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Political Science
1246 SSH
University of California, Davis
One Shields Avenue
Davis, CA 95616
(530) 752-0966
phone
(530) 752-8666
fax
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Selected Recent Placements
Sarah A. Fulton (PhD,
2006) is an Assistant Professor at Texas A&M
University. She is interested in campaigns and elections,
with an emphasis on women in American politics.
Her dissertation, Alice Through
the Looking Glass: Gender, Perceptions
and the Decision to Run, considered the
impact of gender and attitudes on the decision to run for higher office, using
a large-n mail survey she conducted among a national sample of state
legislators. Sarah has received a number of awards, most
recently the Pi Sigma Alpha Award for the best paper presented at the 2007
meeting of the Western Political Science Association for research based on her
dissertation. She has published articles
in the Political Research Quarterly
and the American Political Science Review
(with Cherie Maestas, L. Sandy Maisel, and Walter J. Stone) and is currently
working on a project that examines the impact of gender on electoral outcomes
and fundraising success. |
Daniel Brunstetter (PhD, 2005) is an Assistant Professor at the University of California, Irvine.
Daniel studies political theory, with a focus on early modern thought. His dissertation,
Conquest of Paradigms: The Discovery of the New World and the rise of Modernity, explored the impact of the
Discovery of the New World on the evolution of European thought, illustrating how the shock of this unforeseeable
encounter led to a paradigm shift in the European understanding of human nature and politics. As a graduate student,
Daniel received a number of awards, including a Chateaubriand Fellowship to conduct research in France. His current
research interests include early modern political thought, the just war, and French political thought in the
Enlightenment. He is currently working on a project that examines the importance of the sixteenth-century Spanish
debates about the conquest of the New World in clarifying contemporary questions about the just war. |
Michael Koch (PhD, 2002)
is an Assistant Professor at Texas A&M University. Mike's research
focuses on the intersection of domestic and international politics. He
examines how variations in the political systems within states affect
foreign policy, for example how political competition and the
subsequent partisan outcomes in democratic governments shape foreign
policy decisions between states. Mike received an Institute of Global
Conflict and Cooperation dissertation fellowship, and after graduating
was a post-doctoral research fellow at Pennsylvania State University
and was then awarded a UC Davis Faculty Fellowship. His publications
include "Casualties and Democratic Accountability: Electoral Rules and
Costly Conflicts" in Journal of Conflict Resolution (with Scott S. Gartner) and "Testing Contending
Explanations of the Democratic Peace" in Conflict Management and Peace Science (with Bruce Bueno de Mesquita and Randolph M. Siverson). |
Patricia Sullivan (PhD, 2004) is an Assistant Professor at the University of Georgia. Tricia's dissertation,
The Utility of Force: War Aims and Asymmetric War Outcomes,
explored why militarily strong states frequently fail to achieve their
political objectives when they use military force against weak state
and non-state targets. As a graduate student, Tricia received several
research fellowships, including dissertation fellowships from the
Institute on Global Conflict and Cooperation and University of
California. She was also awarded an NSF dissertation improvement grant.
A paper based on a chapter of her thesis was awarded the 2004 Graduate
Student Paper Prize by American Political Science Association section
on Military Operations and Strategy. She has a recent article (with
Scott S. Gartner) in International Interactions: "Disaggregating Peace: Domestic Politics and Dispute Outcomes." |
Recent Placements
| Olga Bogatyrenko |
SUNY, Fredonia (2007) |
| Ryan Dudley |
California Maritime Academy (2007) |
| Sarah Fulton |
Texas A&M University (2007) |
| V. Gregg Garbesi |
United States Naval Academy (2007) |
| Dana Zartner-Falstrom |
Tulane University (2007) |
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| Daniel Brunstetter |
University of California, Irvine (2006)
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| Matthew Carlson |
University of Vermont (2005) |
| Ryan Claassen |
Kent State University (2005) |
| Michael Koch |
Texas A&M University (2005) |
| Michael Rocca |
University of New Mexico (2005) |
| Patricia Sullivan |
University of Georgia (2005) |
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| Cynthia Boaz |
SUNY, Brockport (2004) |
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| Christian Erickson |
Roosevelt University (2003) |
| Tiffany Jones |
University of Dallas (2003) |
| Kimberly L. Nalder |
California State University, Sacramento (2003) |
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| Bethany Barratt |
Roosevelt University (2002) |
| Teena Gabrielson |
Southwestern University (2002; currently at University of Wyoming) |
| John J. Kennedy |
University of Kansas (2002) |
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| Richard Andres |
School of Advanced Airpower Studies (2001) |
| Thomas G. Hansford |
University of South Carolina (2001; currently at University of California, Merced) |
| Stephen R. Routh |
California State University, Stanislaus (2001) |
| Lisa Sharlach |
University of Alabama (2001) |
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| Craig Collins |
California State University, Hayward (2000) |
| David Damore |
University of Nevada, Las Vegas (2000) |
| Matthew Hoddie |
Texas A&M University (2000) |
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| Monica Barczak |
University of Nevada, Las Vegas (1998) |
| Stephen Nicholson |
Georgia State University (1998; Currently at University of California, Merced) |
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| Stacy (Burnett) Gordon |
University of Nevada, Reno (1997) |
| Roger Rose |
Benedictine University (1997) |
| Nancy Shulock |
California State University, Sacramento (1997) |
| Linda Valenty |
San Jose State University (1997) |
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| Haeran Lim |
Seoul National University (1996) |
| Catherine Nelson |
Sonoma State University (1996) |
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| Ross Miller |
Santa Clara University (1995) (Currently at University of Nebraska)
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| Caroline A. Hartzell |
Gettysburg College (1994) |
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