africana Women: Teaching and Research in the So- cial Sciences," with Gloria Brax- ton, African Women's Studies Se- ries (1986); "Outsiders in Insiders Politics: Black Women and the American Political System," in Readings in American Political Is- sues, Franklin Jones and Michael Adams, eds. (1987); "Rural Afri- cana Women: A Case Study of Sunflower County, Mississippi," Network: A Pan-African Women's Forum (1989); "From Three-Fifths to Zero: Implications of the Consti- tution for African American Wom- en," Women and Politics (1989); "Is This America? Fannie Lou Hamer and the Mississippi Free- dom Democratic Party," Women in the Civil Rights Movement, Vicki Crawford et al., eds. (1990); and "The Impact of Family Structure Variations Among Black Families on the Underenumeration of Black Males," co-authored with John Hudgins and Bernadette Holmes for the U.S. Census Bureau. She has also authored book reviews and several biographical sketches for Notable Black American Women (1991) and American National Biography. She has been the recipient of a National Endowment for the Hu- manities Award, Fulbright-Hays Summer Seminar Award (for study in Egypt), National Conference of Black Political Scientists Best Pa- per award, Ford Foundation curric- ulum development awards and the Hampton University Lindback Award for distinguished teaching. Fields: African American Poli- tics, Women and Politics (particu- larly Africana women) and Urban and Ethnic Politics. Council (1993-95); William E. Nel- son, Jr., The Ohio State University William E. Nelson, Jr. is re- search professor of black studies and professor of political science at The Ohio State University. He earned his B.A. degree at Arkansas AM&N College, his master's de- gree at Atlanta University and his Ph.D. degree at the University of Illinois. Currently he is the presi- dent of the African Heritage Stud- ies Association. He is the former president of the National Confer- ence of Black Political Scientists and the former chair of the Na- tional Council for Black Studies. He served as chair of the depart- William E. Nelson, Jr. ment of black studies at Ohio State from 1972-86. He has served as a member of the Committee on the Status of Blacks of the American Political Science Association. His honors include a Fulbright Fellowship to Britain (1990), and Award of Merit from the Commit- tee on the Status of Blacks, APSA (1988). Publications include Elect- ing Black Mayors: Political Action in the Black Community (1977, co- authored); "Black Elected Admin- istrators: The Trials of Office," Public Administration Review (1974); "Cleveland: The Rise and Fall of the New Black Politics" {The New Black Politics, 1982); "The Weakening of State Participa- tion in Civil Rights Enforcement" {Public Policy Across States and Communities, co-authored, 1986); "Black Presidential Strategies and Institutional Constraints" {National Political Science Review, 1989); "Black Mayoral Leadership: A Twenty Year Perspective" {The National Political Science Review, 1990). Fields: Urban Politics, African American Politics, Ethnic Politics, Public Policy, Political Movements and Organizations. Council (1993-95): Michael P. Zuck- ert, Carleton College Michael P. Zuckert is the Dor- othy and Edward Congdon Profes- June 1994 299 NEW FOR GRADUATE STUDENTS ANNUAL MEETING TRAVEL GRANTS PARTICIPATING IN THE 1994 ANNUAL MEETING??? In a continuing effort to encourage the participation of students in professional conferences, the APSA is now offering a limited number of travel grants to U.S. graduate students who will be participating in the 1994 Annual Meeting in New York City, September 1-4. Interested persons will be required to complete an application form and obtain a letter of support from their department chairperson. The maximum individual award will be limited to $300 in an attempt to assist a greater number of students. The deadline for receipt of the complete application is June 30. Applications without a letter of support will not be considered. 1c Priority will be given to applicants meeting qualifications ranking in the following order: • Position on a panel as a paper presenter • Position on a panel as a discussant • Advanced Graduate Student For Application forms or further information please write to: Graduate Student Travel Grants, APSA, 1527 New Hampshire Ave., NW, Washington, DC 20036-1290 t American Political Science Association Announces 1994 Foreign Student Travel Grants Are you an advanced foreign graduate student attending an American university and hoping to attend the 1994 APSA Annual Meeting in New York City? Each year the APSA awards more than 30 grants to qualified students. Meet the following guidelines and you might join us in New York. • Recipients of awards must be studying in the United States at the tune the award is offered to them. • Recipients must be full-tune graduate students. Foreign graduate students having refugee, immigrant, or tourist visa status are not eligible. • Applicants who are furthest along in their graduate course of study and intend to return to their native country once their course of study is completed will be given preference. • Applicants are not eligible for awards if they are receiving any U.S. government funds for either travel or academic expenses. • Previous grant recipients are not eligible. The maximum award to an individual is $300. A completed application should include a letter of support from your department chairperson. Applications without a letter of support will not be considered. The deadline for receipt of the complete application is June 30. r Applications are available from the APSA National Office. For application forms or further information please write to: Foreign Advanced Graduate Student Travel Grants, APSA, 1527 New Hampshire Ave., NW, Washington, DC 20036-1290. t This program is supported by the Asia Foundation, the Huang Hsing Foundation, and the APSA Association News Michael P. Zuckert sor of Political Science at Carleton College, where he has taught since 1968. He has also served as visiting professor at Claremont Men's Col- lege and Cornell University. His fields of specialization are Political Philosophy, with an emphasis on the liberal tradition, and American constitutionalism and political thought. He earned his B.A. at Cornell and his Ph.D. at the University of Chicago. In his time, he has held several fellowships from the National En- dowment for the Humanities, been a fellow at the Woodrow Wilson Center for Scholars and was awarded a grant from the Bill of Rights Educational Collaborative, of which the APSA was a co-spon- sor, to run a mini-course on the Bill of Rights and the States. He has recently completed a book entitled Natural Rights and the New Republicanism. Recent publications include "Completing the Constitution: The Fourteenth Amendment," "The Virtuous Pol- ity, the Accountable Polity: Free- dom and Responsibility in The Federalist, "On Social State," "Lin- coln and the Problem of Civil Reli- gion." He is also co-author and co-producer of "Mr. Adams and Mr. Jefferson," a nine-part radio drama, broadcast over the APR network in 1988-89 and repeated in 1993. He currently serves as Re- search Director for a television se- ries produced by KTCA-TV, enti- tled The American Revolution. Law and Courts Section Awards The Law and Courts Section of the APSA seeks nominations for the Congressional Quarterly Award for Best Paper by a graduate stu- dent. Any paper in the field of law and courts written by a political science graduate student between July 1993 and June 1994 is eligible. The winner will be announced at the 1994 APSA meeting and will receive a $200 prize. The deadline for nominations is July 1, 1994. Faculty who wish to nominate pa- pers should send one copy to each of the following members of the CQ Award Committee (3 copies total): Micheal Giles, Chair of CQ Com- mittee, Dept. of Political Science, Emory University, Atlanta GA 30322; Susan Sterett, Dept. of Po- litical Science, University of Den- ver, E. Evans at S. University, Denver CO 80208; Harry Hirsch, Dept. of Political Science, Univ. of Calif, at San Diego, 9500 Gilman Dr., La Jolla CA 92093. The Law and Courts Section will give two additional awards this year for distinguished scholarship in the field: the C. Herman Pritch- ett Award for the best book pub- lished in 1993, and the American Judicature Society Award for the best faculty paper given at the 1993 APSA meeting. The Pritchett Award committee includes Michael McCann (chair), Susan Lawrence, and C. Neal Tate, while the AJS Award committee includes Susan Gluck Mezey (chair), Kevin McGuire, and Richard Pacelle. Davis to Serve on Advisory Committee on Historical Diplomatic Documentation APSA President Charles O. Jones nominated Vincent Davis to serve as the Association's repre- sentative for a regular three-year term on the Secretary of State's Advisory Committee on Historical Diplomatic Documentation. The Secretary acted favorably on the nomination and Davis has now been appointed. Davis has been Director of the Patterson School of Diplomacy and International Com- merce and the Patterson Chair Pro- fessor of International Studies, University of Kentucky [Lexington 40506-0027] since 1971. In the sum- mer of 1993, he relinquished the directorship in order to devote more time to the professorship. Davis invites APSA members who may have experienced recent prob- lems with research access to official U.S. diplomatic archives, or who may have constructive suggestions for improving the access process, to communicate with him so that he may more effectively represent Association views in these matters. Foreign Student Travel Grants for 1994 APSA Annual Meeting Each year the American Political Science Association awards travel grants to advanced foreign graduate students enrolled in American uni- versities to enable these students to attend the APSA Annual Meeting. More than 30 foreign students are supported in this way each year. The student travel grants are made possible through the support of the Asia Foundation, the Huang Hsing Foundation, the APSA Council and other sources. The APSA selects the recipients on the basis of the following guide- lines: • Recipients of awards must be studying in the United States at the time the award is offered to them. • Recipients must be full-time graduate students. Foreign graduate students having refugee, immigrant, or tourist visa status are not eligible. • Applicants who are furthest along in their graduate course of study and intend to return to their native country once their course of study is completed will be given preference. • Applicants are not eligible for awards if they are receiving any 302 PS: Political Science & Politics