|
|
|
|
After accepting emeritus status at the University of Michigan 1991, professor Barnes went to Georgetown as Professor of Government and Director of the new Center for German and European Studies (CGES). In 1999, he was named Graf Goltz Professor and Director of CGES. He had spent his entire previous academic career at the University of Michigan (1957-1991) where he served as Chairman of the Department of Political Science for six years and Program Director in the Institute for Social Research from 1969 until 1991. He was the James Orin Murphy Professor of Political Science at Michigan. His dissertation dealt with Canadian politics. He spent Fulbright years in Paris, Florence, and Rome; taught in the Michigan program in Florence; spent a sabbatical in London; received a DAAD award for research in Germany; served, at different times, as a Fellow of the Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences and of the Hoover Institution, both at Stanford University; and carried out research and lectured widely in Europe and elsewhere. He has published widely on politics, parties, opinions, and behaviors in advanced industrial democracies. Major past books include Party Democracy, Representation in Italy, Politics and Culture, and (with others), the Political Action studies. He recently co-authored The Cultural Dynamics of Democratization in Spain and co-edited and contributed a chapter to The Postcommunist Citizen, both published in 1998. He is currently working collaboratively on a second round of surveys in eleven Central and Eastern European countries that were the subject of the latter book. He was a trustee of Duke University from 1989 until 1991.
Selected Publications |
|