Dr. Daniel M. Green
Associate Professor
International Relations and Political Theory
University of Delaware
464 Smith Hall
Newark, DE 19716
302-831-2355
Biography
Daniel M. Green, PhD (Indiana University 1992) joined the Department in 1994. He specializes in international relations theory and history, with a second area in democratization and the comparative politics of developing countries. Professor Green teaches a graduate seminar in international relations theory, and various undergraduate courses on the politics of developing nations, the history of international relations, and a course on the history of American foreign policy in the Middle East. He has edited books on constructivism and comparative politics and the English School approach to international relations theory and is currently completing a book manuscript which identifies and examines key patterns in international behavior from 1515 to 1870.
Recent Publications
Guide
to the English School in International Studies
(Wiley Blackwell, 2014), edited with Cornelia Navari.
“Transition to the Endgame: The Challenge of US Policy
toward Afghanistan.” In Bahram Rajaee and Mark J. Miller, eds., National
Security Under the Obama Administration (Palgrave Macmillan,
2012), pp. 217-234.
“Introduction to the English School.” The Compendium: International Studies Encyclopedia (Wiley Blackwell,
2010).
“Democratization: The World-Wide Spread of
Democracy in the Modern Age.” In George Modelski, ed., World System
History (UNESCO-EOLSS Publishers, 2008).
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