CURRICULUM VITAE KAREN BECKWITH Flora Stone Mather
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CURRICULUM VITAE KAREN BECKWITH Flora Stone Mather Professor Department of Political Science Phone: (216) 368-4129 Case Western Reserve University Fax: (216) 368-4681 223 Mather House Email: [email protected] 11201 Euclid Avenue http://politicalscience.case.edu/faculty/karen-beckwith/ Cleveland, Ohio U. S. A. 44106-7109 EDUCATION: Ph.D. Political Science, Syracuse University, May, 1982. Examination Fields: U.S. Politics (with honors), Comparative Politics. Dissertation: Patterns of Mass Political Participation among American Women, 1952-1976. M.A. Political Science, Syracuse University, 1977. B.A. Political Science, Honors Program, University of Kentucky, 1972. RESEARCH AND TEACHING INTERESTS Comparative Women, Gender and Politics (Western Europe and the United States) Comparative Political Movements Political Parties and Elections (Western Europe and the United States) Electoral Systems and Representation PUBLICATIONS BOOKS Cabinets, Ministers, and Gender, with Claire Annesley, University of Sussex, and Susan Franceschet, University of Calgary. Oxford University Press, forthcoming 2019. Political Women and American Democracy: Critical Perspectives on Women and Politics Research, eds. Christina Wolbrecht, Karen Beckwith and Lisa Baldez. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2008. Women’s Movements Facing the Reconfigured State, eds. Lee Ann Banaszak, Karen Beckwith and Dieter Rucht. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2003. American Women and Political Participation: The Impacts of Work, Generation and Feminism (Westport, Conn.: The Greenwood Press, 1986). Karen Beckwith 2 ARTICLES IN REFEREED JOURNALS “What Do Women Symbolize? Symbolic Representation and Cabinet Appointments,” with Susan Franceschet and Claire Annesley, Politics, Groups, and Identities, 5 (3), 2017; http://www.tandfonline.com/eprint/zDJcSrrNHAdJeIsMPDDP/full. “Before Prime Minister: Margaret Thatcher, Angela Merkel, and Gendered Leadership Contests,” Politics & Gender, 11 (4), December 2015: 718–745. “Narratives of Defeat: Explaining the Effects of Loss in Social Movements,” Journal of Politics, 77 (1), 2015: 2-13. “Gender, Class, and the Structure of Intersectionality: Working-Class Women and the Pittston Coal Strike,” Politics, Groups and Identities, 2 (1), January 2014: 17-34. “Interests, Issues and Preferences: Women’s Interests and Epiphenomena of Activism,” Politics & Gender, 7 (3), September 2011: 424-429. “Comparative Politics and the Logics of a Comparative Politics of Gender,” Perspectives on Politics, 8 (1), March 2010: 159-168. “Sheer Numbers: Critical Representation Thresholds and Women's Political Representation,” with Kimberly Cowell-Meyers, Perspectives on Politics, 5 (3), September 2007: 555-567. “Mapping Strategic Engagements of Women's Movements," International Feminist Journal of Politics, 9 (3), September 2007: 312-339. “Numbers and Newness: The Descriptive and Substantive Representation of Women,” Canadian Journal of Political Science, 40 (1), March 2007: 27-49. “The Comparative Politics of Women's Movements: Teaching Comparatively, Learning Democracy,” Perspectives on Politics, 3 (3), September 2005: 583-596. “A Common Language of Gender?,” Politics & Gender I (1), March 2005: 128-137. “Women, Gender, and Nonviolence in Political Movements,” PS: Political Science and Politics, 35 (1), March 2002: 71-82. “Gender Frames and Collective Action: Configurations of Masculinity in the Pittston Coal Strike,” Politics & Society, 29 (2), June 2001: 297-330. “Women’s Movements at Century’s End: Excavation and Advance in Political Science.” Annual Review of Political Science, 4 (2001): 371-90. “Hinges in Collective Action: Strategic Innovation in the Pittston Coal Strike,” Mobilization, 5 (2), October 2000: 179-199. “Beyond Compare? Women’s Movements in Comparative Perspective,” European Journal of Political Research, 37 (4), June 2000: 431-468. Reprinted in Mona Lena Krook and Sarah Childs, eds., Women, Gender and Politics: A Reader (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2010); and as “Izvan dosega komparacije? Ženski pokreti s komparativnog stajališta,” in Žene i politika: feministička Karen Beckwith 3 politička znanost, ed. Marjeta Šinko. Zagreb: Centar za ženske studije , 2015. Pp. 404-446. “Collective Identities of Class and Gender: Working-Class Women in the Pittston Coal Strike,” Political Psychology, 19 (1), 1998: 147-167. “Lancashire Women Against Pit Closures: Women's Standing in a Men's Movement,” Signs, 21 (4) Summer 1996: 1034-1068. “Comparative Research and Electoral Systems: Lessons from France and Italy,” Women & Politics, XII (2), 1992, pp. 1-33. “Candidature femminili e sistemi elettorali [Female Candidates and Electoral Systems],” Rivista italiana di scienza politica, XX (1), April 1990, pp. 73-103. “Sneaking Women into Office: Alternative Access to Parliament in France and Italy,” Women & Politics, 9 (3), 1989, pp. 1-15. “Feminism and Leftist Politics in Italy: The Case of UDI-PCI Relations,” in West European Politics, VIII (4), October 1985, and in Sylvia Bashevkin, ed., Women and Politics in Western Europe (London: Frank Cass, 1985), pp. 19-37. “The Cross-Cultural Study of Women and Politics: Methodological Problems,” Women and Politics, I (2), Summer, 1980. BOOK CHAPTERS “All Is Not Lost: The 1984-85 British Miners’ Strike and Mobilization after Defeat,” in The Consequences of Social Movements: People, Policies and Institutions, eds. Lorenzo Bosi, Marco Giugni and Katrin Uba. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2016. “Interdisciplinarity and Undergraduate Teaching and Learning,” in Interdisciplinarity: Its Role in a Discipline-based Academy, eds. APSA Task Force on Interdisciplinarity. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2014. Pp. 135-151. “Plotting the Path from One to the Other: Women’s Interests and Political Representation,” in Representation: The Case of Women’s Interests, eds. Michelle Taylor-Robinson and Maria Escobar- Lemmon. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2014. Pp. 19-40. “The Comparative Study of Women’s Movements,” In The Oxford Handbook of Gender and Politics, eds. Karen Celis, Johanna Kantola, Georgina Waylen, and Laurel Weldon. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2013. Pp. 385-410. “Between Participation and Representation: Political Women and Democracy in the United States,” in Christina Wolbrecht, Karen Beckwith, and Lisa Baldez, eds., Political Women and American Democracy: Critical Perspectives on Women and Politics Research, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2008. Pp. 181-198. “The Gendering Ways of States: Women’s Representation and State Transformations in France, Great Britain and the United States,” in Lee Ann Banaszak, Karen Beckwith and Dieter Rucht, eds. Women’s Movements Facing the Reconfigured State. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2003. Pp. 169-202. Karen Beckwith 4 “When Power Relocates: Interactive Changes in Women’s Movements and States” (with Lee Ann Banaszak and Dieter Rucht), in Lee Ann Banaszak, Karen Beckwith and Dieter Rucht, eds. Women’s Movements Facing the Reconfigured State. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2003. Pp. 1- 29. Reprinted in Mona Lena Krook and Sarah Childs, eds., Women, Gender and Politics: A Reader (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2010). “Movement in Context: Women and Miners' Campaigns in Britain,” in Ricca Edmondson, ed., The Political Context of Collective Action. London: Routledge Press, 1997, pp.15-32. “Response to Feminism in the Italian Parliament: Divorce, Abortion, and Sexual Violence Legislation,” in Mary Fainsod Katzenstein and Carol McClurg Mueller, eds., The Women's Movements of Western Europe and the United States: Consciousness, Political Opportunity and Public Policy (Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 1987). Pp. 153-171. “Women in Italian Parliamentary Politics, 1946-1979,” in Howard R. Penniman, ed., Italy at the Polls: The National Elections of 1979 (Washington, D.C.: American Enterprise Institute, 1981). ADDITIONAL PUBLICATIONS AND BOOK REVIEWS “State, Academy, Discipline: Regendering Political Science,” PS: Political Science and Politics, 48 (3), July 2015: 445-449. http://journals.cambridge.org/repo_A97nCkylgTNMK2 “Review of Drude Dahlerup and Monique Leyenaar, eds., Breaking Male Dominance in Old Democracies (Oxford University Press, 2013),” Perspectives on Politics, 13 (2), June 2015: 54-56. “Review of Susan J. Carroll and Kira Sanbonmatsu, More Women Can Run: Gender and Pathways to the State Legislatures (Oxford University Press, 2013),” Political Science Quarterly, 129 (4), Winter 2014: 712-14. “Review of S. Laurel Weldon, When Protest Makes Policy: How Social Movements Represent Disadvantaged Groups (University of Michigan Press, 2011),” Journal of Politics, 74 (2), 2012. “Review of Lee Ann Banaszak, The Women’s Movement Inside and Outside the State,” Social Forces, 89 (3), March 2011: 1064-66. “Review of Karen L. Baird et al., Beyond Reproduction: Women’s Health, Activism and Public Policy, and Karen M. Kedrowski and Marilyn Stine Sarow, Cancer Activism: Gender, Media and Public Policy,” Perspectives on Politics, 8 (2), June 2010: 675-676. Interdisciplinarity: Its Role in a Discipline-Based Academy. 2009. Summary Report of the APSA Task Force on Interdisciplinarity. Washington, DC: American Political Science Association. Task force members: John Aldrich, Chair (Duke); Lisa Anderson (Columbia); Karen Beckwith (CWRU); Mathew Moen (University of South Dakota); Kristin Monroe (UC-Irvine); Kenneth Prewitt (Columbia); Robert Axelrod (Michigan) and Michael Brintnall (APSA), ex officio. “Why Do Men Dominate Politics?”