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Governance
President and Council
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Representing Political Science
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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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Catherine Boone, 2005-07
University of Texas at Austin

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Catherine Boone, University of Texas at Austin
Council Member

Catherine Boone is Associate Professor of Government at University of Texas at Austin.  She received her BA in Political Science with a minor in Economics at University of California, San Diego, and her Ph.D in Political Science from MIT.  Boone's research lies in the areas of Comparative Politics and Political Economy, and focuses on questions of state formation and economic change in the late-developing world. Her work on Africa has dealt with the substantive problems of regime consolidation, economic liberalization, struggles over land tenure, and the politics of HIV/AIDS.  She is author of Merchant Capital and the Roots of State Power in Senegal (Cambridge, 1992), which was a finalist for the African Studies Association's Herskovitz book award, and Political Topographies of the African State: Territorial Authority and Institutional Choice (Cambridge, 2003), which won the Mattei Dogan Award from the Society for Comparative Research.  Her articles have appeared in Comparative Politics, Comparative Political Studies, Journal of Commonwealth and Comparative Politics, World Development, Journal of Development Studies, the African Studies Review, and other comparative politics venues.

She has held appointments as Fulbright professor at Beijing Foreign Studies University, visiting professor at the Centro de Investigacion y Docencia Economicas (CIDE) in Mexico City, Fulbright researcher at the Centre Ivoirien de Recherche Economique et Sociale in Cote d'Ivoire, and researcher at the Ecole Superieure de Gestion des Entreprises (ESGE) in Dakar, Senegal.  She was a fellow of the Harvard Academy of International and Area Studies from 1990-1992.

She has contributed to APSA by serving on various committees of the Comparative Politics Section, and as an officer of the African Politics Conference Group, an APSA-related group.  She is currently serving as President of the West Africa Research Association, which directs the West African Research Center in Dakar, Senegal, and as a member of the SSRC's Africa Regional Advisory Panel.