|
M.J. Peterson
"The Flows of Authority in Intergovernmental Organizations"
Tuesday, May 6, 2008
Noon
Mershon Center for International Security Studies
1501 Neil Ave., Columbus, OH 43201
See a streaming video of this event. This streaming video requires RealPlayer. If you do not have RealPlayer, you can download it free.
M.J. Peterson is Professor of Political Science at the University of Massachusetts in Amherst. Her interests include world politics, international institutions, international political economy, and technology and technological change.
Peterson is author of
International Regimes for the Final Frontier (2005); The UN General Assembly (2005); Recognition of Governments: Legal Doctrine and State Practice 1815-1995 (1997); Managing the Frozen South: The Origin and Evolution of the Antarctic Treaty System (1988); The General Assembly in World Politics (1986); “Diverging Orbits: Situation Definitions in Creation of Regimes for Broadcast and Remote Sensing Satellites,” American Political Science Review (2004); "The Use of Analogies in Developing Outer Space Law," International Organization (1997); "The Emergence of a Mass Market for Fax Machines," Technology in Society (1995), "Whalers, Cetologists, Environmentalists and the International Management of Whaling," International Organization (1992); and other articles and chapters.
Peterson is past President of the New England Political Science Association (2005-06); Council of the American Society of International Law (1998-2001); member of editorial committee, Global Governance (1993 -); and editor of Polity (1994-99). She is currently a Visiting Scholar in Political Science at the University of Chicago.
Peterson has a bachelor's degree from Upsala College in East Orange, N.J., and master's and doctoral degrees in Political Science from Columbia University.
|
  |

M.J. Peterson
Professor of Political Science
University of Massachusetts-Amherst
|