|
|
|
Melani CAMMETT |
Political Science, Brown University |
|
Professor Cammett is Associate Professor of Political Science and
Director of the Middle East Studies Program at Brown University and
specializes in the political economy of development and the Middle
East. She earned her Ph.D. in 2002 from the Department of Political
Science at the University of California at Berkeley and served as an
Academy Scholar at the Harvard Academy for International and Area
Studies from 2005-2006 and 2007-2008. Cammett's current book
project, tentatively entitled In the Service of Sectarianism:
Welfare and Politics in Weak States, explores the dynamics of
sectarianism, focusing on how ethnic and religious parties allocate
welfare goods. Based on extensive field research, the book compares
the conditions under which sectarian parties in Lebanon target
members of other religious groups and marginal supporters, and
includes brief supplementary case studies of Hamas in Palestine, the
Sadrist Movement in Iraq, and the Bharatiya Janata Party in India.
She is also initiating a new research project on the politics of
public health in the Middle East. Her first book, Globalization
and Business Politics in North Africa: A Comparative Perspective
(Cambridge University
Press, 2007), examines how integration in global manufacturing
chains reshapes business politics in developing countries. She has
published scholarly articles in World Politics, Studies in
Comparative International Development, Comparative Politics,
World Development, Global Governance and other
journals. Her research has received support from the Smith
Richardson Foundation, U.S. Institute of Peace, Social Science
Research Council, and the American Institute for Maghrib Studies,
the Global Public Health Initiative at Brown University, the Salomon
Faculty Research Grant at Brown, and the Institute for International
Studies at U.C. Berkeley. Cammett also holds an M.A.L.D. from the
Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy (1994), received a Fulbright
Fellowship in Jordan, and has consulted for development policy
organizations.
|
|
|
|