CV - Clarissa Rile Hayward

CURRICULUM VITAE
Clarissa Rile Hayward
Washington University in Saint Louis
Department of Political Science
Campus Box 1063
One Brookings Drive
St. Louis, MO 63130
(314) 935-5834
chayward@wustl.edu
EDUCATION
Yale University
Ph.D., With Distinction, Political Science,
December, 1998
M.A., Political Science, June, 1994
M. Phil, Political Science, June, 1994
Princeton University
B.A., Summa Cum Laude, Politics, June, 1988
PROFESSIONAL EXPERIENCE
Washington University in Saint Louis
Associate Professor of Political Science, 2007present
Director of Graduate Studies, American Culture
Studies, 2013 - present
Affiliated faculty: American Culture Studies,
Philosophy, Urban Studies.
Ohio State University
Associate Professor of Political Science, 2005-2007
Assistant Professor of Political Science, 1999-2005
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AWARDS AND FELLOWSHIPS
August, 2013
American Political Science Association, Urban
Politics Section, Best Book published in 2013 for
How Americans Make Race: Stories, Institutions,
Spaces
November, 2013
Washington University School of Arts and Sciences
Collaborative Research Seed Grant in the amount of
$12,000 for “Modern Segregation and the Roots of
Structural Racism” project with Iver Bernstein
(History) and Rebecca Wanzo (WGSS)
September, 2008
Washington University Center for Human Values
Faculty Grant
September, 2005 - June 2006
Visiting Member, Institute for Advanced Study,
Princeton, New Jersey
Fellow, National Endowment for the Humanities
January, 2004 - January, 2005
National Academy of Education/Spencer
Postdoctoral Fellowship
2003
Research Grant, College of Social and Behavioral
Science, Ohio State University
2002
Ohio State University, Political Science,
Departmental Teaching Award
2001
Ohio State University Office of Research
Interdisciplinary Research Seminar Program Grant
1999-2000
Ohio State University Faculty Seed Grant
1998
Nominated for the American Political Science
Association’s Leo Strauss Prize for the best
dissertation in Political Theory
1994-1995
Yale University Dissertation Fellowship
1993-1994
Yale University Newhouse Fellowship in Writing
1991-1993
Yale University Sterling Fellowship
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1989
Rotary International Graduate Fellowship, Buenos
Aires, Argentina
SCHOLARLY PUBLICATIONS
Books
How Americans Make Race: Stories, Institutions, Spaces. New York: Cambridge University
Press, 2013.
Awarded the Dennis Judd award for the best book on urban politics by the American Political Science
Association’s Urban Politics Section, 2014
De-facing Power. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 2000.
Edited Volume
Justice and the American Metropolis (with Todd Swanstrom). Minneapolis, MN: University of
Minnesota Press, 2011.
Articles
“What Can Political Freedom Mean in a Multicultural Democracy? On Deliberation, Difference,
and Democratic Governance.” Political Theory, vol. 39. No. 4 (August, 2011), pp. 468-97.
“Thick Injustice” (substantive editors’ introduction, with Todd Swanstrom), pp. 1-29 in Clarissa
Rile Hayward and Todd Swanstrom, eds., Justice and the American Metropolis (Minneapolis,
MN: University of Minnesota Press, 2011).
“Bad Stories: Narrative, Identity, and the State’s Materialist Pedagogy.” Citizenship Studies vol.
14, no. 6 (December, 2010), pp. 651-66.
Reprinted in Governing Through Pedagogy: Re-educating Citizens, ed. Jessica Pykett
(London: Routledge, 2012).
“Identity and Political Theory” (with Ron Watson). Journal of Law and Policy vol. 23 (2010),
pp. 9-41.
“Black Places.” Theory and Event vol. 12, no. 4 (2009).
“Making Interest: On Representation and Democratic Legitimacy,” pp. 111-35 in Ian Shapiro,
Susan Stokes, Elizabeth Wood, and Alexander Kirshner, eds., Political Representation
(Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 2009).
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“Urban Space and American Political Development: Identity, Interest, Action,” pp. 141-53 in
Richardson Dilworth, ed., The City in American Political Development (New York: Routledge,
2009).
“Nobody to Shoot?” Power, Structure, and Agency: A Dialogue” (with Steven Lukes). Journal
of Power vol. 1, no. 1 (April 2008), pp. 5-20.
Reprinted in Power and Politics, ed. Mark Haugaard and Stewart Clegg (Sage Library of
Political Science, 2012).
“Democracy’s Identity Problem: Is Constitutional Patriotism the Answer?” Constellations, vol.
14, no. 2 (June 2007), pp. 182-96.
An early version of this article was circulated as Occasional Paper Number 27 (November,
2006) by the Institute for Advanced Study, School of Social Science, Princeton, NJ.
“Binding Problems, Boundary Problems: The Trouble with ‘Democratic Citizenship,’” pp. 181205 in Seyla Benhabib, Ian Shapiro, and Danilo Petranovich, eds, Identities, Affiliations, and
Allegiances (Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 2007).
“Doxa and Deliberation.” Critical Review of International Social and Political Philosophy. vol.
7, no. 1 (Spring 2004), pp 1-24.
“The Difference States Make: Democracy, Identity, and the American City.” American Political
Science Review, vol. 97, no. 4 (November 2003), pp. 501-14.
“‘The Environment’: Power, Pedagogy and American Urban Schooling.” The Urban Review,
vol. 31, no. 4 (December 1999), pp. 331-57.
“De-facing Power.” Polity, vol. 31, no. 1 (Fall 1998), pp. 1-22.
Reprinted in Power and Politics, ed. Mark Haugaard and Stewart Clegg (Sage Library of
Political Science, 2012).
Review Essays
“The Stories Politicians Tell: Symbolic Power and Narrative Performance in American
Democracy” (review essay of Jeffrey Alexander and Bernadette Jaworsky, Obama Power).
Power, forthcoming 2015.
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“Ethics, Politics, and the Limits of Reason” (review essay on William Connolly, A World of
Becoming, Ruth Grant, ed., In Search of Goodness, and James Miller, Examined Lives: From
Socrates to Nietzsche). Political Theory, vol. 40, no. 2 (April, 2012), pp. 237-45.
Indexed in “The Philosopher’s Index.”
“The Dark Side of Citizenship: Membership, Territory, and the (Anti-)Democratic Polity”
(review essay on Linda Bosniak, The Citizen and the Alien: Dilemmas of Contemporary
Membership and Ayelet Shachar, The Birthright Lottery: Citizenship and Global Inequality),
Issues in Legal Scholarship, vol. 9, no.1, (2011), Article 1. Available at:
http://www.bepress.com/ils/vol9/iss1/1.
“Power and Identity” (review essay of Amy Allen, The Politics of Our Selves: Power, Autonomy,
and Gender in Contemporary Critical Theory). Power, vol. 2, no. 1 (April 2009) 173-85.
“On Power and Responsibility” (review essay of Steven Lukes’s Power: A Radical View, 2nd).
Political Studies Review, vol. 4, no. 2 (May, 2006), pp. 156-63.
Book reviews
For Perspectives on Politics (August, 2012), review of Susan Fainstein, The Just City (Ithaca:
Cornell University Press, 2010).
For Perspectives on Politics (June, 2007), review of Kristin Goss, Disarmed: The Missing
Movement for Gun Control in America (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2006).
“Space and the State in the Time of Global Capital” (review of Neil Brenner, New State Spaces
Urban Governance and the Rescaling of Statehood). European Journal of Sociology Vol. XLVI,
No 3 (December, 2005), pp. 582-6.
For Perspectives on Politics (March, 2004), review of Margaret Kohn, Radical Space: Building
the House of the People (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 2003).
For the American Political Science Review (June 2002), review of Barbara Cruikshank, The Will
to Empower: Democratic Citizens and other Subjects (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1999).
“Comment on Ian’s Shapiro’s Democratic Justice.” The Good Society: A PEGS Journal, vol. 11,
no. 2 (2002), pp. 82-5.
For Political Science Quarterly (Spring 2000), review of Russell Jacoby, The End of Utopia:
Politics and Culture in an Age of Apathy (New York, Basic Books, 1999).
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POPULAR PUBLICATIONS AND OTHER MEDIA CONTRIBUTIONS
“Why Does America Use Public Revenue to Support Private Home Ownership?” Washington
Post / The Monkey Cage, April 15, 2015.
“What Now? Three Ways to Tackle Structural Injustice” (with Lynn Oldham and Laura
Rosenbury), St. Louis Post-Dispatch, November 26, 2014.
“After Ferguson,” Washington Post / The Monkey Cage, November 24, 2014.
“Is Ferguson Anomalous?” Washington Post / The Monkey Cage, August 15, 2014.
“When Talking About Race,” Philadelphia Inquirer / philly.com, February 26, 2014.
“It Takes More than a ‘National Conversation About Race’ to Change Racial Injustice,”
Cleveland Plain Dealer / Cleveland.com, February 9, 2014.
Featured Guest on “Background Briefing with Ian Masters” (radio), November 26, 2014; BBC
News (television), November 26, 2014; “The Scholars’ Circle” (radio), August 24, 2014; RTVE
(television), August 23, 2014; “Background Briefing with Ian Masters” (radio), August 20, 2014;
Washington University’s “Hold That Thought” (podcast), November 6, 2012; “St. Louis on the
Air” (radio), September 7, 2011.
Interviewed for and appeared or was quoted in: The Globe and Mail, November 28, 2014; CBS
Local, November 2, 2014; Bloomberg News, October 13, 2014; The Chronicle of Higher
Education, August 26, 2014; El Pais, August 24, 2014; Christian Science Monitor, August 21,
2014; Pagina, August 20, 2014; Time magazine, August 18, 2014; Los Angeles Times, August
15, 2014.
PRESENTATIONS
“Responsibility and Ignorance: On Dismantling Structural Injustice.” To be presented at the
Brown University Political Theory Workshop, Providence, Rhode Island, April, 2015 and the
Workshop on Politics, Ethics, and Society, Washington University in St. Louis, April, 2015.
“How Americans Make Race.” Presented at the History, Political Science, and International
Relations program, Webster University, St. Louis, January, 2014; the Missouri Conference on
History, St. Louis, MO, March, 2015; the Political Science Colloquium, William and Mary
College, November, 2014; and the Political Science Colloquium, University of Missouri-St.
Louis, February, 2014.
“Structural Racism in and Beyond Ferguson.” Presentation on “Place Matters” panel sponsored
by the Confluence Scholars Strategy Network, St. Louis, MO, October, 2014.
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“How Americans Make Race.” Author meets critics roundtable at the annual meeting of the
American Political Science Association, Washington, D.C., August, 2014.
“Home, Sweet Home.” Presented Ohio State University’s COMPAS (Conversations on Morality,
Politics, and Society) conference, “Public/Private,” Columbus, Ohio, April 2014 and at the
annual meeting of the Urban Affairs Association, San Francisco, CA, April, 2013.
“Identities and Stories.” Presented at the “Race Across the Atlantic” workshop at Washington
University in St. Louis, April 2011; the annual meeting of the American Political Science
Association, Seattle, WA, September, 2011; the Washington University Law Faculty Workshop,
March, 2012; and the Program in Ethics and Public Affairs at Princeton University, November,
2012.
“Stories and Spaces: How Americans Make Race.” Two-day book manuscript workshop
sponsored by the political theory group at Washington University in St. Louis, September, 2012.
“Perspectives on the Just City.” Scheduled to be presented at the annual meeting of the American
Political Science Association, New Orleans, LA, September, 2012 (meeting cancelled due to
hurricane).
“What’s Wrong with the Mall? Power and Publicity in Democratic Politics.” Presented at the
University of Birmingham Symposium on Power and Interests, September 24, 2010,
Birmingham, UK; the Washington University Political Theory Workshop, St. Louis, MO,
January, 2011; the Duke University Political Theory Workshop, Durham, NC, February, 2011;
and the conference “Spatiality and Justice: Interdisciplinary Investigations on a Political
Philosophy of the City,” Montreal, Canada, May 2011.
“Thick Injustice.” With Todd Swanstrom. Presented at the annual meeting of the American
Political Science Association, Washington, DC, September, 2010.
“The Dark Side of Citizenship: Membership, Territory, and the (Anti-)Democratic Polity.
Presented at the annual Law and Society meeting, Chicago, May, 2010.
“Against Recognition: Identity Politics and Democratic Nondomination.” With Ron Watson.
Presented at the annual meeting of the Association for Political Theory, College Station, TX,
October 2008 and the Washington University Political Theory Workshop, St. Louis, MO,
January 2010.
“Bad Stories: Narrative, Citizen Identity, and the State’s Materialist Pedagogy.” Presented at the
Open University Symposium on the Pedagogical State, Milton Keynes, UK, September, 2008;
the annual meeting of the Western Political Science Association, Vancouver, BC, March 2009;
the annual meeting of the International Political Science Association, Santiago, Chile, July,
2009; and the annual meeting of the American Political Science Association, Toronto, ON,
September, 2009.
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“Black Places.” Presented at the annual meeting of the American Political Science Association,
Boston, MA, September, 2008; the Washington University Political Theory Workshop, St.
Louis, MO, October 2008; and Columbia University’s Center for Urban Policy Research, New
York, NY, March 2009.
“Not Your Father’s Vocation: Political Theory and Empirical Political Science.” Presented on
the roundtable / theme panel “(How) Should Normative Political Theorists Use Empirical
Findings?”at the annual meeting of the American Political Science Association, Chicago, IL,
September, 2007.
“What Can Political Freedom Mean in a Multicultural Democracy? On Deliberation, Difference,
and Democratic Governance.” Presented at the Workshop on Deliberative Politics and
Institutional Design in Multicultural Democracies, Queen’s University, Kingston, Ontario,
Canada May, 2007; the Washington University Political Theory Workshop, St. Louis, MO,
October 2007; the University of Chicago Political Theory Workshop, Chicago, IL, October,
2007; and the Department of Political Science and Sociology, National University of Ireland,
Galway, September, 2008.
“Making Interest: On Representation and Democratic Legitimacy.” Presented at the annual
meeting of the American Political Science Association, Philadelphia, PA, September, 2006; the
Yale Political Science Department Conference on Representation and Popular Rule, New Haven,
CT, October, 2006; and (to be presented at) the Moritz College of Law, Ohio State University,
April 2007.
“The Power of Space: Identity, Interest, Action.” Presented at the annual meeting of the
American Political Science Association, Philadelphia, PA, September, 2006; the annual meeting
of the Western Political Science Association, San Diego, CA, March, 2008; the European
Consortium for Political Research Workshop on Metropolitan Governance and Inequality,
Rennes, France, April, 2008; the Washington University Seminar on the City, April 2008; and
Drexel University, Philadelphia, PA, May, 2008.
“Democracy’s Identity Problem: Is Constitutional Patriotism the Answer?” Presented at the
Institute for Advanced Study, Social Science Workshop, April 6, 2006; Princeton University,
Program in Law and Public Affairs (PEPA), Workshop on Constitutional Patriotism, April 8-9,
2006; and Ohio State University, Moritz College of Law, Center for Interdisciplinary Law and
Policy Studies, April 5, 2007.
“Constitutional Patriotism and Its Others.” Presented at the annual meeting of the American
Political Science Association, Chicago, IL, September, 2004.
“Narrative, Collective Identity, and Civic Education.” Presented at the Fall Fellows Forum of
the National Academy of Education, Stanford, CA, October, 2004.
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“Binding Problems, Boundary Problems: The Trouble with “Democratic Citizenship.” Presented
at the annual meeting of the American Political Science Association, Philadelphia, PA, August,
2003; the Yale Political Science Department’s Conference on Identities, Affiliations and
Allegiances, New Haven, CT, October, 2003; and Texas A & M University’s Conference
“Citizenship Unbound,” November 14, 2003.
“Democracy, Difference, and the American City.” Presented at The Democracy Collaborative
Conference, University of Maryland, January 2002 and the annual meeting of the American
Political Science Association, Washington, D.C., September, 2000.
“Cities and Citizens.” Presented at the annual meeting of the American Political Science
Association, San Francisco, CA, September, 2001.
“Doxa and Deliberation.” Presented at the annual meeting of the Midwest Political Science
Association, Chicago, Illinois, April 2001.
“Defacing Power.” Author meets critics roundtable at the annual meeting of the American
Political Science Association, Washington, D.C., August, 2000.
“On Power and Freedom.” Presented at the annual meeting of the Midwest Political Science
Association, Chicago, Illinois, April 1999 and the Yale Political Theory Workshop, New Haven,
Connecticut, April 1999.
“A Critique of the Many ‘Faces’ of Social Power.” Presented at the annual meeting of the New
York State Political Science Association, Albany, New York, May 1998. (Nominated for best
conference paper.)
“Power and Pedagogy in Contemporary American Public Education.” Presented at the annual
meeting of the New York State Political Science Association, Albany, New York, May 1998.
“Foucault’s Challenge to the Many ‘Faces’ of Domination.” Presented at the annual meeting of
the Northeastern Political Science Association, Boston, Massachusetts, November 1996.
TEACHING AND ACADEMIC ADVISING
Courses Taught, Washington University in Saint Louis: Introduction to Political Theory
(undergraduate lecture course); Foundations of American Democracy (undergraduate seminar);
History of Political Thought II: Legitimacy, Equality, and the Social Contract (undergraduate
seminar); History of Political Thought III: Liberty, Democracy, and Revolution (undergraduate
seminar); Power, Justice and the City (undergraduate seminar); Theories of Democracy (graduate
/ advanced undergraduate seminar); Political Theory Proseminar (graduate seminar).
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Graduate Dissertation Committees, Washington University in Saint Louis: Matthew Chick
(Chair); Gregory Whitfeld; Cristian Perez (defended, spring 2014); Ron Watson (defended,
spring 2013).
Dissertation Defense Committees: Jill Delston (Philosophy), November, 2011; Jeffrey Brown
(Philosophy), December 2010; Emily Crookston (Philosophy), August 2009.
Graduate General Examination Committees, Washington University in Saint Louis: Matthew
Chick (2014); Gregory Whitfeld (2013), Cristian Perez (2010), Ron Watson (2009), Brandon
Nelson (2009), Ricardo Vudoyra (2008).
Master’s Thesis Advisor, Washington University in Saint Louis/ University College: Kevin
Burke (2010-2011).
Undergraduate Thesis Advisor, Washington University in Saint Louis: Elena Bell (American
Culture Studies, 2014-2015); Bradley Niederschulte (Political Science, 2013-2014); Harry
Kainen (Philosophy, 2013-2014); Alex Tolkin (Political Science, 2012-2013); Brandon Kressin
(Political Science, 2008-2009).
Undergraduate Thesis Second Reader, Washington University in Saint Louis, Political Science,
Spring 2010, Spring 2011, Spring 2013.
Courses Taught, Ohio State University: Introduction to Political Theory (undergraduate);
Foundations of American Democracy (undergraduate, writing intensive); Political Theories of
Democracy (undergraduate); Power and Resistance (undergraduate honors); Political Theory
from Hume to Marx (upper level undergraduate - graduate); Twentieth Century Political Thought
(upper level undergraduate - graduate); Topics in Political Theory: Theories of Democracy
(graduate); Topics in Political Theory: Democracy and Social Justice (graduate); Independent
Study on Deliberative Democracy (graduate); Independent Study on Habermas and Bourdieu
(graduate); Independent Study on Foucault’s Political Thought (graduate).
Graduate Dissertation Committees, Ohio State University: Gloria Hampton, Johnny Peel,
Melayne Price, Anna Shadley, Christina Xydias.
Graduate General Examination Committees, Ohio State University: Samuel DeCanio, Robert
Kelly, Jonathan Myers, Johnny Peel, Jessica Perez-Monforti, Yusuf Sarfati, Anna Shadley.
Undergraduate Thesis Committees, Ohio State University: Erin Butcher (advisor), Heather Mann
(advisor), Jason Keiber (committee member), Michael McVicar (committee member), Paul
Simon (committee member), Laura Tompkins (committee member); Becky Tippett (committee
member).
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Student awards won for papers written under my direction: American Culture Studies
Undergraduate Writing Prize, 2012-2013: Ashley Fox, Rachel Lewis, and Rohan Mathur
(coauthored paper); Pi Sigma Alpha (National Political Science Honors Society) Prize for the
Best Paper in Political Theory, 2001: Jeffrey Davis, Jennie Scheinbach (tied for first place);
William Jennings Bryan Prize for the Best Undergraduate Paper in Political Science, 2001:
Jeffrey Davis; William Jennings Bryan Prize for the Best Undergraduate Paper in Political
Science, 2000: Angie Cha; William Jennings Bryan Prize for the Best Undergraduate Paper in
Political Science, 1999: Heather Mann; William Jennings Bryan Prize for the Best
Undergraduate Paper in Political Science, 1998: Lisa Andaloro; William Jennings Bryan Prize,
Honorable Mention, 1998: Jonathan Vaas.
Ohio State University Pressey Honors Course Enrichment Fund Awards, Winter, 2003; Autumn,
2001; Winter, 2001.
SERVICE, WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY IN SAINT LOUIS
Faculty Advisory Committee, American Culture Studies, 2015-present.
Advisory Board, Center for the Humanities Mellon Foundation Project on the Divided City, July,
2014-present.
Director of Graduate Studies, American Culture Studies, July, 2013-present.
Organizer, American Culture Studies Dinner Forum Series, September, 2013-present.
Organizer, American Culture Studies Dissertation Writers’ Workshop, September, 2014-present.
Affirmative Action Monitoring Committee, Fall, 2012-present.
Diversity and Inclusion Grant Committee, Fall, 2012-present.
Advisory Board, Law, Identity & Culture Initiative, 2011-present.
Panelist, “The Delmar Divide: St. Louis in Black and White,” Washington University School of
Law, April 7, 2015.
Faculty Delegate, “Race and Ethnicity: A Day of Discovery and Dialogue,” February 5-6, 2015.
Advisory Committee, Center for Interdisciplinary Studies, 2010-2014.
Political Theory Field Committee, 2007-present.
Graduate Admissions Committee, Political Science, 2014-2015.
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Workshop in Politics, Ethics, and Society, Director, 2013-2014, Co-director (with Frank Lovett),
2012-2013.
Co-organizer (with Iver Bernstein and Rebecca Wanzo), “Modern Segregation” Workshop
Series, September-December, 2014.
Organizer, Interdisciplinary faculty reading group on “Modern Segregation,” January, 2014 –
May 2014 present.
Bookstore Advisory Committee, 2010-2013.
Panelist, “The Concept of the Post-Racial,” co-sponsored by American Culture Studies and the
Danforth Center on Religion and Politics, November, 2013.
Organizer, two-day book manuscript workshop on Ian MacMullen’s book manuscript, Civics
Beyond Critics (September, 2013)
BLOC advisor for undergraduate women’s groups with a focus on the 2012 election: 2012-2013.
Panelist, Washington University Lock and Chain (undergraduate honorary) Society, “Education
and Justice,” February, 2013.
Panelist, Washington University American Culture Studies, Americanist Forum, “Why Political
Theory?” October, 2012.
Panelist, Women’s Club of Washington University, “Power and Influence: The Role Women
Play in Today’s World,” October, 2012.
Panelist, “Post-racial America?” Washington University Panel featuring civil rights leader Julian
Bond, April, 2011.
Advisory Board, Center for New Institutional Social Sciences (CNISS), 2008-present.
Marshall Scholarship Nomination Committee, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014.
Executive Committee, Department of Political Science, 2010-2011.
Co-Organizer (with Todd Swanstrom), “Justice and the American Metropolis” Conference,
Washington University in Saint Louis, May, 2009.
Faculty discussion leader, Freshman reading program, 2008-2010, 2012.
Faculty Associate, 2008-2009.
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Panelist, community discussion following 2008 Vice Presidential debate at Washington
University, October 2008.
SERVICE, OHIO STATE UNIVERSITY
Departmental Field Coordinator, Political Theory, 2006-2007, 2004-2005, 2003-2004, 20022003.
Co-founder and director, Political Theory Workshop, 2004 - 2007.
Executive Committee, Political Science Department, 2006-2007, 2004-2005, 2002-2003.
Steering Committee for the Mershon Center Project on Citizenship, 2000-2005.
Arts and Sciences Honors Program Undergraduate Research Scholarship, Referee, 2002.
Political Theory Faculty Recruitment Committee, 2000-2001 (committee member), 2001-2002
(committee chair).
Political Science Colloquium Committee, 2001-2002, 2000-2001.
Organizer, Ohio State University Interdisciplinary Research Seminar on Democracy, Citizenship,
and Identity, Spring - Autumn 2001.
Faculty Recruitment Committee, 1999-2000.
Undergraduate Studies Committee, 1998-99, 2006-2007 (chair of subcommittee for reform of the
undergraduate major).
OTHER PROFESSIONAL ACTIVITIES
Contributing Editor, The Common Reader, 2014-present.
Editorial and Editorial Advisory Boards: Journal of Political Power, 2006- present; Handbook of
Power, 2005 - 2009; Journal of Politics, 2014- present, 2001-2004.
Chair, APSA Urban Politics Best Book Committee, 2014-2015.
Government Department Review Committee, Hamilton College, March 2015.
Section Chair (Normative Political Theory), American Political Science Association, 2010.
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Governance Committee, Association for Political Theory, 2009, 2010 (Chair).
Program Committee Co-Chair (with Mark Rigstad), Association for Political Theory, 2008.
Co-Organizer (with Erkki Berndtson and Henri Goverde), “Power and Space,” session of the
conference “Power: Forms, Dynamics, and Consequences,” University of Tampere, Tampere,
Finland, September 2008.
Program Committee Member, Association for Political Theory, 2007.
Referee, National Academy of Education / Spencer Dissertation Fellowship, 2013-2014.
Manuscript Referee, Journals: American Journal of Political Science; American Political Science
Review; Constellations; Critical Review of International Social and Political Philosophy;
Journal of Politics; Journal of Power; Journal of Theoretical Politics; Political Theory; Politics,
Philosophy, and Economics; Urban Affairs Review.
Manuscript Referee, University Presses: Cambridge University Press, Manchester University
Press, New York University Press, Oxford University Press, Princeton University Press, Temple
University Press, University of Illinois Press, Yale University Press.
Program Committee, Association for Political Theory, 2007.
Panel Organizer, Roundtable Participant, Discussant, and/or Chair: Political Theory Workshop,
Washington University in Saint Louis (2014, 2013, 2012, 2011, 2010, 2009, 2008); Washington
University symposium on “Artifacts as Evidence” (2014); Workshop on Ian MacMullen’s book
manuscript, Civics Beyond Critics (2013); Washington University conference on “Education,
Citizenship and Patriotism” (2010); Workshop on Frank Lovett’s book manuscript, A General
Theory of Domination (2008); Association for Political Theory conference (2014, 2008, 2006);
Yale Conference on Representation and Popular Rule (2006); Ohio State University, Moritz
College of Law, Center for Interdisciplinary Law and Policy Studies Seminar Series (2006);
American Political Science Association (2011, 2008, 2005, 2003, 2002, 2001); Yale Conference
on Contingency in the Study of Politics (2004); Yale Political Science Alumni Conference
(2001); Midwest Political Science Association (2000, 1999); Yale Conference on Democracy
and Distribution (1999); Northeast Political Science Association (1997).
Member or Associated Faculty: American Culture Studies Program, Washington University;
American Political Science Association; American Society for Political and Legal Philosophy;
American Sociological Association; American Studies Association; Association for Political
Theory; Center in Political Economy, Washington University, 2007-2012; Center for New
Institutional Social Science, Washington University, 2007-2012; Comparative Studies
Department, Ohio State University, 2006-2007; the Democracy Collaborative, University of
Maryland; Institute for Advanced Study, School of Social Science; Midwest Political Science
Association; Moritz College of Law, Center for Law, Policy, and Social Science, Ohio State
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University, 2005-2007; Philosophy Department, Washington University; Western Political
Science Association.
COMMUNITY SERVICE
“Segregation and Gentrification.” Workshop at Ferguson Alternative Spring Break, March –
April, 2015.
“Building Trust Within Communities: How Can We Move to a Just Future?” Presentation on
panel sponsored by the Illinois Humanities Council, Granite City, IL, December, 2014.