Tulane Political Science – Jeffrey Stacey
   
   
  Tulane University  
  Department of Political Science  

UNDERGRADUATE

GRADUATE

COURSES

FACULTY

PUBLICATIONS

AFFILIATES

             
     
         
 

REGULAR FACULTY

1 Brian Brox
1 Mary Clark*
1 Dana Zartner
1 Thomas Langston
1 Nancy Maveety
1 Anthony Pereira
1 Gary Remer
1 Jeffrey Stacey
1 Ray Taras
1 Martyn Thompson
1 Mark Vail
1 Aaron Schneider
1 J. Celeste Lay
1 Christopher Fettweis
 
PROFESSOR OF
PRACTICE
1 Casey Kane Love*
1 Gary Brooks
 

VISITING FACULTY

1

Alla Rosca

1

Christopher Lawrence

1 Khaled Helmy
1 Raul Sanchez Urribarri
 
ADJUNCT FACULTY
1 Lou Campomenosi
1 Rosalind Cook
1 Heidi Unter
1 Phuong Pham
1 Michael Sherman
1 Carla Gonzalez
 
*Currently on Leave
 

Jeffrey Stacey

     
 

Assistant Professor

Office: 310 Norman Mayer
Phone: (504) 862-8323
Email: jstacey@tulane.edu
Office hours:
Fall Semester 2007
T 3:30pm-5:30pm

Courses:

Fall Semester 2007



 
stacey
 
 

Areas of expertise:
International Relations
U.S. Foreign Policy
Terrorism / U.S. Military Occupations
Democracy Promotion

International Political Economy
Globalization
Financial Crises / Int'l Fin'l Architecture

Comparative Politics
European Union
Latin America
Asia

Current research projects:
* A study of international responses to the Bush Doctrine (unilateralism/pre-emption) that appear to be taking several forms, including Canada's pulling out of North American missile defense with the U.S. and the recent East Asian summit (and regional community declaration) to which China was invited but the U.S. was not.

* A study comparing past U.S. military occupations, successful and unsuccessful, in the course of formulating an explanation of the U.S. near failure in Iraq and an ulimate prediction of the outcome.

* A study of the recovery of emerging market nation states from financial crises, examining why some of those affected (in the Tequila crisis in Latin America and the Asian financial crisis in East Asia) are reforming their banking and corporate sectors, to stave off a new crisis, and others are not.

* A study of cross-Atlantic merger regulation competition between the U.S. and the EU, testing whether an informal international agreement between the U.S. Justice Department and the EU's antitrust regulator is holding up, given the huge divergence between how each side is regulating the Microsoft case among others.

Recent publications include:
"Dynamics of Formal and Informal Insitutional Change in the EU," Journal of European Public Policy, December 2003, 10: 858-884.

Displacement of the Council Via Informal Dynamics? Comparing the Commission and White Paper," Journal of European Public Policy, December 2003, 10: 936-956.

"Conclusion: Stepping Out of the Shadow of History-making Intergration," Journal of European Public Policy, December 2003, 10: 1020-1033.

Vita: Click here