Faculty
Elizabeth Kier
Office: Gowen 129
(206) 543-9549
ekier@u.washington.edu
(Ph.D., Cornell University), associate professor, specializes in
International Relations with an emphasis on international security
and civil-military relations. Her book, Imagining War: French and
British Military Doctrine Between the Wars (Princeton University
Press, 1997), won the 1998 Edgar S. Furniss Award for exceptional
contribution to the study of national and international security.
She has published articles on social movements, military doctrine,
and setting precedents in international politics in International
Security and Comparative Politics. Her recent research on gays and
lesbians in the military has appeared in a number of publications,
including "Homosexuals in the Military" Open Integration and Combat
Effectiveness" (International Security). She was formerly assistant
professor of Political Science at UC Berkeley and a Senior Fellow
at the Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs at Harvard.
She was also a fellow at the Center for International Security and
Arms Control at Stanford, the Olin Institute for Strategic Studies
at Harvard; and a Social Science Research Council (SSRC)-MacArthur
Fellow in Peace and International Security. She has received fellowships
from the UC Regents, the MacArthur Foundation, SSRC-Western Europe,
the Institute for the Study of World Politics, and the Council for
European Studies. Her current research focuses on the domestic consequences
of war and, in particular, examines how economic mobilization for
war affects both the potential for post-war reform and the outcomes
of war. She teaches courses in international relations, national
security, civil-military relations, and American and European foreign
policy.
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