The Dynamics of Secessionist Regions: Eurasian Unrecognized Quasi-States after Kosovo's Independence

A Project of the Human and Social Dynamics Initiative of the National Science Foundation (NSF)

    Grant number 0827016

Principal Investigator

John O'Loughlin

Institute of Behavioral Science
University of Colorado

John O'Loughlin is College Professor of Distinction, Professor of Geography and Faculty Research Associate in the Political and Economic Change Program of the Institute of Behavioral Science at the University of Colorado. He received his Ph.D. in Geography from the Pennsylvania State University in 1973. His research interests are in the spatial analysis of conflict including the relationship between climate/environmental change and conflict as well as in the political geography of the post-Soviet Union, including Russian and Ukrainian geopolitics, Eurasian quasi-states, and ethno-territorial nationalisms. He has also published on the diffusion of democracy, electoral geography, and the electoral geography of Nazi Germany. He is editor-in-chief of Political Geography. He teaches undergraduate classes in Political Geography, Geographies of Global Change, and the Geography of Western Europe, and graduate classes in Political Geography.

 

Co-Principal Investigators

Gerard Toal

Public and International Affairs
Virginia Tech University

Dr. Gerard Toal (Gearóid Ó Tuathail) is Director of the Masters of Public and International Affairs at Virginia Tech's campus in Old Town Alexandria and Professor of Government and International Affairs in Virginia Tech's School of Public and International Affairs. He grew up on the border region between Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland and was educated in political geography at the National University of Ireland, the University of Illinois, and Syracuse University (Ph D, 1989). He is the author of Critical Geopolitics (Routledge, 1996) and a co-editor of A Companion to Political Geography (Blackwell, 2002) and The Geopolitics Reader (2nd edition Routledge, 2006) among other works. He also serves as Associate Editor of the journal Geopolitics.

 

Michael D. Ward

University of Washington
Department of Political Science

Michael D. Ward is Professor of Political Science at Duke University. He is an affiliate of the Center for Statistics and Social Sciences. His primary interests are in international relations (spanning democratization, globalization, international commerce, military spending, as well as international conflict and cooperation), political geography, as well as mathematical and statistical methods.

 

Post-Doctoral Consultants

Kristin Bakke

Department of Political Science
University College London

 

Frank Witmer

Institute of Behavioral Science
University of Colorado

 

Vladimir Kolossov

Institute of Geography
Russian Academy of Sciences, Moscow