CalendarsResearch Subscribe to 
E-mails In the News Photos On The Air Media Relations ByGeorge! GW Magazine Publications Advertising Graphic Design Community Photography
GW logo
GW News Center

Campus Advisories

 

GW EXPERTS AVAILABLE FOR COMMENT ON POLITICS AND ELECTIONS

General Analysis Public Policy Campaigns
History Foreign Affairs
Elections Education Internet
Political Parties Health Care Campaign Strategy
Congress Iraq War Public Opinion
  Environment  

Presidential History

Leo Ribuffo
Professor of History
Ribuffo is an expert on 20th-century United States history with a special emphasis on historical perspectives of U.S. presidents. His publications include Right Center Left: Essays in American History (1992) and The Old Christian Right: The Protestant Far Right from the Great Depression to the Cold War (1983), which won the Organization of American Historians Merle Curti Prize as the best book in American intellectual history for 1983-84.
Office: (202) 994-6469
Home: (202) 667-2166
E-mail: ribuffo@gwu.edu

Tyler Anbinder
Chair of the Department of History, Professor of History
Anbinder is an expert on Civil War-era politics and immigration. His most recent book, Five Points, traced the history of nineteenth-century America’s most infamous immigrant slum, focusing in particular on tenement life, inter-ethnic relations, and ethnic politics.
Office: (202) 994-6470
Cell: (703) 568-8277
E-mail: anbinder@gwu.edu

Elections:

Steven E. Billet
Director of the GW Legislative Affairs Program, Visiting Associate Professor of Political Management
Billet can speak on political action committees in the United States in the context of of campaign finance, elections, and issue management.
Office: (202) 994-1149
E-mail: sbillet@gwu.edu

F. Christopher Arterton
Dean of GW’s Graduate School of Political Management, Professor of Political Management
Dean Arterton has been actively involved in politics at the national level and is an expert in political institutions and political leadership. He oversees the GW-Battleground Poll. Arterton taught for ten years at Yale University in the Department of Political Science and the School of Organization and Management prior to joining the GW faculty in 1987. He has served as a polling consultant for Newsweek and a consultant on public opinion surveys for the Gallup Organization. He is the author of numerous articles on politics and electoral behavior, and four books, including Media Politics and Teledemocracy.
Office: (202) 994-5843
E-mail: arterton@gwu.edu

Dennis Johnson
Associate Dean of GW’s Graduate School of Political Management, Professor of Political Management
Johnson’s current research involves campaigns and elections, the role of interest groups in campaigns, and the profession of campaign management. He authored the book No Place for Amateurs: The Professionalization of Modern Campaigns, and has contributed a chapters “The Cyberspace Election in Your Future” in Bruce I. Newman’s book Political Marketing Handbook and “The Business of Political Consulting,” in James Thurber’s The Role of Political Consultants. Johnson also can speak on campaign advertisements and polling.
Office: (202) 994-5765
E-mail: dwjgspm@gwu.edu

John Sides
Assistant Professor of Political Science
Sides’ research centers on political behavior, both American politics and in comparative politics. His current research focuses on candidate strategy in campaigns, the effects of campaigns on the attitudes on voters, the consequences of higher turnout for election outcomes, European attitudes toward immigration, and the nature and meaning of patriotism and nationalism.
Office: (202) 994-3538
Email: jsides@gwu.edu

Garry Young
Associate Director of the Institute of Public Policy and Research Scientist
Young’s main area of research centers on the way institutional arrangements interact with interests to yield political and policy outcomes. Currently, he is working on a five-nation study of legislative representation and a study of policy production in the U.S. prior to World War II.
Office: (202) 994-6494
Email: youngg@gwu.edu

Political Parties:

Eric Lawrence
Assistant Professor of Political Science
Lawrence specializes in American political institutions, legislative politics, public policy, and research methodology. He has taught courses on legislative politics and the presidency and has recently published works on the effects of political parties.
Office: (202) 994-4826
Email: edl@gwu.edu

Congress:

Sarah Binder
Professor of Political Science
Binder’s research focuses on Congress, congressional development, and political parties. Her work has appeared in American Political Science Review, Journal of Politics, and Legislative Studies Quarterly.
Office: (202) 994-2167
E-mail: binder@gwu.edu

Forrest Maltzman
Professor of Political Science
The institutions of American national government serve as the focus of Maltzman’s teaching and research and he is especially interested in the factors that shape decision-making within Congress, the Supreme Court, and the executive branch. His current research centers on the evolving role of congressional committees in the U.S. House of Representatives and the interaction among justices on the Supreme Court.
Office: (202) 994-5821
E-mail: forrest@gwu.edu

Foreign Affairs:

Deborah Avant
Associate Professor of Political Science and International Affairs
Avant's areas of expertise include international relations; national and transnational security; U.S. and European defense policy; and civil and military relations.
Office: (202) 994-6703
Email: avant@gwu.edu

Harry Harding
University Professor of Political Science and International Affairs
Harding's areas of expertise include the international relations of the Asia-Pacific region, U.S. relations with China, China foreign policy, and Chinese domestic politics.
Office: (202) 994-1715
Email: hharding@gwu.edu

Hope Harrison
Associate Professor of History and International Affairs; Director, Institute for European, Russian, and Eurasian Studies
Language(s): German, Russian
Harrison's areas of expertise include Russian and German foreign policy, Soviet and U.S. foreign policy and decision-making during the Cold War, former East and West Germany, and the international history of the Cold War.
Office: (202) 994-6342
Email: hopeharr@gwu.edu

James Lebovic
Associate Professor of Political Science and International Affairs
Lebovic's areas of expertise include international relations theory.
Office: (202) 994-7495
Email: lebovic@gwu.edu

Marc Lynch
Associate Professor of Political Science and International Affairs
Lynch's expertise includes Arab media and public opinion, Islamist movements, constructivism in international relations, and public diplomacy. He teaches courses on Middle Eastern politics and international relations and is the author of State Interests and Public Spheres: The International Politics of Jordan's Identity and Voices of the New Arab Public.
Office: (202) 994-5291
E-mail: mlynch@gwu.edu

Henry Nau
Professor of Political Science and International Affairs; Director, U.S.-Japan Economic Agenda; Director, U.S.-Japan Legislative Exchange Program
Nau is in expert in the study of international relations, U.S. and Japan relations, U.S. relations with Europe including East-West trade, and U.S. foreign economic and trade policy.
Office: (202) 994-3167
Email: nau@gwu.edu 

Bernard Reich
Professor of Political Science and International Affairs
Reich's areas of expertise include U.S. and Israel relations, the Arab-Israeli conflict, Middle East politics, Israel, North Africa, military, terrorism, and oil politics.
Office: (202) 994-6716
Email: breich@gwu.edu

Susan Sell
Professor of Political Science
Sell's areas of expertise include international relations theory, international political economy, and North-South relations.
Office: (202) 994-4896
Email: sellskgw@gwu.edu

David Shinn
Adjunct Professor of International Affairs
Shinn is the former U.S. Ambassador to Ethiopia and Burkina Faso. His areas of expertise include U.S. foreign policy with Africa; terrorism and Islamic fundamentalism in Africa; the African continent, specifically East Africa and the Horn of Africa; conflict in Africa, and the African AIDS epidemic. 
Home: (202) 543-1588
Email: dhshinn@earthlink.net

Michael Sodaro
Professor of Political Science and International Affairs; Director, European Studies Program
Language(s): German, French
Sodaro's areas of expertise include international affairs and comparative politics and Europe with special emphasis on Eastern Europe, Germany, and Russia. 
Office: (202) 994-7412
Email: sodaro@gwu.edu

Education:

Iris Comens Rotberg
Research Professor of Education Policy
Rotberg is the senior author of “No Child Left Behind: Views About the Potential Impact of the Bush Administration’s Education Proposals.” The report examined the implications of the Bush administrations education plan based on interviews conducted with leading policymakers and educators. Before coming to GW, Rotberg was program director at the National Science Foundation; principal investigator for the Technology Policy Task Force of the U.S. House of Representatives Committee on Science, Space, and Technology; assistant director of the National Institute of Education, where she directed the Office of Planning and Program Development; and deputy director of a comprehensive study of compensatory education conducted for Congress by the National Institute of Education. Rotberg holds a Ph.D. in research psychology from Johns Hopkins University.
Office: (202) 994-2735
E-mail: irotberg@gwu.edu

Health Care:

Christine Ferguson
Associate Research Professor of Health Policy
Ferguson is the director of the STOP Obesity Alliance, designed to rethink our nations approach to obesity. Her research also includes state and national health reform efforts, Medicaid, child health and development issues, and emergency preparedness. Prior to her appointment at GW, Ferguson served as commissioner of the Department of Public Health in Massachusetts, where she led initiatives addressing public health emergencies, such as SARS and pandemic flu planning, as well as hospital surge capacity, ED diversion, and quality.
Office: 202 530 2356
E-mail: chfergus@gwu.edu

Marsha Regenstein
Associate Research Professor of Health Policy
Regenstein leads projects on health care safety net issues, health care quality improvement, and medically underserved populations at the Center for Health Services Research and Policy. She also leads the cardiovascular market assessment component of Expecting Success: Excellence in Cardiac Care, a national program of the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation intended to improve the quality of health care provided to minority populations in the United States.
Office: 202-994-8662
E-mail: marshar@gwu.edu

Sara Rosenbaum
Chair of the Department of Health Policy, Harold & Jane Hirsh Professor
Rosenbaum is nationally renowned for her research on health care law for the poor, health care financing, managed care, and maternal and child health. In 1993 and 1994, Rosenbaum worked with the White House Domestic Policy Council and the United States Department of Health and Human Services, where she directed the legislative drafting of the Health Security Act for President Clinton. She has served on policy advisory boards for the United States Congress Office of Technology Assessment, the United States Public Health Service, and the Health Care Financing Administration.
Office: (202) 530-2343
E-mail: sarar@gwu.edu

Iraq War:

Charles Bancroft Cushman, Jr.
Associate Dean in the Graduate School of Political Management, Associate Professor of Political Management
Cushman’s work focuses on defense and foreign policy, particularly military force structure, doctrine, organization, and Congress’s role in making defense policy. He received a Ph.D. in American Politics from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Prior to his current position at GW, Cushman was a consultant to the U.S. Department of Defense and to the Space Commission.
Office: (202) 994-9598
Cell: (202) 904-3887
E-mail: cushmanc@gwu.edu

Marc Lynch
Associate Professor of Political Science and International Affairs
Lynch’s expertise includes Arab media and public opinion, Islamist movements, constructivism in international relations, public diplomacy. He teaches courses on Middle Eastern politics and international relations and is the author of State Interests and Public Spheres: The International Politics of Jordan's Identity and Voices of the New Arab Public.
Office: (202) 994-5291
E-mail: mlynch@gwu.edu

Environment:

Mark Starik
Chair of the Department of Strategic Management and Public Policy, Professor of Strategic Management and Public Policy
Starik’s research and teaching interests include strategic environmental management, sustainability policy and management, stakeholder management, particularly in the global energy and tourism sectors, and NGO strategy and sustainability. Starik is director of GW’s Strategic Management and Public Policy Environmental and Social Sustainability Initiative and serves as President of Sustainability Now!
Office: (202) 994-5621
E-mail: starik@gwu.edu

Campaign Analysis:

Peter Fenn
Adjunct Faculty in the Graduate School of Political Management, Founder of Fenn and King Communications
Fenn has worked in more than 250 political campaigns through his media consulting firm, Fenn Communications Group. His experience ranges from presidential campaigns to local mayoral races. Fenn teaches campaign advertising at GW.
Office: (202) 337-6995
Cell: (202) 487-3189
E-mail: peter@fenn-group.com

Stephen Hess
Distinguished Research Professor of Media and Public Affairs
Hess, a renowned Washington scholar and senior fellow emeritus at the Brookings Institution, joined the School of Media and Public Affairs in September 2004. Since 1972, Hess has been a senior fellow in the governance studies program of the Brookings Institution. While there, he concurrently served as a fellow in the faculty of government at Harvard University and as a U.S. Representative to the United Nations General Assembly in 1976 and the UNESCO General Conference in 1974. He has served on the White House staffs of Presidents Eisenhower and Nixon and has been an advisor to Presidents Ford and Carter. His areas of expertise include elections, media, political parties and campaigns, White House organization and staffing, and foreign media coverage of the United States.
Office: (202) 994-4722
E-mail: shess@gwu.edu

Steven Roberts
J.B. and Maurice C. Shapiro Professor of Media and Public Affairs
As a teacher, Steven Roberts lectures widely on American politics and the role of the news media. Steve Roberts has been a journalist for more than 35 years, covering some of the major events of his time, from the antiwar movement and student revolts of the 60s and 70s to President Reagan’s historic trip to Moscow in 1988 as well as nine presidential election campaigns. Roberts is a well-known commentator on many Washington-based TV shows. Since 1997, he has been the Shapiro Professor of Media and Public Affairs at The George Washington University, where he has taught for the last thirteen years.
Office: (202) 994-0235
Home Office: (301) 657-8271
E-mail: sroberts@gwu.edu

Albert May
Associate Professor of Media and Public Affairs, Program Director, Journalism
May covers news coverage of government and politics on the local, state, and national levels along with covering campaigns in the online world including new tools and new problems. He also can speak to news reporting with converged media including print, television, and online.
Office: (202) 994-9014
Home: (703) 748-0192
E-mail: almay@gwu.edu

Internet:

Lance J. Hoffman
Professor Emeritus of Computer Science; Founder and Senior Staff Researcher, Cyberspace Security Policy and Research Institute
Hoffman is known for his pioneering research on computer security and risk analysis and for his interdisciplinary work in computer privacy issues. His recent research includes Internet voting, developing the privacy policy for an electronic payments system and carrying out risk analyses for telemedicine privacy and security. Hoffman has written extensively on Internet voting and computer security, including a paper entitled “Internet Voting for Public Officials: Introduction” (Communications of the ACM, Jan. 2001) and the presentation, “Internet Voting: Not Ready for Prime Time (Yet)” (Jan. 2001). Hoffman leads GW’s computer security and information assurance program in computer science and serves as a technical and strategic advisor to private sector information security companies. In 2000, he served on the Advisory Committee on Online Access and Security of the U.S. Federal Trade Commission.
Office: (202) 994-4955
E-mail: lanceh@gwu.edu

Julie Germany
Director, Institute for Politics, Democracy, and the Internet
Germany is the principal author and editor of several publications, including “Person-to-Person-to-Person: Harnessing the Political Power of Online Social Networks and User-Generated Content,” as well as “The Politics-to-Go-Handbook: A Guide to Using Mobile Technology in Politics and The Political Consultants’ Online Fundraising Primer.” She also co-authored Putting Online Influentials to Work for Your Campaign. Germany is a co-founder of Mobile Monday DC, the local chapter of an international community of mobile technology experts and enthusiasts, and founding board member of Young Champions, a non-profit that addresses youth health issues.
Office: (202) 994-7635
E-mail: germanyj@gwu.edu

Campaign Strategy:

Michael Cornfield
Adjunct Associate Research Professor of Political Management
A professor in the Graduate School of Political Management since 1994, Michael Cornfield teaches the core course on strategy and message development, and a course on politics and the new media. Cornfield holds a Ph.D. in political science from Harvard University, and he taught at the University of Virginia and the College of William and Mary before joining the faculty at GW.
Office: (202) 416-4530
E-mail: corn@gwu.edu

Edward Grefe
Director of External Affairs, Adjunct Professor of Political Management
Grefe is an expert on grassroots organizing and issues management, as well as referenda and initiative and on the impact of social movements on political process.
Office: (202) 994-8934
Cell: (703) 346-2048
E-mail: grefe@gwu.edu

Don Bates
Academic Director, Graduate School of Political Management
Bates’ research interests include public relations writing issues and challenges, public relations issues and trends, history of public relations, differences between public relations and marketing or advertising, and the convergence of public relations and politics.
E-mail: dbates@gwu.edu
Office: (202) 994-9419
Cell: 917-913-8940

Public Opinion:

William Adams
Professor of Public Policy and Public Administration
Adams’ research interests span several fields, including public administration, public policy, political science, applied statistics, social psychology, and mass communications. Along with a variety of survey research and evaluation projects for both public and private sector organizations, his research also has focused on public opinion and the U.S. mass media. Books that he has authored and edited are Election Night News and Voter Turnout: Solving the Projection Puzzle; Television Coverage of the 1980 Presidential Campaign; Television Coverage of International Affairs; Television Coverage of the Middle East; and Television Network News: Issues in Content Research. As a researcher with the Rand Corporation, Dr. Adams co-authored An Assessment of Telephone Survey Methods, a Rand monograph. Adams earned his Ph.D. in political science from The George Washington University, and his B.A. and M.A. from Baylor University.
Office: (202) 994-7494
E-mail: adams@gwu.edu

Susan Wiley
Associate Professor of Political Science and of Political Management
Professor Wiley’s primary research interests are American political behavior and domestic public policy. She serves as department undergraduate coordinator, directs the undergraduate internship program, and teaches quantitative methods for political managers in the Graduate School of Political Management.
Office: (202) 994-8244
E-mail: wiley@gwu.edu

For more news about GW and faculty experts, visit www.gwnewscenter.org.

- GW -

Updated: Jan. 17, 2008
 

 
 

©1996-2008 The George Washington University Office of University Relations, Washington, D.C.
Submit questions/comments