Ancient History: My Professional Vitae, 1962-1988
(for more recent decades, see www.hawaii.edu/intlrel/vita.htm)



RICHARD W. CHADWICK

ADDRESSES


Home: 2525 Date St., apt. 701; Honolulu, Hawaii 96826-5434
Phone: (808) 946-0580

Office: Political Science Department, University of Hawaii,
2424 Maile Way SSB 640, Honolulu, Hawaii 96822
Phone: (808) 956-7180, fax 956-6877
Email: chadwick@hawaii.edu
Web: www.hawaii.edu/intlrel/

EDUCATION

Ph.D: 1966, Political Science, Northwestern University
(specialized in foreign policy decision making and methodology)

B.S: 1962, Political and Social Science, Illinois Institute of Technology
(The Department combined anthropology, history, political science, and sociology;
my first year and a half was spent as a physics major. I also continued courses in
art on scholarships at the Art Institute of Chicago.)

JOB HISTORY: 1962-88

Note: most of the descriptions below focus on my research related activities. My teaching activities are described in the section below on the period 1972-75, which I devoted entirely to development of my teaching philosophy, course structures, and content.

1968-present, Political Science Department, University of Hawaii; tenured 1973; full professorship 1974.
Note: positions held since 1968 (below), have been either joint appointments or
held while on leaves of absence or sabbaticals from the University of Hawaii).

1982-85 Consultant to the Australian Resources and Environmental Assessment (AREA)
Project, Department of Arts, Heritage, and Environment. I provided advice on the
adaptation of their global model (AREAM) to examination of a variety of policy problems,
e.g., impact of military expenditures on economic develoment, and aid-related strategies
to reduce desertification. This work is the outgrowth of work done with the G-MAPP
Project (below).

1981-84 "Coordinator" (title of a project director not on the payroll of the EWC), G-MAPP
Project (Global Modeling and the Policy Process), East-West Center, co-sponsored by
the AREA Project above. The project had many subprojects, chief among which were
surveys of global modelers on problems with policy applications, a comparative appraisal
of major global models, technical revisions of the SARU model and its derivative, AREAM,
and modifications of AREAM to include government budgets and demand functions for
military expenditures to examine impacts of military spending on economic development
rates.

1977-81 Research Associate, Research Fellow, and Consultant to many research projects at
the East-West Center, requiring assistance for quantitative political analysis: survey
research, experimental research, content analysis, demographic and national accounts
data analysis, in such areas as international cooperation in scientific research,
international integration and dependency, bias in educational delivery systems,
comparative problems of urban growth in eastern Europe, western Europe, Asia, and the
U.S., and information management systems for the East-West Center.

1975-76 (during Sabbatical leave from UH): Guest Professor, ZUMA (Zentrum fuer Umfragen,
Methoden und Analysen; political translation: Survey Research Center), University of
Mannheim. I was used as a research consultant and ZUMA representative to various
research projects in Frankfurt, Karlsruhe, Cologne, Zurich, and at ZUMA, dealing with
various computer based modeling and decision making analysis problems. A major
product was a 200 page monograph discussing and critically evaluating trends in
quantitative modeling in political science.

1972-75 teaching at UH. I spent most of my time developing course lectures looking towards
the day when I would write three books, one on international relations, one on
political-economic modeling, and one on a philosophy of research methodology for
political science.

Regarding methodology, I developed a two course (one academic year) graduate level introduction to paradigms in political research (empirical, applied or pragmatic, and philosophical); the paradigms are then elaborated in terms of data collection and analysis techniques such as experimentation, quasi-experimental designs, survey research, participant observation, social ecological (demographic or aggregate data) analysis, simulation methods, futuristics, and philosophy. An advanced course then covers statistical decision reasoning and norms, and analytic procedures through multiple regression, factor, canonical and discriminant function analysis, and an introduction to a computer based statistical analysis and data management package, SPSS, and DYNAMO, a computer language with applications to global modeling (WORLD2 and WORLD3 of Forrester's and the Meadows' team). I also developed and taught more advanced courses specialized in simulation techniques and global modeling.

Regarding international relations, I developed a two course sequence giving undergraduates (a) a review of major developments in international relations since World War II, (b) a review of theories of international relations focused on problems related to national security, and (c) a review of political economy theory focused on economic development, political development, and ecological issues. At the graduate level I taught courses on international conflict and integration, and a specialized course on the political economy of military spending.

I have continued to teach in these areas up to the present.

1968-72 variously titled positions (Research Associate, Research Fellow, and project employee)
with the Center for Internatzional Affairs (CFIA), Harvard University. Most of these positions
were part time. During 1970-72, I was on leave of absence from UH with CALSPAN, Corp.
(see below), which also encouraged my affiliation with the CFIA. Research support came
principally from the Cambridge Project at MIT, funds from which were transferred to the
CFIA for my use under Karl W. Deutsch, the project director. My principal activities
included supervising a trade flows data collection, analysis, and computer programming
project. Major products included several computer programs (a revision of RANULL, with
programming assistance from Carey Mann who completely rewrote it, for the analysis of
trade flow data using the Savage-Deutsch "null model" method; and DICHOT, a program I
wrote for the hierarchical decomposition of matrices using the McQuiddy technique), a
general article on various indicators of trade concentration and a preliminary report on
results of data analyses which Karl Deutsch and I (still) hope one day to put in book form.

1972 Consultant to CACI, Inc.

1970-72 Research Political Scientist, Operations Research, Cornell Aeronautical Laboratory, Inc.,
of Cornell University (since then, they have changed their name to CALSPAN Corp., and
have become independent of Cornell University). Duties were almost exclusively proposal
writing for contracts. Major efforts included research designs for the analysis of urban civil
strife, proposals to the National Institutes of Mental Health, the Arms Control and
Disarmament Agency, the Defense Intelligence School, and the Buffalo Metropolitan
Housing Authority. In addition I provided assistance to an in-house content analysis project
and wrote its final report. Research for the trade flow project at Harvard (see above) was
frequently done here via telecommunications with the MIT Multics System.

1970 Summer (two months). Visiting Researcher, Institute for Economic Research, Swiss
Federal Institute of Technology (Institut fuer Wirtschaftsforshung, Eidgenoessische
Technische Hochschule), Zurich. I was hired by a research group headed by Prof.
Dr. Bruno Fritsch, to critically review a two-volume research publication in
draft, to suggest new lines of research to them for possible future projects, and
to assist their programmer in setting up an early version of computer program,
RANULL, I had written while at Yale University (see below).

1968-70 (joint appointment in the Political Science Department) Research Associate,
Dimensionality of Nations (DON) Project, University of Hawaii (Director:
Rudolph J. Rummel). My primary functions were to be an in-house critic of various
research designs and sub-projects, provide technical support, and conduct independent
research (a major product of which was a technical report). Many of these criticisms are
embodied in a publication I coauthored with Larry Nitz.

1967-68 Associate Research Scientist, Behavioral Gaming and Simulation Group, System
Development Corporation (SDC), Santa Monica, California (formerly System Development
Division, RAND Corporation). I was hired to help design and support work with a general
purpose foreign policy man-machine simulation laboratory. Our first simulation was a
Middle East crisis involving the threat and possible use of nuclear weapons by the Israelis.
The Group Leader was Gerald Shure, a psychologist who designed the training simulators
for the SAGE system; other team members included Harvey DeWeerd from RAND,
Michael Driver then from Purdue, John MacRae from England, and Richard Brody and
Robert Noel as consultants. I was responsible for the design of the "fact book" to be used
by simulation participants, and for assistance in other matters.

1967-68 Consultant, Yale Political Data Program, Yale University (part time with permission
from SDC, above)

1966-67 Lecturer, Political Science Department, and Research Staff Political Scientist,
Yale Political Data Program, Yale University. In addition to assisting Karl Deutsch
in teaching a section of a political science class, I (a) supervised a data collection
effort on trade flows, (b) wrote a trade flows analysis program, RANULL, based on
the Savage-Deutsch "null model" algorithm, and (c) continued empirical political-economic
modeling work begun at Northwestern University (see below) using causal-inference
techniques. I also provided informal consultation to the Yale political handbook project
under Michael Hudson and Charles Taylor.

1966-67 Research Associate, Simulated International Processes (SIP) Project, International
Relations Program, Northwestern University (held simultaneous with the above
positions at Yale; Yale paid the salary, the SIP Project the travel; I commuted about
once a month on average). This position was a continuance of a long standing
relationship with Harold Guetzkow and his SIP Project. Both Guetzkow (my dissertation
committee chairman--I received my Ph.D. in June, 1966) and the Yale group headed by
Bruce Russett, had an interest in the empirical political, military, economic model I was
developing, hence the joint support.

1965-66 Instructor, Political and Social Science Department, Illinois Institute of Technology
(promoted 1966 to Assistant Professor, but I took a leave of absence that year to
go to Yale; I felt I had a moral obligation to return in 1967, but in the interim the
department split four ways into Anthropology, History, Political Science, and Sociology,
with major changes in personnel). My duties were to teach American government,
international relations, foreign policy, and comparative politics. During this period I also
completed the final draft of my dissertation.

1964-65 Research Assistant, Simulated International Processes (SIP) Project, International
Relations Program, Northwestern University. I designed and executed empirical tests
of causal models embedded in the Inter-National Simulation (INS-8), and wrote several
in-house articles suggesting lines of development for future simulation design and
empirical modeling, some of which were integrated into the second generation model,
the International Processes Simulation (IPS) designed by Paul Smoker (on leave from
the University of Lancaster, England).

1963-64 Teaching Assistant, Political Science, Northwestern University

1962-63 Research Assistant, Dimensionality of Nations (DON) Project, Northwestern University
(Principal investigator, Harold Guetzkow. Guetzkow subsequently transferred control of
the DON Project to Rummel with whom it migrated eventually to the University of Hawaii
where I rejoined it in 1968). I collected data on domestic and foreign conflict behavior
indicators across 81 nations for the period 1955-57, and contributed significantly to their
operational definition under Rummel's general supervision. I also completed a research
paper employing the "cross lagged panel correlation" technique of causal inference
developed by Donald Campbell, on this data set, to assess the degree of relationship
between foreign and domestic conflict behavior.

PUBLICATIONS


This section is divided into four parts: (1) research articles published in journals or books,
(2) reviews of books and research papers, (3) research papers published by research projects in universities or corporations, and (4) unpublished manuscripts.

1. Published Articles


1987: (synopsis of) "The I Ching and Global Modeling." Simulation, Vol. 49, No. 4 (October),
pp. 189-1. Original paper presented at the Fifth International Conference on
Chinese Philosophy: the Reconstruction and Revitalization of Chinese Philosophy,
July, 1987, San Diego. The synopsis was published at the request of the technical
editor, John McLeod. (The full paper was published in a book of conference
proceedings by the International Society for Chinese Philosophy.)

1986: "Richardson Processes Applied to Selected Asian-Pacific Dyads: A Preliminary Analysis."
Journal of Peace Research, Vol. 23, No. 4. (An extensive statistical analysis of arms
imports and military expenditure statistics in the context of arms escalation and
economic burden, and review of the related literature.)

1986: "The G-MAPP Project: Multinational Utility in Analytic Modeling," in Gerald R. Stairs (Ed.)
Foresight Planning: Realities and Resiliency at the Policy Interface. Selected
Presentations from a Conference of the World Growth Policy Group, Center for
International Studies, Duke University (held in 1984).

1985: "Modeling Political-military Policy Dynamics in a Global Model." 40p. Presented at the
1985 International Political Science Association meeting, Paris, and published in
Michael D. Ward (ed.), Theories, Models, and Simulations in International Relations,
Westview Press, 1985.

1975: (with Joseph M. Firestone) "A New Approach to Measurement Modeling in the Social
Sciences," International Journal of General Systems, 2: 35-53. Presented at the
annual convention of the New York State Political Science Association, 1972.

1973: "Steps toward a Probabilistic Systems Theory of Political Behavior, with Special Reference
to Integration Theory," in Hayward R. Alker, Jr., Antoine Stoetzel, and Karl W. Deutsch
(eds.) Mathematical Approaches to International Relations, pp. 67-112; Elsevier Publishing
Company, Amsterdam. Presented at the 1970 Congress of the International Political
Studies Association, Munich, West Germany.

1973: (coauthored by Karl W. Deutsch) "International Trade and Economic Integration: Further
Developments in Matrix Analysis," Comparative Political Studies, 6,1: 84-109.
Presented at the Annual Conference of the International Studies Association regional
conference with the Rocky Mountain Social Science Association, Ft. Collins, Colorado.

1973: (with Carey A. Mann, Jr.) "RANULL: A Computer Program for the Analysis of
Transaction Matrices," Behavioral Science, 18, 72-73.

1973: "Improving Organizational Intelligence at the International Level: Suggestions for Developing
a Computerized Intelligence Data Analysis Decision System with Autonomous Learning
Ability" Proceedings of the 1972 Conference on Cybernetics. Prepared for the American
Society for Cybernetics and IEEE Systems, Man and Cybernetics Society conference,
Washington, D.C., 1972. (I was unable to attend but was told the paper would appear in
the proceedings.)

1972: (with Joseph M. Firestone) "Social Responsibility and the Study of Social Conflict: Some
Thoughts on the Ethical Aspects of Scientific Social Research," General Systems
Yearbook, XVII: 121-128.

1972: "Theory Development through Simulation: A Comparison and Analysis of Associations
among Variables in an International System and an Inter-Nation Simulation," International
Studies Quarterly, 16,1: 83-127.

1970: "A Partial Model of National Political-Economic Systems: Evaluation by
Causal Inference Methods," Journal of Peace Research, VII,3: 121-131.

1970: (with John Raser and Donald T. Campbell) "Gaming and Simulation for
Developing Theory Relevant to Inter-National Relations," General Systems
Yearbook, XV: 183-204.

1969: "An Inductive Empirical Analysis of Intra- and International Behavior,
Aimed at a Partial Extension of Inter-Nation Simulation Theory," Journal of
Peace Research, VI,3: 193-214.

1968: (coauthor:+ Karl W. Deutsch) "Doubling Time and Half Life: Two Suggested Conventions
for Describing Rates of Change in Social Science Data." Published simultaneously
at the requests of the publishers in The American Behavioral Scientist, II,4: NS9-NS11,
and Comparative Political Studies, 1,1: 139-145.

1967: "An Empirical Test of Five Assumptions in an Inter-Nation Simulation, about National
Political Systems," General Systems Yearbook, XII: 177-2. Presented at the
1966 Annual Convention of the American Political Science Association.

2. Review Articles


1982: "A Critical Appraisal of Rummel's 'Libertarianism and International Violence'," in
Occasional Papers in Political Science, 1983, pp. 191-9. Published by the
Department of Political Science, University of Hawaii.

1977: "Review of The Uses and Methods of Gaming by Martin Shubik," The Journal of Politics.

1977: (with Lawrence H. Nitz) "Some Comments on Vincent's Critique of Social Field Theory,"
Political Methodology.

1973: "A Review of Cross-National Micro-Analysis: Procedures and Problems by
John C. Pierce and Richard A. Pride (eds.)," Western Political Quarterly.

1972: "A Brief Critique of 'Transaction Data and Analysis: In Search of
Concepts,' by Barry B. Hughes," International Organization, 26,4: 681-685.

 

3. Project Research Reports


3.1. Working Papers
as "Coordinator" of the G-MAPP (Global Models and the Policy Process) Project, East-West Center,1981-84 (In EWC parlance, since I was a University of Hawaii employee, not an EWC employee, they labeled me "coordinator;" only EWC employees were given the title of "director.")

See publications under section 1, above, for G-MAPP-related papers for 1983-84, published in journals or books. Note also that the papers below include only my works, not those of my project colleagues Allison MacKenzie (nee Currie), Richard Gigengack, S. Gupta, Peter House, Hisashi Ishitani, T. Imoto, Don MacRae (Project Coordinator, Spring, 1981), Desai Narasimhalu, Franzi Poldy, David Robinson, Sripada Raju, Penelope Ridings, all of whom made considerable contributions to the project effort.

1982: "G-MAPP: Global Models and the Policy Process: Project Accomplishments and Plans."
G-MAPP Project Annual Report to Open Grants, East-West Center, December, 17 pages.

1982: "Political-Economic Modeling for National Decision-making Analysis." G-MAPP Project
Report, Open Grants, East-West Center, September, 38 p.

1982: "Pune Workshop Report." G-MAPP Project Report, Open Grants, East-West Center,
September, 13 p.

1981: "FUGI: Future of Global Interdependence. Running the Microeconomic Model."
G-MAPP Report, 18 p.

1981: "Modeling Political-economic Decision-making in International Relations: Opportunities
for the FUGI, AREA, and World Bank Models," G-MAPP Report, November, 37 p.

3.2. Research Papers Connected to Other East-West Center Projects


1981: "Accessing the International Comparative Archive." International Comparative Archive
Project, Culture Learning Institute, East-West Center (June). 8 p. (This is a user's
guide to a IBM TSO data management program I wrote for naive users to easily
access a 14 nation, 500+ variable data bank on surveys of city government officials
dealing with development problems and political-economic values. The project was
under the direction of Philip Jacob, now deceased.)

1981: "Development of an East-West Center Data Base and Modeling System for the Study of
Political-Economic Interdependence in the Asian-Pacific Region." (Coauthored by
myself and Sung-Hwan Jo.) (October). 9 p. (Draft of a proposed research project.)

1980: "A Prototypic, Interactive Data Management System," Culture Learning Institute, East-West
Center (August), 20p. (This is a manual for using an interactive "turn-key" or "menu" style
IBM TSO program I wrote for naive users to use the IBM text editing system and do
statistical analyses via SPSS of pre-packaged data archives. It also enables
terminal-to-terminal teleconferencing and mail service.)

1980: "Data Banking as a Research Investment." Culture Learning Institute (March), 19 p. (A
proposal to develop an EWC data library of quantitative research--surveys, trend studies,
and so on--at the East-West Center.)

1980: "Who Has the Pedagogy of the Oppressed? An Exploratory Case Study of Newfoundland
Teachers," Culture Learning Institute, East-West Center (April). (Currently submitted for
publication in Canada. This is the final product of a survey of Canadian secondary school
teachers to assess the applicability of Paulo Freire's theories concerning values held by
rural vs. urban teachers. Authors: Amarjit Singh, myself, and I.J. Baksh.)

3.3. Other Projects Research Reports.


1972: "International Involvement: Steps toward the Quantitative Analysis and Explanation of
International Policies," Dimensionality of Nations Project Research Report # 37,
University of Hawaii. 90p.

1972: "Content Analysis Dictionary for Measurement of Political Intentions," Internal Research
Final Report, Ooprations Research Department, Cornell Aeronautical Laboratory, Inc. 29p.

1972: (with Joseph M. Firestone) "Intrastate Sociopolitical, Empirical Conflict Models: A Short,
Selective Review and Appraisal," Research supported by Consolidated Analysis
Centers (CACI), Inc. Printing by the Center for Comparative Political Research, State
University of New York at Binghamton. 56p.

1971: "DICHOT: A Program for Hierarchical Dichotomization of Matrices Based upon the
McQuitty-Clark Method of Iterative Intercolumnar Correlations," The Cambridge
Project, Massachusetts Institute of Technology (March), 14p.

1971: "Notes on the Development of a Joint Proposal on Macroeconomic and Political
Processes of Development," Institute for Economic Research, Swiss Federal
Institute of Technology, Zurich. 34p.

1970: (with Joseph M. Firestone) "Measurement Modeling and Quantitative Research on Civil Strife:
A Critique," Operations Research, Cornell Aeronautical Laboratory. 15p.

1968: "A Partial Model of National Political-Economic Systems: Evaluation by Causal Inference
Methods," TECH MEMO-3989, Behavioral Gaming and Simulation Group, System
Development Corporation (SDC), June 25, 1968. 77p. (A summary of this report was
published in 1969 by the Journal of Peace Research.)

1966: "Some Suggesting on Coding of Observations on Phenomena Whose Boundaries Are
Incompletely Defined," Yale Political Data Program, Yale University (December), 6p.

1966: "A Compendium of Research Questions for Continuing the Revision of INS Theory,"
Simulated International Processes Project (SIP), Northwestern University (June), 35p.

1966: "A General Model of Information, Decision, and Program Flows in INS: Applications to
Problems Involving Aggregative Analyses," SIP (August), 22p.

1966: (with Paul Smoker) "Some Research Problems and Proposals for Continuing and
Extending S.I.P. Validity Operations," SIP (August), 17p.

4. Unpublished papers (See also the following "Grants and Awards" section.)


1979: "SIPER Lexicon." January, 16 p. (A dictionary and input specification paper for using
SIPER, a political-economic simulation designed by Stuart Bremer. Used in graduate
classes on political-economic modeling.)

1978: "Teaching Comparative Organization Theories through Simulation." 19 p. NSF proposal
to Local Course Improvement Program (funded through 1981).

1973: (revised, 1974, 1988) "Social Science and the Social Interest: Three Paradigms and a
Synthesis." Delivered at a conference, "Sanity, Science, and Global
Responsibility," Brock University, Canada, July 9-13, 1988, and published in its
proceedings. The paper was delivered but the proceedings were never published.

1973: "Personality, Society, and Political Design" (November) 15p. A sequel to the paper below.

1973: "Self, Society, and Survival," 36p. Prepared for a colloquium on Alternative Futures,
University of Hawaii, Spring, 1973. The paper was twice accepted for publication in
Fields within Fields and Main Currents in Modern Thought, but both journals ceased
publication just prior to the issue in which the article was to appear! Still sitting
on my shelf (I didn't want to close down another journal!).

1971: "Power, Control, Social Entropy, and the Concept of Causation in Social Science." 42p.
Presented by invitation to the Albany Symposium on Power and Influence, Oct. 11-13,
1971. Subsequently revised for a reader, but the publisher withdrew his contract.
Submitted to a journal but rejected as too long. I've not taken the time to cut it down.

GRANTS, AWARDS, AND CONFERENCE PRESENTATIONS


1988: (with Everett Kleinjans) Round Table on "Power, Personality, and the Public Interest,"
presentation of recent philosophy developments relating the _EI Ching_R to global
modeling and public policy. Second Annual Conference of the International Society
for Philosophy and Psychotherapy: "Beauty, Truth and Goodness: the Quest for Self
Realization," January, 1988, Honolulu.

1987: International Conference for Chinese Philosophy (see recent publications above for details)

1986: Travel grant from the President's Fund, University of Hawaii, to present a paper,
"Global Modeling for National Planning," at the International Conference on Dryland
Degradation and Rehabilitation, August 29-September 3, Beijing, China; hosted by
the China National Environmental Protection Agency.

1985: Travel grant, SIPRI (Stockholm International Peace Research Institute), to deliver
a paper with Drs. Richard Gigengack, Catrinus Jepma, and Henk de Haan,
"Military Expenditures and Economic Development in a Global Model," at the
International Conference on Military Spending, jointly sponsored with the
International Economics Assoc.

1985: Travel grant, World Modeling Project, Faculty of Economics, University of Groningen,
The Netherlands, to organize the adaptation of Richardson process arms race
modeling to use in a global model.

1985: International Political Science Association (see recent publications above for details)

1984: Travel grant from the Center for International Studies, Duke University, and the
University of Hawaii, to participate in a conference on global modeling.

1984: Fall; leave of absence for global modeling work with the AREA Project.

1983: Joint University of Hawaii and East-West Center Grant Award: "Adaptation and
Demonstration of the RSI World Data Bank"

1981-84: Research Fellowship, Student Affairs and Open Grants, East-West Center
(summer salaries plus project support). Three separate appointments to act as
Coordinator (director) of the G-MAPP (Global Models and the Policy Process)
Project, an international project in global political, economic, and ecological
modeling (see project publications, below).

1978-81: NSF Grant "Teaching Comparative Organization Theories through Simulation"

1979-81: Adjunct Research Associate, Culture Learning Institute, "Impact of Transnational
Interactions Project." Also assisted (1980-81) the ICRD (International Comparative
Research and Development) Project, (Jack Brownell and Kathy Wilson, Principal
Investigators), and the International Comparative Political Archive Project (Phil Jacob,
Principal Investigator) under this EWC affiliation.

1978-79: University of Hawaii Instructional Development Grant (with Ted Becker as
co-Principal Investigator): Hawaii Constitutional Convention Simulation;
survey of Hawaii voters on CONCON issues; and first Hawaii Televote.

Long term projects (books and so on)


In addition to managing and participating in research projects indicated above, I have continued to do research for two books, one on Modeling the Global Political Economy, and an introductory text, Interntional Relations, both based on my lectures and some of the above articles.

I developed a general purpose data and model library for use in political-economic modeling classes, thesis, and post-doctoral research, which consisted of more than twenty separate data sets and models.

Several other books were started in association with colleagues, but career changes made them extremely difficult to complete (one with Karl Deutsch during my residence at Harvard, one with Firestone during my period at CALSPAN Corp).

COMMUNITY SERVICE


University of Hawaii Political Science Departmental assignments:


1987 Committee assignments: personnel (Spring), grants and awards (Fall, 1987-Spring, 1988).

1986-87 Prepared Graduate Program Review report for the Political Science Department.
This was a major undertaking involving collection of statistical information on faculty
workload, and obtaining survey and interview data from graduate students and
faculty evaluating the graduate program.

1979-present Coordinator, International Relations subfield. The major task the last two years
was assisting the group to prepare a M.A. program and brochure, and structure for the
Ph.D. with an international relations specialization.

1982-84 Chairperson, Department Personnel Committee; met regularly to review applications
for College of Continuing Ed. courses, hiring of two new faculty to tenure-line positions.

University and Professional Service:


1984-87 Member, Board of Govenors of the Matsunaga Institute for Peace, and member
of its Curriculum Committee (Board membership continued until MIP was absorbed
by the College of Social Sciences)

1986 Member of the Hawaii Political Studies Association's Planning Committee for its first
International Conference, scheduled for January, 1990.

1979-90 Department Coordinator for UHCC computer accounts for faculty and students,
and all-around resource person to about 25 individuals with such accounts.

Teaching Duties:


Every semester, I teach International Relations I, and usually each Spring, International Relations II, the first emphasizing national security issues, the second political economy (development, international financial and related organizations, aid, etc). Typical enrollment is 40-50 for the first, and 15-25 for the second.

In the spring, I usually teach a specialized graduate course, "Modeling Intenational Systems," an introduction to formal models of political-economic decision making in political science, and to global modeling for national and intenational policy analysis.

In the fall, I often teach an advanced graduate seminar on topics related to my modeling expertise, e.g., the impact of military spending on developing countries.