John James Quinn is Professor of Political Science at Truman
State University. He has worked there since the fall of 1996.
Before arriving at Truman, he obtained a MA and PhD in Political
Science from UCLA (1995). Before UCLA, he was a Peace Corps
volunteer in Zaire for three years (now the Democratic Republic
of the Congo). As a volunteer, he was an English teacher in a
small town for two years. For the third year, he was the
Regional Representative for Haut Zaire in Kisangani. Before
Peace Corps, he attended St. Vincent College in Latrobe,
Pennsylvania, where he majored in History and English, and would
later to become certified to teach social science and English
(7-12 ).
At Truman, he has taught courses in African Politics, African International
Relations, Comparative Politics, International Political
Economy, Research Methodology, Senior Seminar, Introduction to
Political Science, and Introduction to International Relations.
He also taught as a visiting professor at the University of Ghana-Legion in Fall 2001. He
won the prestigious Walker and Doris Allen Fellowship for
Faculty excellence in 2010, and he has been nominated for other
teaching awards.
His primary research agenda centers on the political and
economic effects of majority state ownership of industry or
mining or oil in Africa. He also works on issues of African
democratization in the post-Cold War period, French ODA in
Africa, the diffusion of conflict in Zaire and
Rwanda, corruption, and comparative development and democracy.
He is author of
The Road Oft Traveled: Development Politics and
Majority State Ownership of Industry in Africa (Praeger, 2002).
He has published articles in such journals as
International
Interactions,
Party Politics, and
International Politics as well as written several chapters
for books and entries for handbooks and encyclopedias.
See
Curriculum Vitae for more details.
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