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The Center for Globalization & Governance is part of the
Woodrow Wilson School. It began operation in Fall 2004, and is
directed by Helen Milner. Charles R. Beitz, Carles Boix, Christina L. Davis, Joanne S. Gowa, Gene M. Grossman,
G. John Ikenberry, Harold James, Robert O. Keohane, Douglas S. Massey, Andrew Moravcsik, and Katherine S. Newman make up its executive committee.
Our mission is three-fold. First, we seek to create a large
and dynamic community of scholars and students interested in
both the academic and policy dimensions of globalization and
international governance. To accomplish this, the Center directs three visiting
fellows program in which the most promising, talented scholars working
on globalization and governance issues will spend a year at Princeton.
The Center strives to create an intellectual community that
serves the main goals of the WWS: to tackle the most serious
issues of the present day and prepare the leaders who will shape
the public policies of the future.
A second element is to foster greater integration among various
parts of the social sciences at Princeton University. Research
on globalization by necessity involves economics, history, and
sociology as well as political science. The Center promotes
interdisciplinary research at Princeton; numerous faculty from
the WWS, Politics, Economics, History and Sociology are associated
with the Center and involved in its projects. It also seeks
to bring together graduate students in the Woodrow Wilson School
and in various departments who have interests in globalization
issues. And it plays a role in developing more systematic
curricular offerings.
The Center promotes engagement with
the broader academic and policy community. We will continue to initiate
a number of the projects that are conducted jointly with other
academic and policy institutions. Running these projects under
the auspices of the Center within the Woodrow Wilson School facilitates these
wide-ranging partnerships. Center-sponsored lectures
and conferences bring in high-level officials from the American
government and international organizations. We continue to foster
a collaborative effort to inspire our students to pursue careers
in these areas. In sum, the Center strives to develop a tight-knit
intellectual community at Princeton and promote ties between the
academic and policy communities involved in globalization and international
governance issues.
The full press
release announcing the Center is available on
the Princeton Weekly Bulletin web site.
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