One of the core objectives of the EU Center at the University of Oklahoma is to create an effective outreach network in the Southwest. In order to facilitate exchanges of faculty, students, and EU visitors, we have designated several EU Center Fellows at partner institutions throughout the region. The University of Oklahoma EU Center provides resources to help Fellows host EU visitors to the region and to bring Fellows to the OU Campus for special events. There are 8 participating EU Center Faculty Fellows at universities in 5 states:
Arizona State University Carolyn M. Warner
University of Arkansas Mark Cory
University of Central Oklahoma Tim H. Baughman
University of Denver Lisa Conant
Oklahoma State University Jeffrey Lewis
United States Air Force Academy Thomas S. Mowle
University of Texas Gary P. Freeman
University of Tulsa Michael Mosher
| Carolyn M. Warner Department of Political Science Arizona State University Box 872001 Tempe AZ 85287-2001 (480) 965-5201 fax: (480) 965-3929 carolyn.warner@asu.edu | AssociateProfessor (Ph.D. Harvard University; A.M. Harvard University; B.A.University of California San Diego). Professor Warner's researchinterests range from religion and politics to patronage and corruption,and she has written extensively on imperialism and state building inAfrica. Her teaching interests cover a similarly broad range ofsubjects, and normally she offers the introductory course in EuropeanPolitics and often in Comparative Politics. Supported by a NationalScience Foundation grant, she currently is conducting research oncorruption and fraud in the European Union, and is a Jean Monnet Fellowat the European University Institute near Florence, Italy. In thefollowing academic year she will be a National Fellow at the HooverInstitution of Stanford University. Her book, Confessions of anInterest Group: the Catholic Church and Political Parties in Europe,was recently published by Princeton University Press, and she hascontributed articles to Review of International Studies, Review ofInternational Political Economy, Journal of Interdisciplinary History,Party Politics, and Political Theory. She is an avid cyclist and skier. |
Professor Mark Cory, Director | ProfessorMark Cory, B.A. Dartmouth College 1963, M.A. Indiana University 1968,Ph.D. Indiana University 1971.Professor Cory joined the University ofArkansas in 1982 and is currently a Professor of German and graduateadvisor, as well as director of the interdisciplinary undergraduateprogram in European Studies. He has published two books on contemporaryGerman Literature and over twenty journal articles, book chapters andtranslations. He has served on two national editorial boards and forseventeen years served variously as associate dean and/or director ofHumanities in Fulbright College. His research interests are twentiethcentury German literature and associated cultural phenomena. |
| Professor Lisa Conant Department of Political Science University of Denver Sturm Hall 2199 South University Boulevard Denver, CO 80208 Phone: (303) 871-2629 conant@du.edu | LisaConant, (Ph.D and MA University of Washington 1998 1993, BA Universityof Minnesota 1990). Jean Monnet Fellow, Robert Schuman Center of theEuropean University Institute, 2002-2001. Doctoral Fellow, BerlinProgram for Advanced German and European Studies, Free University ofBerlin, 1995-1996. Assistant Professor of Political Science at OhioUniversity, 1998-2000. Assistant professor of Political Science at theUniversity of Denver 2000-present. Professor Conant teaches courses incomparative law and politics, European integration, and internationalrelations. Her research interests concern the role of the EuropeanCourt of Justice in politics and policy change in the European Union,and how legal practices reflect patterns of individual belonging andidentity. Publications: forthcoming book, Justice Contained: Law andPolitics in the European Union, Cornell University Press, 2002;"Europeanization and the Courts" in Transforming Europe:Europeanization and Domestic Change, eds. Maria Green Cowles, JamesCaporaso, and Thomas Risse, Cornell University Press,2001; "ContestedBoundaries: Citizens, States, and Supranational Belonging in theEuropean Union," EUI Working Paper, European Forum Series RSC No.2001/27; "European Judicial Review and National Institutional Change,"in Altered States: A Comparative Study of the Sources and Consequencesof Institutional Change, eds. Andrew Cortell and Susan Peterson,Lexington Press, forthcoming 2002. |
Major Thomas S. Mowle, Ph.D. | MajorMowle holds a Ph.D. in Political Science from The Ohio StateUniversity. His major areas of interest include International RelationsTheory, Foreign Policy Decision Making, and Security Studies. Hiscurrent research efforts focus on European integration andtransatlantic relations. He is chair of the Academy's Western EuropeanArea Studies Group. His book The United States and the European Union:Allies at Odds? is forthcoming in 2003. |
Dean Tim H. Baughman | Dr.T. H. Baughman ("Bock-man") began teaching twentieth century Europeanhistory in 1969 and continues to enjoy offering a series of courses onEuropean history since 1871. His publications have been divided betweenearly twentieth century Great Britain and the history of the polarregions in that period. Among his publications are Before the HeroesCame: Antarctica in the 1890s (University of Nebraska Press, 1994),Ice: The Antarctic Diary of Charles F. Passel (Texas Tech UniversityPress,1995) and Pilgrims on the Ice: Robert Falcon Scott's FirstAntarctic Expedition (University of Nebraska Press, 1999). Recently hehas published a short popular biography, Shackleton of the Antarctic.In addition to his academic work Dr. Baughman has been an avidsupporter of studying abroad, having personally led seventeen studytours to Europe over the past fifteen years. He lectures widely on hisresearch topics and on the question of leadership as exemplified bygreat figures of the past. |
| Professor Gary P. Freeman Department of Government University of Texas Austin, TX 78712 Phone: (512) 471-5121 gfreeman@jeeves.la.utexas.edu | Prof.Freeman specializes in the politics of immigration, comparative socialpolicy, and politics in western democracies, especially France,Britain, Australia, Canada, and the United States. In addition to twobooks, Immigrant Labor and Racial Conflict in Industrial Societies andNations of Immigrants: Australia, the United States, and InternationalMigration (edited with James Jupp), recent publications include"Divergent Paths of Immigration Politics in the United States andAustralia," Population and Development Review (2001), "HomelandCitizenship Policies and the Status of Third-Country Nationals in theEuropean Union," Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies (1998),"Immigration as a Source of Discontent and Frustration in WesternDemocracies," Studies in Comparative International Development (1997),and "Modes of Immigration Politics in Liberal Democratic States,"International Migration Review (1995), "Client Politics or Populism:The Politics of Immigration Reform in the United States," in Guiraudonand Joppke, eds. Controlling a New Immigration World (2001),"Democratic Politics and Multilateral Immigration Policy," in Tomasi,ed. In Defense of the Alien (2000), "State Regulatory Regimes andImmigrant Informal Economic Activity," (with Nedim Ogelman) in Rath,ed. Immigrant Businesses (2000), and "The Quest for Skill," inBernstein and Weiner, eds. Migration and Refugee Policies (1999).Current research includes the impact of public opinion on member statepreferences for harmonized immigration and asylum policies in the EU,the modeling of immigration politics in comparative contexts, and apaper on the perspectives of political scientists on internationalmigration. As Director of the Public Policy Clinic in the Department,he is heading up a number of collaborative research projects on theimpact of U.S. welfare reform on immigrants, the naturalizationpractices of legal immigrants in Texas, and related topics. |
Professor Jeffrey Lewis | JeffreyLewis, Ph.D., University of Wisconsin-Madison (1998). Lewis is anAssistant Professor of Political Science at Oklahoma State University.He teaches classes in comparative politics, international relations,and European politics. His research focuses on politics and politicaleconomy in the European Union (EU). His current project examines thestyle of decision-making in the EU's Council of Ministers, and hownorms such as diffuse reciprocity and culture of compromise impactbargaining outcomes. Lewis has been a visiting research fellow at theMax-Planck Institute for the Study of Societies in Cologne (1996-1997)and the European University Institute in Florence (1996). His recentpublications include articles in the Journal of Common Market Studiesand the Journal of European Public Policy. |
Professor Michael Mosher |