Jack Snyder
Robert & Renee Belfer Professor of International Relations
Political Science
International Affairs Building, Room 1327
Phone: 212-854-8290
jls6@columbia.edu
http://www.columbia.edu/cu/polisci/fac-bios/snyder/faculty.html
Jack Snyder (Ph.D., Columbia, 1981) is the Robert and Renée Belfer Professor of
International Relations in the political science department and Institute of War
and Peace Studies at Columbia University. His books include Electing to Fight:
Why Emerging Democracies Go to War (MIT Press, 2005); From Voting to Violence:
Democratization and Nationalist Conflict (Norton Books, 2000); Myths of Empire:
Domestic Politics and International Ambition. (Cornell University Press, 1991);
The Ideology of the Offensive: Military Decision Making and the Disasters of
1914 (Cornell, 1984); and Civil Wars, Insecurity, and Intervention, co-editor
with Barbara Walter (Columbia, 1999). His articles on such topics as
democratization and war ("Prone to Violence: The Paradox of the Democratic
Peace," The National Interest, winter 2005/2006), imperial overstretch, war
crimes tribunals versus amnesties, international relations theory after
September 11, and anarchy and culture have appeared in The American Political
Science Review, Foreign Affairs, Foreign Policy, International Organization,
International Security, and World Politics.
A Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, Snyder is Acting Director
of the Harriman Institute at Columbia and a member of the editorial boards of
the American Political Science Review and International Security. He edits the
W. W. Norton book series on World Politics. He received a B.A. in government
from Harvard University in 1973, the Certificate of Columbia’s Russian Institute
in 1978, and a Ph.D. in political science from Columbia in 1981.
Component: New Approaches to Religion and
International Affairs