t. v. paul - mcgill university · t. v. paul curriculum vitae (as of august 2015) office address...

22
T. V. PAUL Curriculum Vitae (as of August 2015) Office Address Department of Political Science McGill University, 855 Sherbrooke St. West Montreal, Quebec H3A 2T7, Canada Phone: 514-398-4400, Ext.089703 (work) Fax: 514-398-1770 Email: [email protected] Web Pages: www.tvpaul.com http://www.mcgill.ca/politicalscience/faculty/paul/ Research & Teaching Areas International Security South Asia/India International Relations Theory War & Conflict Nuclear Proliferation Regional Security/Asia ACADEMIC POSITIONS 1/2003-Present: James McGill Professor of International Relations, Department of Political Science, McGill University, Montreal, Canada 10/2009- 5/2012: Director (Founding), McGill University/Université de Montreal Center for International Peace and Security Studies (CIPSS) 7/2000–12/2002: Professor, Department of Political Science, McGill University (on Leave: Sept 2002-April 2003) 7/2000-6/2002 & Director, McGill/University of Montreal Research Group in 9/2006–10/2009: International Security (REGIS) 6/1995-6/2000: Associate Professor, Department of Political Science, McGill University 9/1991 – 5/1995: Assistant Professor, Department of Political Science, McGill University 12/1986 – 6/1989: Teaching Associate, Department of Political Science, University of California, Los Angeles. 7/1985 – 7/1986: Teaching Fellow, Department of Government, University of Queensland, Brisbane, Australia VISITING POSITIONS 8/2014: Visiting Professor, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore 5/2014: Visiting Professor, Kings College, London

Upload: lykien

Post on 08-May-2018

215 views

Category:

Documents


1 download

TRANSCRIPT

T. V. PAUL

Curriculum Vitae (as of August 2015) Office Address Department of Political Science McGill University, 855 Sherbrooke St. West Montreal, Quebec H3A 2T7, Canada Phone: 514-398-4400, Ext.089703 (work) Fax: 514-398-1770 Email: [email protected]

Web Pages: www.tvpaul.com http://www.mcgill.ca/politicalscience/faculty/paul/

Research & Teaching Areas

International Security

South Asia/India

International Relations Theory

War & Conflict

Nuclear Proliferation

Regional Security/Asia ACADEMIC POSITIONS 1/2003-Present: James McGill Professor of International Relations, Department of

Political Science, McGill University, Montreal, Canada 10/2009- 5/2012: Director (Founding), McGill University/Université de Montreal

Center for International Peace and Security Studies (CIPSS) 7/2000–12/2002: Professor, Department of Political Science, McGill University (on Leave:

Sept 2002-April 2003) 7/2000-6/2002 & Director, McGill/University of Montreal Research Group in 9/2006–10/2009: International Security (REGIS) 6/1995-6/2000: Associate Professor, Department of Political Science, McGill University 9/1991 – 5/1995: Assistant Professor, Department of Political Science, McGill University 12/1986 – 6/1989: Teaching Associate, Department of Political Science, University of

California, Los Angeles. 7/1985 – 7/1986: Teaching Fellow, Department of Government, University of Queensland, Brisbane, Australia VISITING POSITIONS 8/2014: Visiting Professor, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore 5/2014: Visiting Professor, Kings College, London

2

6/2014- Visiting Professor, Diplomatic Academy, Vienna 3/2013-4/2013: Visiting Scholar, APEC Studies Center, UC Berkeley, California 1/2013-2/2013: Visiting Scholar, East-West Center, Honolulu, Hawaii 9/2002–4/2003: Visiting Professor, Department of National Security Affairs, Naval

Postgraduate School, Monterey Senior Visiting Associate, Center for Nonproliferation Studies, Monterey

Institute of International Studies, California 9/1997- 6/1998: Visiting Scholar, Center for International Affairs (CFIA) & John M. Olin Institute for Strategic Studies, Harvard University

EDUCATION Ph.D. 1991: Political Science, University of California, Los Angeles. MA 1988: Political Science, University of California, Los Angeles. M.Phil 1984: International Relations, Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi, India. BA 1977: Political Science, Kerala University, India. HONORS/AWARDS/HONORARY POSITIONS

President, International Studies Association (ISA), 2016-17.

President-Elect, International Studies Association (ISA), 2015-16.

Included in the A-List of 41 Most Influential Indo-Canadians and Friends of India, The Indian Diaspora ((www.theindiandiaspora.com), Toronto, January 2015.

The Ngee Ann Kongsi Professor (Visiting) of International Relations, S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore, Aug. 2014.

Charles Phelps Taft Lecturer, University of Cincinnati, April 2014.

Ambassador John Price and Marcia Price World Affairs Lecturer, Utah Council for Citizen Diplomacy, March 2014.

Marian Miner Cook Athenaeum Distinguished Lecturer, Claremont-McKenna College, February 2014.

Vice President; International Studies Association (ISA), 2013-14.

Team Leader, Globalization and the National Security State Project (Won 4 Consecutive Team Grants from FQRSC- 2002-2017)

Member, Distinguished International Jury, Grawemeyer Award for Ideas Improving World Order, University of Louisville, September 2012.

Best Professor in International Relations Award, World Education Congress, Mumbai, June 2012.

KPS Menon Chair (Visiting) for Diplomatic Studies 2011-12, Mahatma Gandhi University, Kottayam, India.

Honorary Member, The Golden Key International Honour Society (September 2011-).

Editor, South Asia in World Affairs Book Series, Georgetown University Press, 2010-

Book, The Tradition of Non-use of Nuclear Weapons has been Selected for Inclusion in the Peace Prize Laureate Exhibition Honoring President Barack Obama by the Nobel Peace Center, Oslo, November 2009.

Chair, Security Studies Section of International Studies Association (2009-2011).

Interviewed in Conversations with History, A Television Interview Series with Leading Scholars and Practitioners, UC Berkeley, October 2009 & July 2014.

3

Distinguished Award in Arts and Letters, Indian American Kerala Center, New York, November 2009.

Faculty of Arts 2005 Award for High Distinction in Research, McGill University

“Popular Professor,” Maclean’s Guide to Canadian Universities, 2005.

James McGill Chair, 2003—Present (renewed, June 1, 2010).

Choice Magazine’s ‘Outstanding Academic Title for 2001’ for Power Versus Prudence, 2002.

Peace Scholar Award, U.S. Institute of Peace, Washington D.C., 1989. REFEREED PUBLICATIONS Books

1. Accommodating Rising Powers: Past, Present and Future (Editor and Contributor) Cambridge and New York: Cambridge University Press, forthcoming, March 2016.

2. Status in World Politics (co-editor and contributor with Deborah Larson and William Wohlforth), Cambridge and New York: Cambridge University Press (in hardcover and paperback editions), 2014.

3. The Warrior State: Pakistan in the Contemporary World (New York and Oxford: Oxford University Press), in Hard Cover, January 2014.

South Asia Edition (except Pakistan), New Delhi: Random House India, May 2014.

Pakistan Edition, Karachi: Oxford University Press, October 2014.

Paperback Edition, Oxford University Press, New York, June 2015.

Malayalam Translation, Olive Publications, Calicut, 2015, forthcoming.

Hindi Translation, Kautilya Books, New Delhi, forthcoming. ‘Book for Understanding’ by the American Association of University Presses, 9/2014.

4. International Relations Theory and Regional Transformation (Editor and Contributor), Cambridge and New York: Cambridge University Press (in hardcover and

paperback editions), 2012. 5. South Asia’s Weak States: Understanding the Regional Insecurity Predicament (Editor

& Contributor), Stanford: Stanford University Press (in hardcover and paperback editions), 2010.

South Asia Edition, Oxford University Press, New Delhi, 2011. 6. Globalization and the National Security State (with Norrin Ripsman), New York and

Oxford: Oxford University Press (in hardcover and paperback editions), 2010. 7. Complex Deterrence: Strategy in the Global Age (Co-editor and Contributor with

Patrick M. Morgan and James J. Wirtz), Chicago and London: University of Chicago Press (in hardcover and paperback editions), 2009.

South Asia Edition, Cambridge University Press, New Delhi, 2011. 8. The Tradition of Non-use of Nuclear Weapons, Stanford: Stanford University Press (in

hardcover and paperback editions), 2009.

Selected for Inclusion in the Peace Prize Laureate Exhibition Honoring President Barack Obama by the Nobel Peace Center, Oslo, November 2009.

Selected for a chapter-length analysis by Peter Katzenstein and Rudra Sil in their book: Beyond Paradigms: Analytic Eclecticism in the Study of World Politics (Palgrave, 2010).

South Asia Edition, Cambridge University Press, New Delhi, 2011.

4

9. The India-Pakistan Conflict: An Enduring Rivalry (Editor & Contributor), Cambridge, New York: Cambridge University Press (in paperback, hard cover, and digital editions), 2005.

South Asia Edition, Cambridge University Press, New Delhi, August 2006. 10. Balance of Power: Theory and Practice in the 21st Century (Co-editor and contributor

with James J. Wirtz and Michel Fortmann), Stanford: Stanford University Press (in paperback and hardcover editions), 2004.

11. The Nation-State in Question (Co-editor and Contributor with G. John Ikenberry and John A. Hall), Princeton: Princeton University Press (in paperback and

hardcover editions), 2003. 12. India in the World Order: Searching For Major Power Status (with Baldev Raj Nayar),

Cambridge, New York and Melbourne: Cambridge University Press (in paperback and hardcover editions), 2003.

India Edition, Cambridge University Press, New Delhi, March 2005.

Electronic Edition, 2011. Chapter 2 reprinted in India’s Foreign Policy and National Security Volume 1: India’s

Foreign Policy, edited by Kanti Bajpai and Harsh Pant, Oxford University Press India,

2013.

13. Power versus Prudence: Why Nations Forgo Nuclear Weapons, Montreal, Ithaca & London: McGill-Queens’ University Press ((in paperback and hardcover editions), 2000.

Selected as an ‘Outstanding Academic Title for 2001’ by Choice Magazine, 1/2002

‘Book for Understanding’ by the American Association of University Presses, 9/2001. 14. International Order and the Future of World Politics (Co-editor and Contributor with

John A. Hall), Cambridge and New York: Cambridge University Press (in paperback and hardcover editions), 1999, 2000 (twice), 2001, 2002, 2003.

15. The Absolute Weapon Revisited: Nuclear Arms and the Emerging International Order (Co-editor and Contributor with Richard Harknett and James J. Wirtz), Ann

Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 1998.

Paperback Edition, 2000.

Selected as a ‘Book for Understanding’ by the American Association of University Presses, 2001.

16. Asymmetric Conflicts: War Initiation by Weaker Powers, Cambridge and New York: Cambridge University Press (in hardcover and paperback editions), 1994.

Digital Edition, 1999.

Electronic Edition, 2009.

Chapters 1 and 2 Reprinted in Paul F. Diehl ed., War, Sage Publications, 2005.

Books in Progress 1. Restraining Great Powers: Soft Balancing in World Politics (Writing in Progress) 2. A Violent Subcontinent: Building Peace among India, Pakistan, Afghanistan and Neighbors

(Proposal) 3. The Himalayan Contest: The Sino-Indian Rivalry in a Globalized World (Conference)

Journal Articles and Book Chapters (All Refereed)

2016: “The Accommodation of Rising Powers in World Politics,” in Paul ed., Accommodating Rising Powers: Past, Present and Future (Cambridge University Press), pp.

5

2015: “Nuclear Abolition: Strategic Context and Constrains,” in Nik Hynek and Michal Smetana eds. Nuclear Disarmament: Strategic, Political, and Regional Perspectives (London: Routledge, forthcoming). 2014: “Strategies for Managing China’s Rise,” Harvard Asia Quarterly, 16(2), Summer, 11-18. 2014: “India’s Soft Power in a Globalizing World,” Current History, 113(762) April, 157-62. 2014: “India’s Role in Asia: A Rising Regional Power,” in David Shambaugh and Michael

Yahuda eds., International Relations of Asia 2nd edn.,(Lanham: Rowman & Littlefield), pp.173-96.

2014: “Status and World Order” with Deborah Larson and William Wohlforth in Status in World

Politics, Cambridge University Press, pp. 3-31. 2014: “Status Accommodation through Institutional Means: India’s Rise and the Global

Order” with Mahesh Shankar in Status in World Politics, Cambridge University Press, pp. 165-191.

2013 : « Southern Asia, India, and the Gulf Region: Understanding the New Geo-political Interface”(with Happymon Jacob), Indian Foreign Affairs Journal, 8, no.1 (January- March), 52-65.

2012 : «Las Potencias en ascenso y el equilibrio del ponder en el siglo xxI,” Politica Exterior No. 94, February, pp.95-116. 2012: “Regional Transformation in International Relations” in Paul ed., International Relations

Theory and Regional Transformation, Cambridge University Press, pp. 3-21. 2012: “Disarmament Revisited: Is Nuclear Abolition Possible?” Journal of Strategic Studies,

Vol. 35, No. 1, February, pp. 149-169. 2011: “Impact of Climatic Change on Indian Security: The Role of State Capacity,” in

Daniel Moran ed., Climate Change and National Security: A Country-level Analysis, Washington DC; Georgetown University Press, pp. 73-84.

2011: “The Major Powers and Conflicts in South Asia,” in Amitendu Palit ed., South Asia: Beyond the Financial Crisis, Singapore: World Scientific Publishing Co., pp. 101-116.

2010: “Taboo or Tradition: The Non-Use of Nuclear Weapons in World Politics,” Review of International Studies, 6, October, pp. 853-863.

Reprinted in Nuclear Politics, eds. Maria Rost Rublee and Ramesh Thakur, Vol. 2, Sage Publications, 2014, 171-182.

2010: “A Plea for Puzzle-Driven International Relations Research,” Qualitative & Multi- Method Research, Fall, pp.13-19.

2010: “State Capacity and South Asia’s Perennial Insecurity Problems,” in Paul ed., South Asia’s Weak States: Understanding Regional Insecurity, Stanford University Press, pp. 3-27.

2010: “Transforming South Asia: Is a Pluralistic Security Community Feasible? With Theodore McLauchlin in Paul ed., South Asia’s Weak States: Understanding Regional Insecurity, Stanford University Press, pp. 293-311.

2010: “Integrating International Relations Studies in India to Global Scholarship,” International Studies, 46 (1-2), 129-45.

2010: “Foreign Policy Making in India: Looking for Theoretical Explanations,” With Mahesh Shankar, in Amitabh Mattoo and Happymon Jacob, eds., Shaping India's Foreign

Policy: People, Politics and Places, New Delhi: Har-Anand Publishers, 46-77. 2009: “Complex Deterrence: An Introduction,” in Paul, Morgan, Wirtz eds., Complex Deterrence: Strategy in the Global Age, University of Chicago Press, Press, pp. 1-27.

6

2009: “Deterrence among Great Powers in an Era of Globalization,” in Paul, Morgan, Wirtz eds., Complex Deterrence: Strategy in the Global Age, University of Chicago Press, pp. 259-76.

2009: “Nuclear Weapons and Asian Security in the Twenty-first Century,” in N.S. Sisodia, V. Krishnappa, and Priyanka Singh, eds., Proliferation and Emerging Nuclear Order in the Twenty-first Century, New Delhi: Academic Foundation, pp. 29-43.

2009: “Soft Balancing in the Age of U.S. Primacy,” in Michael E. Brown, Owen R. Cote, Jr. and Sean M. Lynn-Jones eds., Primacy and Its Discontents: American Power and

International Stability, Cambridge, MIT Press, pp. 288-313 (Reprint of International Security article).

2007: “Why the US-India Nuclear Accord is a Good Deal,” (with Mahesh Shankar) Survival 49 (4), Winter, pp. 111-22.

“The Indian Nuclear Deal: Authors’ Response,” Survival 50(3), Summer, pp. 247- 48. 2007: “The US.-India Nuclear Accord: Implications for the Non-Proliferation Regime,”

International Journal, 62(4) Autumn, pp. 845-61. 2006: “Why Has the India-Pakistan Rivalry Been So Enduring? Power Asymmetry and

an Intractable Conflict,” Security Studies, 15(4) October-December, 600-630. Reprinted in India’s Foreign Policy and National Security Volume 1: India’s Foreign

Policy, edited by Kanti Bajpai and Harsh Pant, Oxford University Press India, 2013.

2005: “Soft Balancing in the Age of U.S. Primacy,” International Security, 30(1) Summer, pp. 46-71.

2005: “Globalization and the National Security State: A Framework for Analysis,” (with Norrin Ripsman) International Studies Review, 7(2) June, pp.199-227.

2005: “The Causes of the India-Pakistan Rivalry,” in Paul, ed., The India-Pakistan Conflict: An Enduring Rivalry, Cambridge University Press, pp.3-24.

2005: “South Asia’s Embedded Conflict: Understanding the India-Pakistan Rivalry” (with William Hogg), in Paul, ed., The India-Pakistan Conflict: An Enduring Rivalry, Cambridge University Press, pp.251-266.

2005: “The Risk of Nuclear War Does not Belong to History” in Raimo Vayrynen, ed., The Waning of Major War: London: Frank Cass, pp.113-132.

2005: “The National Security State and Global Terrorism: Why the State is Not Prepared for the New Kind of War,” in Ersel Aydinli and James N. Rosenau eds. Globalization, Security and the Nation-State, Albany: SUNY Press, pp. 49-64.

2004: “Under Pressure? Globalization and the National Security State,” Millennium, (with Norrin Ripsman) 33 (2), December, 355-380.

2004: “The Causes and Consequences of China-Pakistan Nuclear/Missile Collaboration,” in Lowell Dittmer ed., South Asia’s Nuclear Dilemma, New York: M.E. Sharpe, pp. 175-88.

2004: “The Enduring Axioms of Balance of Power Theory,” in Paul, Wirtz and Fortmann, eds., Balance of Power: Theory and Practice in the 21st Century, Stanford University Press, pp.1-25.

2004: “Balance of Power at the Turn of the New Century,” (With Fortmann and Wirtz), in Paul, Wirtz and Fortmann, eds., Balance of Power: Theory and Practice in the 21st Century, Stanford University Press, pp. 360-74.

2003: “Chinese/Pakistani Nuclear/Missile Ties and Balance of Power Politics,” The Nonproliferation Review, 10 (2), Summer, 1-9.

2003: “States, Security Function and Global Social Forces,” in Paul, Ikenberry, and Hall eds., The Nation-State in Question, Princeton University Press, 139-165.

7

2003: “Systemic Conditions and Security Cooperation: Explaining the Persistence of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Regime,” Cambridge Review of International Affairs, 16(1), April, 135-55.

2002: “India, the International System and Nuclear Weapons,” in Damodar Sardesai and Raju G.C. Thomas eds. Nuclear India in the 21st Century, New York: Palgrave (St. Martins and Macmillan) Publishers, 85-104.

1999: "Great Equalizers or Agents of Chaos? Weapons of Mass Destruction and the Emerging International Order," in International Order and the Future of World Politics, Cambridge University Press, 373-92.

1999: “Preconditions for Prudence: A Sociological Synthesis of Realism and Liberalism,” (Co-authored with John A. Hall) in International Order and the Future of World Politics, Cambridge University Press, 67-77.

1999: "Introduction" (Co-authored with John A. Hall) in International Order and the Future of World Politics, Cambridge University Press, 1-15.

1999: “The State and the Future of World Politics," (Co-authored with John A. Hall) in International Order and the Future of World Politics, Cambridge University Press, 395-408.

1998: “The Systemic Bases of India’s Challenge to the Global Nuclear Order,” Non- Proliferation Review, 6(1), Fall:1-11.

1998: "Power, Influence, and Nuclear Weapons: A Reassessment," in The Absolute Weapon Revisited, The University of Michigan Press, 19-46.

1998: (With Richard Harknett and James Wirtz) "Understanding Nuclear Weapons in a Transforming World," in The Absolute Weapon Revisited, The University of Michigan Press, 1-15.

1998: "The NPT and Power Transitions in the International System," in Raju Thomas ed., The Nuclear Non-Proliferation Regime: Prospects for the 21st Century, Houndmills & New York: Macmillan & St. Martin's Press, 59-77.

1997: "Nuclear Proliferation and Enduring Regional Conflicts," in Jaeshik Sohn ed., Peace Strategies for Global Community in the 21st Century, Seoul: Kyung Hee University Press, 703-716.

1996: "Strengthening the Non-Proliferation Regime: The Role of Coercive Sanctions," International Journal, 51(3) Summer, 440-65.

1995: "Nuclear Taboo and War Initiation: Nuclear Weapons in Regional Conflicts," Journal of Conflict Resolution, 39(4), December, 696-717.

1995: "The Paradox of Power: Nuclear Weapons in a Changed World," Alternatives, 20(4), November, 479-500.

1995: "Time Pressure and War Initiation: Some Linkages," Canadian Journal of Political Science, 27(2) June, 255-76.

1993: "The Politics of Unilateral Nuclear Weapon Free-Zones: The Case of the South Pacific," in Bennett Ramberg ed., Arms Control without Negotiation, Boulder, Lynne Rienner, 159-74 .

1992: "Influence through Arms Transfers: Lessons from the US-Pakistani Relationship," Asian Survey, 32(12) Dec., 1078-92.

1986: "Nuclear Free-zone in the South Pacific - Rhetoric or Reality?" The Round Table, No. 299, pp. 252-62.

Other Non-Refereed Publications 2014: “Overcoming South Asia’s Peace Spoilers,” Project Syndicate, April 1, 2014.

8

2014: “The Failed State Paradigm: A Response to Mazaar,” E-International Relations, March. 2014: “Pakistan’s Democratic Progression and the Impending Changes in Afghanistan,” The

Duck of Minerva, March 8. 2008: “The India-U.S. Nuclear Accord: Critics Neglect the Big Picture,” Asia-Pacific

Foundation, Vancouver, September 30 2007: “Nuclear Power Struggle,” Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, July/August, p. 6 2006: “Can There be a Jointly Administered Kashmir?” India Today (Special Anniversary

Issue) December 18, pp. 34-35 2006: “India: Relations with the U.S. and Asia after the Bush Visit,” Sasakawa Peace

Foundation USA, Washington DC, June, pp. 1-6. 2006: “The India-US Nuclear Accord in Strategic Context,” in Wade L. Huntley and

Karthika Sasikumar, eds., Nuclear Cooperation with India: New Challenges, New Opportunities, Simons Center for Disarmament and Non-Proliferation, University of British Columbia, pp. 47-51.

2005: “NPT” in Weapons of Mass Destruction: A Global Encyclopedia , Santa Barbara: ABC- Clio, Vol. II., pp.252-55

2002: “Kick-starting the Indo-Pakistani Negotiations: Constraints and Opportunities,” Strategic Insights, Center for Contemporary Conflict, Naval Postgraduate School, December

1996: “Theory and the Spread of Nuclear Weapons,” Global Insight, University of California, Los Angeles, 1(1), Spring

1986: “Will India Join the Nuclear Club?” Asian Defence Journal (Kuala Lumpur), February, 74-79 Reprinted in Peace Magazine Australia, Aug-Sept 1986; and Disarmament Campaign (The Netherlands) January 1987.

Book Reviews

2015: The Pashtun Question, Abubaker Siddique. London: Hurst &Company. 2014,

International Affairs 91, 2, March 2015, pp. 440-41. 2015: How Rivalries End. Karen Rasler, William R. Thompson and Sumit Ganguly, Philadelphia:

University of Pennsylvania Press, 2013, Perspectives on Politics, 13(1), March, pp. 103-105. 2014: Applied Diplomacy: Through the Prism of Mythology. By T.P. Sreenivasan & Divya S. Iyer.

New Delhi: Wisdom Tree, Indian Foreign Affairs Journal, 9(3), July-Sept, pp.305-06. 2014: Flawed Logics: Strategic Nuclear Arms Control from Truman to Obama. James H. Lebovic.

Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins University Press, 2013, H-Diplo-ISSF Forum, June, pp.14-16. 2012: Unraveling Internal Conflicts in East Asia and the Pacific: Incidence, Consequences, and

Resolutions. Edited by Jacob Bercovitch and Karl DeRouen JR. Rowman and Littlefield, 2011, Perspectives on Politics, 10(2), June, pp. 436-38.

2012: No Man's Land: Globalization, Territory, and Clandestine Groups in Southeast Asia. By Justin V. Hastings. Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 2010, Perspectives on Politics, 10(2), June, pp. 436-38.

2012: J. Samuel Barkin, Realist Constructivism: Rethinking International Relations Theory, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2010, Canadian Journal of Political Science, 44(4), p.194.

2010: International Relations in South Asia, edited by Navnita Chadha Behera, Pacific Affairs, 83(3), September, 626-27.

2009: Four Crises and a Peace Process: American Engagement in South Asia by P.R. Chari, Pervaiz Iqbal Cheema and Stephen P. Cohen (Brookings Institution Press, 2007),

9

Political Science Quarterly, 124(1), Spring, 206-8. 2007: How the Weak Win Wars: A Theory of Asymmetric Conflict by Ivan Arreguin-Toft

(Cambridge University Press, 2005), Perspectives on Politics, 5(1), March, 203-04 2005: Operation Parakram: The War Unfinished (Lt. Gen. (Retd.) V.K. Sood and Pravin

Sawhney, Sage Publications, 2003), Pacific Affairs, 78(1), Spring, 150-51

2005: Why Wars Widen: A Theory of Predation and Balancing. (Stacy Bergstrom Haldi, Frank Cass), International History Review, 17(1), March, 216-17

2003: The Heart of War (Gwyn Prins, Routledge), Political Studies, 1(2), April 2003, 277 2002: India’s Nuclear Bomb: The Impact on Global Proliferation (George Perkovich,

University of California Press), Journal of Asian and African Studies 37(1) 111-13 2001: Dangerous Weapons, Desperate States: Russia, Belarus, Kazakhstan and Ukraine (Gary Bertsch and William Potter, eds. Routledge) Journal of Politics 63(1), 361-63 2001: New Nukes: India, Pakistan, and the Global Nuclear Disarmament (Praful Bidwai and

Achin Vanaik, Olive Branch Press, 2000), Political Science Quarterly 116 (4), 644-46 2001: Pondering NATO’s Nuclear Options, (David G. Haglund ed., Queens Quarterly,

1999) Canadian Journal of Political Science 34(2), 897-98 2001: The Making of the Indian Atomic Bomb: Science, Secrecy and the Post-Colonial State,

(Itty Abraham, Zed Books) Pacific Affairs (73:4 Winter), 607-08 1998: Risk Taking and Decisionmaking: Foreign Military Intervention Decisions, (Yaacov Y.I.

Vertzberger, Stanford University Press) Political Science Quarterly, No.113, Fall, 517 1996: To Have and Have Not: Southeast Asian Raw Materials and the Origins of the Pacific

War (Jonathan Marshall, University of California Press) Journal of Interdisciplinary History, 27(3), Winter, 569-70

1996: A Question of Values: Johan Galtung's Peace Research (Peter Lawler, Lynne Rienner), International Journal, 51(2) Spring, 373-75 1995: Military Persuasion (Stephen J. Cimbala, Penn State University Press, 1994); Journal

of Politics, 57(4), November, 1228-31 1995: Untying the Knot of War (T. Clifton Morgan, Michigan University Press, 1994),

Journal of Politics, 57(4), November, 1228-31 1994: Canada and South Asia: Political and Strategic Relations (Arthur G. Rubinoff, ed.,

University of Toronto Press, 1992), Canadian Journal of Political Science, March 1986: Public Policy and Policy Analysis in India (R.S. Ganapthy et al. eds., Sage

Publications, 1985) for Australian Journal of Politics and History, April

Journal Articles/Book Chapters in Preparation “The U.S.-India Nuclear Accord: A Power Transitions Perspective,” (with Mahesh

Shankar) Self-Deterrence: A Neglected Dimension of Nuclear Relationships” “Asymmetric Deterrence: How the Weak Deters the Strong” International Conferences Organized “Accommodating Rising Powers,” Nov. 2013 (volume published by Cambridge University

Press, 2016). “When Regions Transform: IR Theory and Change,” May 2010 (volume published by Cambridge

University Press, 2012). “Weak States and Regional Insecurity in South Asia,” October 2008 (volume published by Stanford

University Press, 2010) “Deterrence: A Complex Paradigm” Montreal, May 2007 (volume published by University

10

of Chicago Press). “Understanding the India-Pakistan Enduring Rivalry,” Montreal, December 2003 (volume

published by Cambridge University Press) “Balance of Power Theory Revisited,” Montreal, May 2002 (volume published by Stanford

University Press) “What Can States Do Now? ” Montreal, November 2001 (volume published by Princeton

University Press) “International Order in the 21st Century,” Montreal, May 1997 (volume published by

Cambridge University Press) “Nuclear Weapons in the Post-Cold War Era,” Montreal, Nov.1995 (volume published by University of Michigan Press) Conferences Planned

Will There be a Peaceful Status Accommodation for China and India?

Papers Presented (last five years) 2015: “The Future of Balance of Power in the 21st Century,” American Political Sceince

Associaiton (APSA) Conference, San Francisco, September. 2015: “From Soft Balancing to Hard Balancing: Globalization and Balance of Power Politics in

Asia-Pacific,” ISA Global South Caucus Conference, Singapore, January. 2013: “War Making and State building: Pakstan in Comparative Perspective,” Annual

Conference on South Asia, Madison, Wisconsin, Ocotber . 2013: “Rising Powers and Global Order: Is Peaceful Status Accommodation Possible?, APSA,

Chicago, August. 2013: “Soft Balancing in World Politics,” CPSA conference, Victoria, June. 2012: “Will China’s Rise be Peaceful,” Canadian Political Science Association Conference,

Edmonton, June 13-15. 2012: “India’s Status Accommodation,” International Political Science Association Conference,

Madrid, July 8-10. 2012: “Self-Detrrence: A Challenge to Traditional Paradigm,” ISAC/ISSS Conference, Duke,

University, Durham, October 4-6. 2011: “Building Peace in South Asia: Can IR Theory Help?’ Third Global International Studies

Conference, Porto, Portugal, August 17-20. 2011: “Status Accommodation through Institutional Means: India’s Rise and the Global Order,”

(With Mahesh Shankar) International Studies Association (ISA) Conference, Montreal, March 16-19.

2010: "China’s Rise: Engagement, Hedging, Soft Balancing and the Alliance System in East Asia," Conference on “The Rise of China and Alliance in East Asia: Implications for Diplomatic Truce,” Institute of International Relations, National Chengchi University, Taipei, December 9-10.

2010: "Rising Powers and Balance of Power in the 21st Century," Conference on Ascending Powers and the International System," Mateas Romero Institute (Mexican Diplomatic Academy), Mexico City, December 13-14.

2010: “India’s Soft Power in a Globalizing World,” Indian Council for Cultural Relations (ICCR), 60th anniversary conference, New Delhi, November 9-12.

2010: “Status Accommodation through Liberal Means: India’s Rise and the Global Order,” (with Mahesh Shankar), Conference on Beyond American Hegemony, Status and Rising

Powers, Dickey Center, Dartmouth College, October, 22-13.

11

2010: “IR Theory and Regional Transformation,” ISSS/ISAC Conference, Providence, RI, October 14-16.

2010: “Eclectic Approaches in the Study of International Security,” APSA Convention, Washington, D.C. September.

2010: “Trilateral Relations: Strategic Dimensions and Implications for South Asia,” Conference on Trilateral Relations-India, Pakistan and China, Carnegie Center, Washington DC.

2010: “Asymmetric Deterrence: How the Weak Deters the Strong,” ISA Convention, New Orleans, February.

2009: “The Major Powers and Conflicts in South Asia,” 5th International Conference of South Asia, Institute of South Asian Studies, National University of Singapore, November

2009: “India’s Rise and the Global Order: The Logic of Peaceful Integration,” (with Mahesh Shankar) APSA Convention, Toronto, September

2009: “War-Making and State-building in the Developing World,” 4th Conference on Interdisciplinary Social Sciences, University of Athens (Greece), July

2009: “Integrating International Relations Studies in India to the Global Mainstream,” Conference on Upgrading International Studies in India, National University of Singapore, March

International Studies Association (ISA): San Francisco, March 2008; Chicago, March 2007; San Diego, March 2006; Honolulu, March 2005; Montreal, March 2004; Budapest, June 2003; February 2003; New Orleans, 2002; Los Angeles, 2000; Washington D.C. 1999; Toronto, March 1997; San Diego, April 1996; Chicago February 1995; Washington D.C., March 1994; Acapulco, March 1993; Atlanta, April 1992; St. Louis, March 1988. American Political Science Association (APSA), Boston, August 2008; Philadelphia, September 2006; Washington DC, Sept 2005; Philadelphia, Aug 2003; Boston Aug 2002; San Francisco Aug 2001; Atlanta, Sept. 1999; Washington DC, Sept. 1997; San Francisco, Sept. 1996; New York, Sept. 1994; San Francisco, Sept. 1990. Alexendre de Gusmao Foundation and IPRI , Rio de Janeiro, August 2008 World International Studies, Ljubljana, July 2008 GRANTS/FELLOWSHIPS 2013-2017: Fonds de recherche du Québec – Société et culture (FRQSC), “Globalization, Rising

Powers, and the World Security Order,” $415,604 (team leader). 2011-2014: Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council (SSHRC) Canada, $115,248 for the

book project on: Soft Balancing and Order in World Politics (Ranked 2 among 82 Canada- wide applications).

2010-2017: James McGill Chair Research Grant component, $100,500 ($15,000 annually). 2009-2013: Fonds de rescherche sur la societe et la culture (FQRSC) Quebec, Team Grant,

$427,328 for the project, Globalization and the Changing Regional Security Orders (Team leader)

2009-2010: Conference Grant, Security and Defense Forum (Ottawa) $3,000 for holding the Conference on: When Regions Transform.

2008-09: Conference Grant, Security and Defense Forum (Ottawa) $10,000 for holding the Conference on: South Asia’s Weak States and Regional Insecurity.

2007-2010: Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council (SSHRC) Canada, $94,693 for the

12

book project on: War-Making and State Building: Pakistan in Comparative Perspective (Ranked 6 among 142 Canada-wide applications).

2007-2008: Conference Grant, Security and Defence Forum, Ottawa, $10,000 for holding the Conference on: Deterrence: A Complex Paradigm.

2004-2008: Fonds de rescherche sur la societe et la culture (FQRSC) Quebec, Team Grant, $265,200 for the project, Globalization and the National Security State. (Team leader).

2003-2010: James McGill Chair Research Grant component, $100,500 ($15,000 annually). 2002-2005: Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council (SSHRC) Canada, $58,000 for the

book project: The Tradition of Non-Use: Nuclear Taboo in World Politics. 2001-2004: Fonds pour la formation de Chercheurs (FCAR) (Quebec) $135,000 (team grant with

Michel Fortmann and John A Hall) for the project, Globalization, National Security and the Future of the Nation-State.

2003-2004: Conference Grant, John Holmes Fund, Canadian Centre for Foreign Policy Development, Ottawa, $10,000; McGill Peace Studies Committee, $10,000; Security and Defence Forum, Ottawa, $2,500; McGill University, $1,500 for holding the conference on Understanding the India-Pakistan Rivalry.

2002-2003: Naval Postgraduate School, Monterey, Research Initiation Grant, US$73,747. 2001-2002: Conference Grant, $12,000 Department of Foreign Affairs and International Trade,

Ottawa; $3,000, Security and Defense Forum, Ottawa; and $2,000, McGill University, for holding the conference on Balance of Power Revisited (May 2002).

1995-Present: Team Grant with the University of Montreal, Security and Defence Forum, (Ottawa) $96,000 annually for activities of the Research Group in International Security.

1998-2001: Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council (SSHRC)- Canada, $32,600 for the project: The World Order and India: Challenge and Integration in the Major Power System (with Baldev Nayar).

1997-2000: SSHRC, $33,000 for the Project: Transitions without War: Strategies for Peaceful Change in the International System.

1997-2000: Fonds pour la formation de Chercheurs (FCAR) (Quebec) $44,000 for the Project: Transitions without War.

1996-97: Conference Grant, The John Holmes Fund, $20,000; Security and Defence Forum Conference Grant $5,000; University of Montreal-REGIS Grant $5,000; McGill Conference Grant $750 for the conference on International Order in the 21st Century (with John Hall).

Faculty Research Grant, McGill University, $3,000 for the project: Why Nations Forgo Nuclear Weapons.

Conference Grants, Security and Defense Forum $5,000; Department of Foreign Affairs, Canada $5,000; McGill Conference Grant $1,500; University of Montreal, Chair Strategic Studies, $2,500; University of Quebec at Montreal, $1,500 for holding the conference on Nuclear Weapons in a Transformed World.

1993-96: Research Grant, The Rockefeller Foundation, US$25,000 for the project: Why Nations Forgo Nuclear Weapons.

1994-95: Research Grant, Department of Foreign Affairs, Canada, $35,000 for the project: Why Nations Forgo Nuclear Weapons.

1992-93: Research Development Fund, McGill University $7,000 for the project: Why Nations Forgo Nuclear Weapons.

Conference Grant, Department of Foreign Affairs ($6,000); Faculty Research Grant, McGill University ($3,000); International Travel Grant ($1,200), Workshop Grant, McGill University ($3,000).

13

1990-91: Dissertation Fellowship, Institute on Global Conflict and Cooperation (IGCC), University of California, US$28,000.

1989-90: Peace Scholar Fellowship, US Institute of Peace, Washington D.C. US$12,000; Dissertation Fellowship, Institute for the Study of World Politics, Washington D.C., US$9,000.

1986-87: Pre-doctoral Fellowship, Center for International and Strategic Affairs (CISA), UCLA, US$11,000.

1985-86: Post-graduate Scholarship, University of Queensland, Australia, A$11,000 INVITED LECTURES 2015: UN University, Japan Foundation, Ayoma Gakunin University, International house of Japan (Sasakawa Foundation), University of Nigata Prefecture (all in Tokyo); Kyoto University, Nagoya University; Yokohama University (January); Murdoch University, University of Queensland, Griffith University, Sydney University, University of Western Australia, University of Adelaide, Melbourne University, Australian National University, University of New South Wales (all in March); Koc University, Istanbul (May); Bilkent University, Ankara (May); Seoul National University (June), 2014: McGill University, CDA Institute, Ottawa, University of Ottawa (January); Columbia University, Queens University, CIGI, Waterloo, Munk School, University of Toronto, Berkle Center, UCLA, Global Security Seminar, Los Angles, University of Southern California, Claremont-McKenna College, UC San Diego, Council on Foreign Relations Washington DC, Georgia Tech, Atlanta (February); Cooper Union, NYC, Harvard Club, NYC, University of Chicago Int’l House, Northwestern University, Carnegie, Washington DC, University of Utah, Utah Council for Citizen Diplomacy, Utah State University, World Affairs Council, Portland (March); University of Cincinnati, Mershon Center, Ohio State, Ohio-Wesleyan, Mount Holyoke College, UC Berkeley, World Affairs Council, San Francisco, Stanford University Monterey Institute of International Studies, Tufts University, Fletcher School, Harvard University, Boston College, University of Texas, Austin (April); Geneva, Graduate Institute of International Studies, University of Amsterdam, University of Copenhagen, Uppsala University, Oxford University, London School of Economics, Kings College, Chatham House, London (May); Vienna Diplomatic Academy (June); Institute of Defense Studies and Analysis, New Delhi, India International Center, Jadvpur university, Kolkata, Goa International Center; Nehru Centre, Mumbai, Asia Society, Mumbai, (June) Takhsashila Institution, Bangalore, Observer Research Foundation, Chennai, Kerala International Centre, Trivandrum (July); Lee Kwan Yew School of Public Policy, Singapore, Rajaratnam School of International Studies, Singapore (August); Princeton University (September). 2013: American University (January); East-West Center, Honolulu (February); University of Hawaii, Honolulu (February); Hawaii Pacific University, Honolulu (February); Asia-Pacific Studies Center, Honolulu (February); George Washington University (April); Aarhus University, Denmark (December). 2012: University of Michigan, Gerald R. Ford School of Public Policy (March); Tongi University, Shanghai Institute of International Studies, Fudan University (all in Shanghai); Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, China Institute of International Studies, Tsinghua University, Beijing Foreign Affairs University (all in Beijing); Jinan University, Sun Yat-sen University (Guangzhou); Nanjing University (September).

14

2011: M.G. University, Kottayam; Kerala University, Trivandrum; Andhra University, Vishakapatanam; Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi; Institute of Peace and Conflict Studies, New Delhi; India International Center/Maritime Foundation, New Delhi; Institute of Defense Studies and Analysis, New Delhi-all January; S. Rajaretnam School of International Studies, Singapore; Institute of South Asian Studies, National University Singapore (February); Ryerson University, Toronto (April); Harvard/MIT/Brown Joint Seminar series on South Asia (November). 2010: University of Warsaw (June); University of Heidelberg (June). 2009: S. Rajaretnam School of International Studies, Singapore; Bangladesh Institute of Strategic Studies, Dhaka (January); Bangladesh Institute of Peace and Security Studies, Dhaka (January); Government College, Port Blair, Andaman & Nicobar Islands, India (January); Fatima Mata National College, Kollam, India (January); Academic Staff College, Trivandrum (January); University of Laval (April); University of Georgia, Athens (April); The North-South Institute/The Friedrich Ebert Foundation, Ottawa (June); University of Hull (August); Hellenic Foundation for European & Foreign Policy, Athens (July); Institute of International Relations, Athens (July); Georgetown University (September); American University (September); Executives for National Security, Palo Alto, California (October); University of California, Berkeley (October); Canadian Forces College, Toronto (November); Jawaharlal Nehru University, Jamia Millia University (New Delhi); Sikkim University; Jadvapur University, Kolkota; Loyola College, Chennai; Kerala International Center, Trivandrum; Mahatma Gandhi University, Kottayam (all in December). 2008: Kerala University, Trivandrum; Academic Staff College, Trivandrum, Kerala International Center, Trivandrum; Maharajas College Ernakulum; Cochin University, Calicut University, Kannur University, Mangalore University; Utkal University, Bhubaneswar; Center for Human Rights, Bhubaneswar; Jammu University; Kashmir University, Srinagar; Tribhuvan University, Kathmandu (All January); Institute for Defense Studies and Analysis, New Delhi; Institute for Peace and Conflict Studies, New Delhi; Gulf Research Center, Dubai (February); Tel Aviv University (August); Hebrew University of Jerusalem (August); University of Haifa (August); Graduate Institute of International Studies, Geneva (December). 2007: City University of Hong Kong; S. Rajaretnam School of International Studies, Singapore; Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi; Indian Institute of Management, Ahmadabad; Goa University; Bangalore University; Indian Institute of Science, Bangalore; Mahatma Gandhi University, School of International Relations, Kottayam, India; Kerala University, India (all in January); Pondicherry University, Loyola College, Chennai, India; Center for Security Analysis, Chennai, India; Taiwan Foundation for Democracy, Taipei; University of Southern California (February); George Bush School, Texas A&M (March); University of Cincinnati (May); Finnish Institute of International Affairs, Helsinki (August); Cornell University (September); Secondary Schools’ Model UN Symposium 2007, Montreal (November). 2006: Addis Ababa University, Ethiopia; University of Dar Es Salaam, Tanzania; African Centre for the Constructive Resolution of Disputes (ACCORD), Durban, South Africa (January); University of peace, San Jose, Costa Rica (March), Chilean War College, Santiago (March); Chilean Diplomatic Academy, Santiago (March); National Intelligence Council (Washington

15

D,C. (April); Carnegie Endowment for International Peace (Washington DC) (April); Liu Institute, University of British Columbia (April). 2005: Institute of Defense and Strategic Studies, Singapore (January); National Defense College of the Philippines, Manila (January); Ho Chi Minh City University (HUFLIT), Vietnam (February); University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign (March); Berry College, Georgia (April); University of Chicago, PIPES Series (April); Ohio State University, Mershon Center (April); Jawaharlal Nehru University (July); Jaipur University (July); Udaipur University (July); Thevara S.H. College, Cochin (August); M.G. University, Kottayam (August); Kerala University (August); Madurai Kamaraj University (August); Stella Mary’s College, Chennai (August); Royal United Services Institute for Defence and Security Studies (RUSI), London; University of Wales, Aberystwyth (December). 2004: Canadian Armed Forces Staff College, Toronto (September); East-West Center, University of Hawaii (March); Center for Asia-Pacific Security, Honolulu (March); Hawaii-Pacific University, Honolulu (March - NEH Visiting Lecturer); Observer Research Foundation, New Delhi (January); Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi (January); Institute for Defense Studies and Analysis, New Delhi (January); Institute for Peace and Conflict Studies, New Delhi (December). M.G. University, Kottayam, India (December). 2003: University of Allahabad, India (December); University of Pondicherry, India (December); Stella Mary’s College, Chennai (December); Observer Research Foundation, Chennai (December); University of Colombo (December); Kerala University, Trivandrum, India (December); University of California, Los Angeles (April); University of California, Berkeley, (March). 2002: Monterey Institute of International Studies, California (December); Naval Post-graduate School, Monterey, California (February); Center for International and Strategic Studies, Washington D.C. (January); University of Toronto, (January); University of Windsor (January); Nehru Center, Bombay (January); University of Bombay (January); Pune University, India (January) 2001: Kerala University, Trivandrum, India (December); Jadavpur University, Calcutta, India (December); Punjab University, Chandigarh, India (December); United Services Institution, New Delhi (December); Delhi Policy Group, New Delhi (December); Center for Policy Research, New Delhi (December): Institute for Peace and Conflict Studies, New Delhi (December). 2000: Koc University, Istanbul, Turkey (December); M.G. University, Kottayam (December); Simon Fraser University, Vancouver (March); University of Quebec, Montreal (March). 1998: Stanford University (April); Brandeis University, Boston (April); Monterey Institute of International Studies (April); University of California, Santa Barbara (April); University of California, Irvine (April); University of Washington, Seattle (March); University of British Columbia, Vancouver (March); University of Cincinnati (Video Seminar, March); Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi (March); India International Center, New Delhi (March); London School of Economics (February)

16

1997: Dartmouth College (December); Olin Institute, Harvard University (November); Center for Science and International Affairs, Harvard University (November); Center for International Affairs, Harvard University (November); Kyung Hee University, Seoul (September). 1995: Institute for Defense Studies and Analysis, New Delhi (January); Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi (January). 1993: M.G. University, Kottayam, India (December); McGill University Workshop on International Security (November); University of Montreal (March). 1992: Beijing Institute of Strategic Studies, China, (August); Physicians for the Prevention of Nuclear War, Montreal, (September). 1991: University of Nebraska, Lincoln (February) 1990: University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (November); University of California, Los Angeles (January); University of California, Davis (January). 1986: University of California, Irvine (September). AFFILIATIONS American Political Science Association (APSA); International Studies Association (ISA); British International Studies Association (BISA) (200-2009); Indian Political Science Association; Canadian International Council (CIC) (2006-10); International Institute for Strategic Studies (IISS-London, 1992-2000); Canadian Political Science Association (1992-98; 2012-2014); Arms Control Association (1988-93); International Political Science Association (1992-95; 2012-13).

OTHER PROFESSIONAL ACTIVITIES Editorial Advisory Board Memberships Editor, Book Series on “South Asia in World Affairs”, Georgetown University Press, (2010-16). Member, Editorial Board, Journal of Global Security Studies (2014-). Member, Editorial Board, Military and Strategic Affairs (2013-). Member, Editorial Board, Journal of South Asian Studies (Feb 2013-Feb 2015). Member, Editorial Board, Journal of Political Science & Public Affairs (2013- Member, Editorial Board, Jadavpur Journal of International Relations (2012-) Member, Editorial Board, Indian Journal of Foreign Affairs (2012-2015) Member, Editorial Board, India Journal of Asian Affairs (2011-present) Member, Editorial Board, International Studies Quarterly (2009-13; 2014-2014-2017) Member, Editorial Board, Global Governance (Journal) (2009-12) Member, Editorial Board, International Interactions (Journal) (2009--2013) Member, Editorial Board, Contemporary Security Policy (Journal) (2006--2014)

Member, Editorial Board, Non-Proliferation Review, Monterey, California, 2003--Present Member, Editorial Board, Asian Security Book Series, Stanford University Press, East-

West Center Honolulu/Washington D.C. 2007-10. Series Editor, Book Series on Initiatives in Strategic Studies, Palgrave Press, New York,

2004--Present

17

Assistant Editor, Canadian Journal of Political Science, 1996-1999. Other Chair, Long-range Planning Committee, International Studies Association, April 2014-2016. Member, Long-range Planning Committee, International Studies Association, April 2013-2015. Member, Board of Advisors, South Asia Democratic Forum, Brussels (February 2012-). Program Chair, ISSS Section, ISA Conference, New York, February 2009. Member, Governing Council, International Security Studies Section (ISSS) of International

Studies Association (ISA), 2008-11. Member, Governing Board, Canadian International Council (Montreal Chapter), 2008—2010. Chair, Distinguished Scholar Selection Committee, International Security Studies Section (ISSS) of

International Studies Association, 2007-08. Chief Organizer, Annual Conference of International Security and Arms Control Division-

ISAC (APSA) and International Security Studies Section (ISA), Montreal, October 2007. Scholar in Residence, Mahatma Gandhi University, School of International Relations,

Kottayam, India (January-February 2007) Member, Governing Council, International Security and Arms Control Division, APSA, 2006-

2008. Division Head (International Security and Arms Control) and Member, Program Committee,

American Political Science Association Annual Convention, Philadelphia (September 2006). Member, International Advisory Board, Asian Security Book Series, Stanford University Press,

East-West Center Honolulu/Washington D.C. 2002-07 Member, International Advisory Committee, Encyclopedia of Arms Control , 2002-04. Member, Social Science Research Council (SSRC), Global Security and Cooperation Program,

Working Group on South Asia Nuclear Project, 2003-04. External Evaluator, Tenure and Appointment of Full Professor, Bilkent University (August 2014);

Singapore Management University (August 2014); Georgetown University, Doha (July 2014); University Cincinnati (July 2014); Kings College, London (October 2012; Oct 2013), University of Singapore (April 2012); Nanyang Technological University, Singapore (April 2012); University of Utah, August 2011; Kings College, London, November 2010; Naval Post Graduate School, October 2010; November 2011, Indiana University, September 2010; Fletcher School of Diplomacy, April 2007. Tenure and Promotion of Assistant Professor, University of Michigan, July 2015; MIT, October 2013; Utah State University October 2013; University of Georgia, June 2012, 2011; Canadian Forces College, Toronto, May 2010, Concordia University, November 2005; University of Cincinnati, September 2005; Concordia University, December 2003; Cornell University, November 2003; Naval Postgraduate School, November 2003; University of Maryland, Baltimore County, October 2003; University of Western Ontario, October 2000; York University, September 2000; Endowed Chair, UCLA (November 2011).

PhD Theses: Aarhus University, Dec 2013; Laval University, May 2012; Madras University, January 2010; November, 2009; Dalhousie University, Halifax, October 2008; Graduate Institute of International Studies, Geneva, November 2008; Pondicherry University, March 2006; Madras University, May 2005.

Book Manuscript Reviewer, Harvard University Press, February 2015; Cornell University Press, October 2008, February 2014; University of Kentucky Press, September 2006; University Press of Florida, September 2006; University of Chicago Press, May 2006, March 2008, March 2010; Routledge, September, May, October, November, December 2006, April,

18

November 2007, October 2009, March 2010, May, October 2012, May 2013, October 2014, July 2015; Palgrave Press, April 2006, March 2012, April 2012, September 2012, November 2012, February 2013, November 2013, November 2014; CQ Press, February 2006; University of Michigan Press, Oct. 2005; Stanford University Press, August 2005, September 2005, April 2008, April 2009, May 2010, Aug 2012; Frank Cass, November 2005, July 2004, October 2004, November 2004; Princeton University Press, May 2003; Cambridge University Press, February 2002, May 2003, October 2003, May 2006, March 2007, February 2008, September 2008, November 2009, March 2010, March 2011; Aug 2012; Ashgate Publishing, June 2001; Westview Press, October 2000; University of Georgia Press, April 2007, September 2012, September 2013; Georgetown University Press, April 2009, July 2010; Oxford University Press, May 2010, July 2012, November 2014; Columbia University Press, August 2010; Bloomsbury, Aug 2012; University of Pennsylvania Press, September 2012; May 2013; September 2013.

Journal Manuscript Reviewer, World Politics: May 2015, August 2005; International Security, Feb. 2002, Oct. 1999, Oct. 1997, Jan. 2004, July 2005, Sept. 2005; February 2006, December 2008, June 2009, August 2010, June 2011; Nonproliferation Review: January 2003, July 2011; Contemporary Security Policy: September 2003, April 2005, July 2007; Review of International Studies: January 2001; Canadian Foreign Policy Journal: Oct. 1999, June 2005; Journal of Contingencies and Crisis Management: Feb.1999; European Journal of International Relations: December 2004, April 2004, Nov. 1998; International Studies Quarterly: August 2011, October 2010; May 2010, May 2009; August 2009, March 2007, May 2006, June 2001, June 1998, March 1996; Millennium: Feb. 1998, Dec. 2014; Journal of Peace Research: Aug. 1995, Sept. 2000; Arms Control: May 1994; Security Studies: May 2004, October 2004, May 2005; November 2007, May 2009; October 2010, November 2011, December 2011, February 2013, Dec. 2014; Asian Survey: October 2004, November 2006, February 2013, November 2014; International Studies Perspectives: October 2004; Asian Security: May 2005; Foreign Policy Analysis: July 2007, November 2007, October 2010; India Review: August 2007, April 2012; International Journal: November 2007, November 2009, October 2012; International Studies, June 2009; International Interactions, June 2012, May 2010, July 2009; International Relations of the Asia-Pacific, May 2011; Polity, June 2011, Sept 2013; St. Anthony’s International Review (November 2011); Journal of Strategic Studies (Feb 2012); Journal of Cold War History (July 2013); Journal of Development Studies, Dec. 2014.

Reviewer, Grawemeyer Book Award, University of Louisville, April 2009; 2003; FCAR Grant Application; SSHRC Grant application, January 2006, December 2003, January 2001, Dec. 1997; Killiam Fellowships, 1999 &2000; Shastri Indo-Canadian Institute's India Studies Fellowships, Aug 1995: & 1997; Israel Science Foundation, February 2011; Portuguese Foundation for Science and Technology, August 2012.

Selection Board, Peace Scholar Dissertation Awards, U.S. Institute of Peace, Washington D.C., January 2002.

Organizer & Participant: Roundtable Panels on: “Stephen P. Cohen and South Asia,” ISA Conference, San Diego, April 2012; “Complex Deterrence,” ISSS/ISAC Conference, Monterey, October, 2009; “Is Deterrence a Failed Paradigm?,” APSA Convention, Washington DC., September 2006; ‘Why No one Cares to Balance America,’ APSA Conference, Washington D.C., Sept. 2005; ‘Understanding India-Pakistan Rivalry,’ APSA Conference, Chicago, Sept. 2004; ‘Balance of Power Revisited,’ ISA Convention, Portland, March 2003; “India’s Quest for Great Power Status: Causes and Implications,” ISA Convention, New Orleans, March 2002; ‘India and the World Order,’ Annual South Asia Conference, University of Wisconsin, Madison, October, 2000; ‘India, Nuclear

19

Weapons and World Order,’ APSA Conference, Atlanta. Sept. 1999; ‘Major Powers and the Emerging International Order,’ & ‘Strategies for International Order,’ APSA Conference, Boston. Sept. 1998; Participant, Ditchley Foundation Conference on: “Is India Ready for Superpower Status?”

Oxford, March 18-21, 2010; Roundtable Panels on Benny Miller’s “States Nations and Great Powers,” Nina Tannenwald’s “The Nuclear Taboo,” International Studies Association Convention, San Francisco, March 2008; Roundtable on Analytic Eclecticism in the Study of World Politics, APSA Conference, Washington DC (Sept 2010).

Chair, Panels on ”Rising Powers and the Emerging international Order,” APSA conference, Seattle (September 2011); “When Regions Transform,” and “Status in World Politics,” ISA Conference, Montreal (March 2011); Panel on Nuclear Deterrence in the 21st Century, APSA Conference, Washington DC (Sept 2010); Panels on South Asia’s Insecurity Predicament,” and Neoclassical Realism and India’s Foreign Policy,” ISA Convention, New Orleans, February 2010, “Neoclassical Realism” and “Complex Deterrence,” ISA Convention, New York, February 2008; Distinguished Scholar Panel in Honor of Richard Rosecrance (Chair), ISA Convention, San Francisco, March 2008; “Sources of Regional Stability” ISA Convention, New Orleans, March 2002; ‘Alliances and War,’ APSA Convention, San Francisco, August 2001; "Globalization, Ethnicity & Identity," CPSA Convention, Montreal, June 1995.

Discussant, “When Regions Transform,” ISA Conference, San Diego, 2012; Asia Studies Conference, Toronto, March 2011; ISA conference Montreal; APSA Conference, Washington DC (Sept 2010); ISA Conference New York (Feb. 2009); ISA Conference, San Diego, March 2006; APSA Conference, Chicago, Sept. 2004; Conference on South

Asia’s Nuclear Future, Stanford University, June 2004; Conference on the 1999 India-Pakistan Kargil Conflict, Naval Postgraduate School, Monterey, May 2002. Panels on: "Nation, Identity and the Indian State," CPSA Convention, Montreal, June 1995; "Alliances and War," ISA Convention, Chicago, Feb. 1995.

Editor, REGIS/CIPSS Working Paper Series, 2000-2001; 2004-2010 Campus Director, REGIS, 1995-1997; 2003-2005; 2007-09. Member, Canadian Faculty team visiting NATO and EU Headquarters, Brussels, June 1996. Selection Committee, Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada (SSHRC),

Doctoral fellowships, March 1996. UNIVERSITY AND DEPARTMENTAL ACTIVITIES Statutory Selection Committee, McGill University, May 1, 2015-April 30, 2018. Dean’s Representative, Committee on Spousal Hiring, History Department, Spring 2012. Faculty of Arts Committee for the Selection of Chair, Dept. of Political Science (Spring 2009) Chair, Departmental Committee on Full Professor Promotion Criteria (Fall 2008) Departmental Hiring Committee, Assistant Professor in Chinese Politics (2008 and 2009) University Tenure Committee (Faculty of Education) (1999-2001); Faculty of Arts (2004-2005) University Selection Committee, James McGill and William Dawson Chairs (2004-05) University Statutory Selection Committee for Full Professors (2005) Field Coordinator, International Relations (1996-97, 1999-02, 2003-04, 2007-2011) Campus Director, Research Group in International Security (2003-2005) Departmental Graduate Studies Committee, (2006-07) Departmental Search Committee, Associate/Assistant Professors in International Relations (2001-

2002, 2003-04; 2006-07) Departmental Search Committee, Assistant Professor in European Politics (2000-01)

20

Departmental Selection Committee, Canada Research Chair (October 2000) Chair’s Selection Committee, Political Science (2000) Faculty of Arts Distinguished Lectureship Committee (1993-94, 2000-02) Graduate Admissions Committee (1992-94, 1995-97, 1999-2000; 2004-2005; 2006-07) SSHRC/McGill Major University Selection Committee (1999-2001) Pro-dean, Ph.D. orals, Departments of Chemistry (1999); Psychology (Jan. 2001);

Religious Studies (May 2007). Faculty of Arts, Committee on Teaching (1995-97) Coordinator, Visiting Speaker Series (1993-94, 1995-97) Chair, Shastri Indo-Canadian Institute, McGill Committee (1993-94) Board of Directors, Shastri Institute, Calgary (1993-94) Head, Majors Program in Political Science (1993-94) Appointments Committee for Comparative Politics (1993-94) Faculty of Arts Appointments Committee for Greek Studies (1993-94) Department Dissertation Committee (1991-92) University Computer Users' Committee (1991-92) Steering Committee, Center for International and Strategic Affairs, UCLA (1988-91) COURSES TAUGHT Graduate level (at McGill University) 160-679A: International Security: Conflict and Cooperation 160-778A: Workshop on International Security and Political Economy 160-575B: International Politics: Nuclear Proliferation NS-4667: Political Development in South Asia (At the Naval Postgraduate School- Winter 2003). Undergraduate level (at McGill University) 160-360B: International Security: Strategies of War and Peace 160-351A: Conflict, Crisis, and War 160-349B: International Politics and Foreign Policy: Asia- China, Japan and India 160-244B: International Politics: State Behavior ADVISING Ph.D.: (Theses under supervision) Athanasios Hristoulas: "The Externalization of International Conflicts" (Aug. 1995. Obtained

tenure-track position at ITAM, Mexico City) Saira Khan: "Nuclear Proliferation in Protracted Conflict Regions: A Comparative Study of

South Asia and the Middle East" (defended- May 1999. Obtained tenure track position at the University of Amsterdam).

Kirsten Rafferty: "Alliances as Institutions: Persistence and Decay in Security Cooperation," (defended- January 2001. Obtained tenure-track position at Berry College, Georgia)

Mark Lanteigne, "Games without Frontiers: Chinese Power and International Institutions," (defended- August 2002. Obtained tenure-track teaching position at University of St. Andrew’s, Scotland)

Pierre Pahlavi, “Mass Diplomacy: Foreign Policy in the Global Information Age” (defended, December 2004. Obtained tenure-track teaching position at Canadian Armed Forces Staff College, Toronto)

Gabriel Stern: “Forging New Identities: Explaining Success and Failure in Canadian Arms

21

Control Initiatives” (defended - November 2005. Practicing Law, Toronto) Imad Mansour, “The Domestic Sources of Regional Orders: Explaining Instability in the

Middle East” (Defended, March 2009, Assistant Professor at Qatar University, Doha. Stefanie von Hlatky: “The Great Asymmetry: America’s Closest Allies in Times of War,” Co-

supervisor- University of Montreal (Defended, March 2010-Obtained tenure-track position at Queens’ University, Ontario).

Bahar Akman, “UN Peace Operations: Identifying Sources of Human Security” (Defended, March 2010, Teaching at Boston College).

Mahesh Shankar, “Rivalry and Territorial Disputes: The Cases of India and China” (Defended, October 2012, Obtained tenure-track position at Skidmore College, New York). Jean-Francois Bélanger, « Preventive Attacks and Nuclear Non-Prolifération » (in Progress)

Han Zhen, “The Micro-Foundations of Interdependence and Peace: China-Japan Case.” (in

Progress) Recent Committees: Theodore McLauchlin (tenure-track-University of Montreal); Jessica Trisco (tenure-track- University of Western Ontario); Susan Khazaeli (current-University of Ottawa): Jacob Rabas (current) Post-doctoral Supervision Pierre Lizee, (REGIS Post-doc Fellow) “Peace, Power and Resistance in Cambodia,” 9/1996-97. Robin Ramcharan, (REGIS Post-doc Fellow) “Conflict Prevention and Regional Cooperation in Southeast Asia,” 9/1998-1999. Carol McQueen, (REGIS Post-doc Fellow) “Humanitarian Intervention and Safety Zones,” 9/2001-5/2002. Philippe Bourbeau (SSHRC Fellow) “Securitization and Regional Orders,” 9/2008-5/2009. Stefanie von Hlatky, "The United States and its Allies: Dilemmas of Military Cooperation" (SDF

Post-doctoral Fellow), 9/2009-5/2010, SSHRC Post-doctoral Fellow: 4/11-11/11. Nicola Contessi, “Rising Powers and Central Asia,” FQRSC Fellow, 9/12 to 8/14. MA: (Theses under Supervision) James Gorman, "Expected Utility Theory: The Importance of Situational Variables." 8/92. Tamir Anis: "Between Realignment and Bandwagoning: The Case of Egypt." 4/94. Kao Yao-Hsing "The Road toward Reunification: A Case Study of Divided States." 4/94. Kirsten Rafferty, "Non-alignment: The Enigma of an Aligned World." 9/94. Sarah Laugier, “The Policy of Sector Specific Aggressive Bilateralism with Japan and its

Implications,” 9/1994 (co-supervisor). Richard Taylor: "British Security Policy in the Post-Cold War Era." 4/95. Terry McNamee: "The Nuclear Policy of South Africa: A Psychological Perspective." 9/95. Steven Breton, “Imperial Sunset: Grand Strategies of Hegemons in Relative Decline,” 4/1997

(co-supervisor) Saeed Al-Ghmadi, “The International Civil Aviation Organization and its Role in International

Politics,” 5/1997 (co-supervisor) Joe Sisto: "Canada and the Nuclear Arms Race: A Case Study in Unilateral Self-restraint." 9/97. Kaori Kokado: “Economy First: Japan’s Disincentives for Nuclear Acquisition,” 5/00. Paolo Torchetti, “Perceptive Legitimacy: The NPT and its Behavioral Prescriptions,” 1/01. Umut Aydin, “Adversaries as Allies: Greece and Turkey in NATO,” 3/01. Mehmet Yilmaz, “The War that Never Happened: Conflict over the Sharing of Euphrates-Tigris

River Water,” May 2003, (NPS)

22

David Lehman, “Departure Delayed: Russian Exits from Western Periphery” 1/05. Maxime Beaupre, “Unwilling Foes: Russia, China and the Challenge of the American Ballistic

Missile Defense Program,” (9/05). Olivier Henripin, “A Rationalist Approach to Power Transition Theory: The Case of the

Prospective Sino-American Transition” (8/07) Mila Francisco, “Non-Democratic Peace in South America: Comparing the Beagle Channel and

the Cenepa Crises” (9/07). Sebastien Mainville, “Bridge Too Far: Military Control of National Security Policy and Self-

defeating Escalation During War,” –co-supervisor (5/2009). Mark Paradis, “Is it Just Hot Air? The Security Discourse on Climate Change” –co-supervisor (6/09). Steven Lolelski, “Weak Revisionists: Threats, Cultures of Insecurity, and Regional Ambition,”

(10/10)-Dean’s Honor’s List. Young Ju Lee, “The Impact of Juche on North Korea’s Foreign Policy in the Post-Cold War Era

(1990-2010)” (1/11). Raphael Zaffran, “Losing the War, Winning the Peace: Implementing Exit Strategies in Failing

Counterinsurgencies” (4/11). Thomas C. Daoust, “Threat Perceptions: American and British Assessment of Rising China,”

(11/11). Colin Chia, “Status Updates: Nationalism and Great Power Politics in Russia and China,”

(12/14).

Field Research Trips Australia (twice), Bangladesh, China (twice), Singapore, Malaysia, India (several), Israel, Pakistan, UK (several), France, Japan (thrice), Korea (twice), Maldives, South Africa (twice), Turkey, Argentina (twice), Brazil (three), Ukraine, Singapore (several), Switzerland, Sweden, Russia, Ethiopia, Uganda, Tanzania, Zambia, Mexico, Costa Rica, Venezuela, Colombia, Peru, and Chile, Hong Kong, Taiwan; Nepal, UAE.