Chad E. Nelson 781 SWKT, Provo, UT 84602 Phone: 310-903-7163 • Email: cenelson@ucla.edu ACADEMIC POSITION Visiting Assistant Professor, Brigham Young University, 2014-2015 EDUCATION University of California, Los Angeles Ph.D., Political Science, June 2014 Field: International Relations Subfield: Comparative Politics Columbia University, New York, NY M.A., Political Science, 2002 Fields: International Relations, Comparative Politics Brigham Young University, Provo, UT B.A., Philosophy, 2000 Minors: Political Science, International Development BYU Field Research Program, East London, South Africa, 1999 BYU Study Abroad, London, England, 1996 DISSERTATION/BOOK PROJECT Revolutionary Waves: The International Effects of Threatened Domestic Order Committee: Arthur Stein (chair), Michael Mann (Sociology), Marc Trachtenberg, Robert Trager When do leaders fear the domestic repercussions of revolutions abroad, and how does the prospect of such revolutionary waves affect international affairs? I examine how revolutionary states can act as platforms and models in spreading a new regime type in the international system, and how other states respond to that possibility. I argue that fear of contagion is mostly a product of the characteristics of the host country rather than the infecting agent and that this factor leads to patterns of cooperation and conflict not otherwise explained by existing international relations theories. The argument is tested through detailed qualitative analysis of the response to revolution in the four dominant ideological revolutionary movements of the last two hundred years: liberalism from the American Revolution to the Congress period, communism and fascism during interwar Europe, and political Islam and Middle East international relations, before and after the Iranian Revolution. The answers to the questions above address not only the issue of the international effects of revolutions, but also the larger issues of when, why, and to what extent ideological differences between states matter in international relations and how domestic instability interacts with international politics. FELLOWSHIPS • • Herbert F. York Global Dissertation Fellowship, Institute on Global Conflict and Cooperation, 2013-2014 Collegium of University Teaching Fellowship, UCLA, 2012-2013 RESEARCH INTERESTS International Security, Revolutions and International Politics, Domestic Instability and International Conflict, International Relations of the Middle East, the Rise of Great Powers, American Foreign Policy, War and the State. PAPERS and CONFERENCES “The Attenuation of Revolutionary Foreign Policy” (with Arthur Stein). Forthcoming, International Politics. “Revolutionary Waves: The International Effects of Threatened Domestic Order.” • Presenting at the Annual Meeting of the American Political Science Association, San Francisco, September 2015. “The Evolution of Norms? American Policy toward Revolution in Iran and Egypt.” • Presented at the Annual Meeting of the International Studies Association, New Orleans, February 2015. “‘My Foresight does not Embrace Such Remote Fears’: Britain, France and the Emergence of American Hegemony.” • Presented at the Annual Meeting of the International Studies Association, Toronto, March 2014. “Revolution and War: Saddam’s Decision to Invade Iran.” • Presented at the Annual Meeting of the International Studies Association West, Pasadena, September 2013. • Presented as panel, “War Initiation and Termination: Insights from Captured Iraqi Records” at the Annual Meeting of the International Studies Association, San Francisco, April 2013. “Revolutionary Contagion and International Politics: The Ancien Régime and the Concert of Europe Compared.” • Presented at the Annual Meeting of the International Studies Association, San Francisco, April 2013. “Demonstration Effects and the American Revolution.” • Presented at the Annual Meeting of the Midwest Political Science Association, Chicago, April 2012. Book Manuscript: “When the United States was China: the Great Powers and the Emergence of American Hegemony.” “The International Effects of the Iranian Revolution: the Salience of Regime Security.” “Structural Theories and the Iranian Revolution.” TEACHING INTERESTS International Relations Theory; Causes and International Consequences of Revolutions; International Relations of the Middle East; International Conflict; Change in the International System; American Foreign Policy; Domestic Causes of Peace and War; Rise and Fall of Great Powers; International Organizations; War, the State and Society; Qualitative Methods. TEACHING EXPERIENCE Visiting Assistant Professor, Brigham Young University, 2014-2015 • International Conflict • Research Seminar on Revolutions and International Politics • National Security Affairs Collegium of University Teaching Fellow, University of California Los Angeles, 2012-13 • Revolutions and International Politics Visiting Faculty, Brigham Young University, 2010 • International Relations of the Middle East • Capstone Seminar in International Security Teaching Fellow/Associate/Assistant, University of California Los Angeles • Great Powers in the Middle East – Instructor: Steven Spiegel (2006-2012) • Introduction to Global Studies – Instructor: Russell Burgos (2011) • Globalization: Concepts and History – Instructors: Russell Burgos, David Rigby, Dominic Thomas (2011) • Diplomacy and War – Instructor: Robert Trager (2009) • Constitutional Rights and Liberties – Instructor: Karen Orren (2006-2008) • International Relations Theory – Instructor: Arthur Stein (2006-2007) ADDITIONAL TRAINING • • • Maxwell School, Syracuse University: Summer Institute for Qualitative and MultiMethod Research, 2012 Institute for Global Conflict and Cooperation, University of California: Public Policy and Nuclear Threats summer course, 2007 University of Washington: Intensive Persian Language Program, 2002 REFERENCES Professor Arthur Stein Department of Political Science, UCLA 3383 Bunche Hall Los Angeles, CA 90095-1472 310-825-1173 stein@polisci.ucla.edu Associate Professor Robert Trager Department of Political Science, UCLA 4349 Bunche Hall Los Angeles, CA 90095-1472 310-825-0778 rtrager@ucla.edu Professor Steven L. Spiegel Department of Political Science, UCLA 3385 Bunche Hall Los Angeles, CA 90095-1472 310-825-1276 spiegel@polisci.ucla.edu Professor Marc Trachtenberg Department of Political Science, UCLA 3258 Bunche Hall Los Angeles, CA 90095-1472 310-267-1904 trachten@polisci.ucla.edu