Mark Abdollahian

Dr. Mark Abdollahian delivers advanced analytics for data driven decision-making. His global experience spans national policy, corporate strategy, economic development, finance, public-private partnerships, M&A and business process reengineering. He creates, architects and implements enterprise class data and strategy analytics used by the US Government, the World Bank and the United Nations as well as private sector companies worldwide, including Arthur Andersen, Motorola, McKinsey, Raytheon, British Aerospace, Chevron and DeBeers. Dr. Abdollahian develops, manages and applies behavioral and predictive analytics to strategic and operational issues across government and business, focusing on bringing to market next generation innovations today.

Dr. Abdollahian is author of dozens of articles and two books on data driven strategy across business, politics and economics. He is a board member for several private and nonprofit enterprises and lectures to audiences worldwide. Dr. Abdollahian is a Full Clinical Professor at the Division of Politics and Economics, Claremont Graduate University, cofounder of Sentia Group, and currently chief executive officer of ACERTAS. In addition to Bachelors degrees in Political Science, History, and French from Case Western Reserve University, Dr. Abdollahian holds a Master’s degree in Foreign and Defense Policy and a Ph.D. in Political Economy and Mathematical Modeling from Claremont Graduate University.

Professor Abdollahian's interests include strategic decision making, international political economy, sustainable development, economics, growth, human social cultural behavioral modeling, econometrics, predictive analytics, computational modeling and simulation, data analytics, and visualization. 

Courses Taught

  • SPE471 Strategy for Politics, Economics, and Business
  • SPE316 Computational and Agent Based Modeling
  • PP487 Applied Data Analysis
  • SPE448 Social Network Analysis
  • SPE439 System Dynamics
  • SPE486 Data Analytics and Visualization
  • SPE438 Dynamic Modeling

Recent Research

MARINA ARBETMAN-RABINOWITZ

Senior Fellow at TransResearch Consortium and Claremont Graduate University, Senior Consultant at Sentia Group Inc.
Email: mar@sentiagroup.com

Dr. Marina Arbetman-Rabinowitz, is a Senior Fellowat the TransResearchConsortium and Claremont Graduate University and a Senior consultant at Sentia Group Inc. She is a political economist with vast experience in estimation of conflict, socio-economic and political measures. She is a consulting with the World Bank in Cambodia, Mongolia, Philippines and numerous Latin American nations including Mexico, Brazil and Argentina.

Dr. Arbetman-Rabinowitzis pioneer in the concept of political extraction and the major force behind the creation of political reach. Dr. Arbetman-Rabinowitzcoordinated much of the construction of political reach and extraction measures, and the compilation and integration of the fiscal and economic indicators that are required to empirically assess Political Performance. Her extensive prior data experience helped enormously in the collection and analysis of information for complex environments like Middle East, Afghanistan, Pakistan and Africa.

Previously, Dr. Arbetman-Rabinowitz held academic positions at Universidad of Buenos Aires, University of Missouri-Columbia, and Tulane University. She completed much of her early training in Universidad de Buenos Aires, Argentina and obtained a PhD at Vanderbilt University in 1990.

Other related research work, publication, websites, and links

  • Demographic and Economic Consequences of Conflict.
  • Power Distribution and Oil in the Sudan: Will the Comprehensive Peace Agreement turn the Curse into a Blessing.
  • Government Structure, Strength, and Effectiveness.
  • Political Capacity and Economic Behavior.
  • The Economic Costs of the American Civil War: A Reexamination.
  • Exploring the `Phoenix Factor with a Collective Good Perspective.
  • Choosing Among Measures of Power: A Review of the Empirical Record.

KRISTIN JOHNSON

Assistant Professor, Department of Politics, University of Rhode Island
Email: Kristin_Johnson@mail.uri.edu
Work Phone: 401­ 874-5495

Dr. Johnson's primary research interests focus on the influence of state capacity on three major areas:conflict and human security, individual attitudes within countries, and human development. Her work examines the role ofstate capacity across levels of analysis, including regional, national, and provincial level contexts. Currently she is Assistant Professor at the University of Rhode Island and a Director at the TransResearch Consortium.

Dr. Johnson specializes in state capacity on individual attitudes and behavior in African countries. Her work in this area examines the influence of state capacity on building political legitimacy and trust, social capital, and political participation, with emphasis on the influence of state capacity on regional and sub national conflict in Sudan following the 2011 referendum for Southern Sudanese independence. Her current research efforts extend these studies into examination of sub national political performance, conflict, and trust in Nigerian states. 

A final related research emphasis evaluates the role of political capacity and procedural democracy in influencing levels and types of human rights violations in Mexican states. This effort is extended to examining the role of human security and state capacity in motivating migration between Mexican states and in examining the influence of political capacity on variance in human development in Mexican states.Kristin Johnson received her Ph.D. in Political Science from Claremont Graduate University in 2007.

Other related research work, publication, websites, and links

  • Capacity to Trust: Political Capacity, Conflict, & Political Trust in Africa 1993-2007.
  • Hybridity, Political Order, and Legitimacy: Examples from Nigeri.
  • Human Rights in Transition: Sub National Democratization in Mexico 2001-2007.
  • Inclusive Institutions & State Development in Africa.
  • Political Reach, Violence, and Political Participation in Africa 2000-2008.
  • Sub National Capabilities and Internal Conflict: Resources & Revenues in Nigeria.
  • Patterns of Human Rights Violations in Mexican States 1994-2008.
  • Human Security, Economic Transitions & Internal Migration in Mexico 1997-2009.
  • Institutional Capacity, Conflict, and the Development of Social Capital: A Sub National Analysis of Nigeria.

Young Joon Kim

Name: Young Joon Kim
Email Address: youngjoon-kim@hotmail.com

Dr. Young Joon KIM is an associate research fellow in the Northeast Asian Strategy division at Institute for National Security Strategy of Republic of Korea, and a lecturer at Yonsei University, Graduate School of International Studies. He finished his doctrate in 2013 from Claremont Graduate University, in World Politics and Methodology and holds an M.A. in International Relations from Korea University.

He is a Executive Committee Member of the Korean Association of International Studies and an Associate Editor of the Journal of East Asian Affairs. His recent publication includes " Appeasing the Fear of Abandonment in Asymmetric Alliances : The ROK-US Alliance Case.", "The Evolution of Power Transition Theory: A Critical Review." and "The Application of Agent-Based Model in Political Science." Dr. Kim's research focuses on Chinese foreign policy, Inter-Korean relations, East Asian international relations, and Alliance.

Thomas Volgy

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Professor at University of Arizona

Email: volgy@email.arizona.edu

Thomas J. Volgy received his BA from Oakland University, and his Master’s and Ph.D. degrees from the University of Minnesota in Political Science. He moved to Tucson to take a position at the University of Arizona, where he is a professor of political science, specializing in international politics and the comparative analysis of international regions. He also served from 1995 to 2015 as the executive director of the International Studies Association, the largest association of its kind focusing on international studies, with a membership of over 7,000 scholars from 110 countries. He is also a faculty research affiliate at the Pardee Center, University of Denver. He also engages in consulting work in the United States and overseas, involving business consultation, political consultation, and international trade. He served in public office from 1977 through 1991 as a member of the Tucson city council, and then as Mayor of Tucson.

He has published over fifty articles in professional journals, and is the author and/or co-author of several books, including Major Powers and the Quest for Status in International Politics (2011), Mapping the New World Order (2009), International Politics and State Strength (2003), Politics in the Trenches: Experimenting with Democracy in America (2001), and The Forgotten Americans (1992). His latest work is focused on regions, hierarchy, and conflict in international politics, and on status considerations in international politics.

He has been honored by the University of Arizona with awards for teaching and distinguished public service, and by the International Studies Association for excellence in public service.

Jonathan M. DiCicco

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Associate Professor of Political Science and International Relations, Middle Tennessee State University

Email: Jon.DiCicco@mtsu.edu

Work phone: 615 904 8035


Jon DiCicco is Associate Professor of Political Science and International Relations at Middle Tennessee State University in Murfreesboro, Tennessee, where he teaches international peace and security in MTSU’s Masters of International Affairs program. DiCicco’s research focuses on the consequences, causes, and prevention of war, with special attention to foreign-policy decision-making in the context of interstate rivalries and power transitions. Combining political analysis with historical perspective, DiCicco’s published research often emphasizes leadership and agency within the structural frameworks of power transition theory and interstate rivalry research. His work may be found in the Journal of Conflict Resolution, International Studies Quarterly, Political Research Quarterly, Foreign Policy Analysis, and other scholarly journals, books, and reference works, including The Oxford Encyclopedia of Empirical International Relations Theory. He is currently developing a project on dissatisfaction and revisionism in the international order. Former director of the International Relations program at Canisius College, DiCicco earned his B.A. at Drew University and his Ph.D. at Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey-New Brunswick.


LinkedIn profile: https://www.linkedin.com/in/jon-dicicco-4a21587


Curriculum Vitae: https://static1.squarespace.com/static/53ab2bbde4b0a06bed80ded4/t/5c26e143b8a0456c72b196be/1546051907699/DiCicco-Vitae-August-2018-no-refs.pdf

Gaspare M. Genna

Name: Gaspare Genna
Academic Title: Professor of Political Science
Email Address: ggenna@utep.edu

Dr. Genna applies political economy and political psychology approaches to the understanding of issues related to regional integration using a balance of quantitative and qualitative research methods. His subject areas include structural conditions for regionalization, political decision making, public opinion on integration, and policy implications. Geographical area of specialization are Europe and the Americas and strong knowledge of East Asian and African integration. He has published in books and journal articles in many prestigious outlets.

ResearchGate URL: https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Gaspare_Genna
LinkedIn URL: https://www.linkedin.com/in/gaspare-genna-606a588
Curriculum Vitae: Click Here