Talk:John Paden

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John Paden

Robinson Professor; Clarence J. Robinson Professor of International Studies

John N. Paden is Clarence Robinson Professor of International Studies, and Professor of Public and International Affairs at George Mason University. He received his B.A. in philosophy from Occidental College, his M.A. in philosophy, politics and economics from Oxford University as a Rhodes Scholar, and his Ph.D. in politics from Harvard University. He has served as Director of African Studies at Northwestern University, Professor of Public Administration at Ahmadu Bello University (Zaria, Nigeria), and Dean, Faculty of Social and Management Sciences, at Bayero University (Kano, Nigeria). Some of Dr. Paden?s publications include: Religion and Political Culture in Kano (winner of the Herskovits Prize); The African Experience (four volumes); Black Africa: A Comparative Handbook; Understanding Black Africa: Data and Analysis of Social Change and Nation Building; Values, Identities, and National Integration: Empirical Research in Africa; and Ahmadu Bello, Sardauna of Sokoto: Values and Leadership in Nigeria. His book Muslim Civic Cultures and Conflict Resolution: The Challenge of Democratic Federalism in Nigeria was published by the Brookings Institution in 2005. Dr. Paden has traveled widely in Europe, Africa, Middle East, and Asia. He was part of a fifteen-year project to help establish African studies in China. Since 2002, he has served on a senior-level task force at The Brookings Institution on "United States Policy toward the Islamic world." He is a co-founder of the graduate program in International Commerce and Policy, and is Co-Founder/Co-Director of the Center for Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation. He has served as director of the summer graduate program in China, focusing on socio-economic changes and cross-cultural trade strategies, and participated in the summer trade programs in Oxford and Geneva. He serves on doctoral committees in Economics, Public Policy, and Conflict Analysis and Resolution. In terms of undergraduate teaching, Dr. Paden has developed and taught broad-gauged courses, including freshman seminars ("The nature of the non-western world," and "The idea of the nation state,") sophomore honors seminars ("Cross-cultural perspectives: Understanding the giants of Asia and Africa,"), and upper-division courses ("Religion and Post-modernism," "Political Culture and Leadership," and "Cultural Dimensions of Globalization"). He has helped develop undergraduate minors in Asia Pacific Studies, Islamic Studies, and Afro-American and African Studies. He has served on the undergraduate General Education committee, with a focus on the requirement in global understanding." In terms of outreach and community service, Dr. Paden has served as an international monitor for the Carter Center during the Nigerian presidential elections in 1999 (Kaduna) and 2003 (Kano). He was part of a team which helped plan the new Nigerian federal capital at Abuja. He has served on review panels at the U.S. Institute of Peace and participated in the Nigeria Working Group, Council on Foreign Relations, and the Nigerian Working Group, Center for Strategic and International Studies.

Email: jpaden@gmu.edu