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Governance
President and Council
Committees
Task Forces
Organized Sections
Representing Political Science
Governance Documents
Nominations
Reports & Activities
Ethics
Past Officers & Council
Robert Axelrod, President
Ira Katznelson, President
Margaret Levi, President 2004-05
Gary Cox, Vice President
Henry Brady, Vice-President 2006-07
Martha Ackelsberg, Vice-President
Tony Affigne, Treasurer
Helen V. Milner, Vice-President
Joan Tronto, Vice President 2004-05
Catherine Boone, 2005-07
John Garcia, Vice President 2004-05
David Laitin, Vice President
Jack S. Levy, 2005-07
Dvora Yanow, Secretary
Timothy Kaufman-Osborn, 2005-07
Andrea Y. Simpson, Council
Christine Marie Sierra, Secretary 2004-05
Luis Ricardo Fraga, Secretary
Henry Brady, Treasurer 2003-05
Donald P. Green, 2005-07
Bryan D. Jones, 2005-07
Michael Jones-Correa, 2005-07
John H. Aldrich, Council 2003-05
John Harbeson, Council 2003-05
Marion Orr, Council 2003-05
Shirley Geiger, Council 2003-05
Joanna Vecchiarelli Scott, Council 2003-05
Manuel Avalos, Council 2003-05
Judith Baer, Council 2003-05
Lisa Anderson, Council
Pei-Te Lien, Council
Andrew Aoki, Council
David Vogel, Council
Rogers Smith, Council
Harvey Mansfield, Council
James Gibson, Council
Neta Crawford, Council
 
 

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David Laitin, Vice President
Stanford University

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David Laitin, Stanford University
Vice President 2005-06

David Laitin received his foundational education in political science as the roommate of Peter Katzenstein at Swarthmore College.  He received his Ph.D. at the University of California, Berkeley, working under the direction of Ernst Haas and Hanna Pitkin.  His principal field is comparative politics and he has conducted field research in Somalia, Yorubaland, Catalonia, and Estonia, working on issues of language and religion, and how these cultural phenomena link nation to state. His books include Politics, Language and Thought: The Somali Experience; Hegemony and Culture: Politics and Religious Change Among the Yoruba; and Identity in Formation: The Russian-Speaking Populations in the Near Abroad. Most recently, in collaboration with James Fearon, he has published two papers in the American Political Science Review on ethnicity, ethnic cooperation, and the sources of civil war.

For the APSA, he has served on the Council, and its executive committee; as president of the Comparative Politics Section; and is currently serving on the APSA Taskforce on Political Violence and Terrorism. He has taught at the University of California, San Diego, the University of Chicago, and is currently the Watkins Professor of Political Science at Stanford University.