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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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Andrea Y. Simpson, Council
University of Richmond

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Andrea Y. Simpson, University of Richmond
Council 2005-07

Andrea Y. Simpson began her academic career in 1993 as an assistant professor at the University of Washington in Seattle, Washington.  During her tenure there, she completed two postdoctoral fellowships: The Chancellor's Postdoctoral Fellowship at the University of California, Berkeley and a Rockefeller Foundation Fellowship at the Center for Research on Women, (the CROW Center), at the University of Memphis in Memphis, Tennessee.  At UC-Berkeley, she completed her first book, The Tie that Binds (New York University Press, 1998), named the "Best Book of 1998 on Racial Identity" by the Race, Ethnicity, and Politics section of the American Political Science Association.  Simpson received tenure at the University of Washington in December of the year 2000.  After eleven years of service at the University of Washington, Simpson is now an associate professor at the University of Richmond in Richmond, Virginia.  She is currently completing a project that examines the effects of gender, race, and class on political mobilization within the environmental justice movement.  A book manuscript is forthcoming from Oxford University Press.