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TRIP Survey report cover

Elliott School Professors Martha Finnemore and Michael Barnett were listed as the No. 1 and No. 11 scholars, respectively, who produced the most interesting scholarship in the past five years in the 2011 Teaching, Research and International Policy (TRIP) survey P D F file icon, which included responses from 1,582 international relations faculty members.



Part-time and Adjunct Faculty

The Elliott School's part-time and adjunct faculty is comprised of superb scholars whose research makes important contributions to our understanding of the world. Being in the heart of Washington, DC enables us to draw on the tremendous intellectual firepower that abounds in the policy community, think tanks, NGOs, and international organizations.

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Lloyd Eby:
Lloyd Eby received a Ph.D. in Philosophy from Fordham University in 1988, and an A.B., with a major in philosophy, from Washington University in St. Louis. He has taught at the State University of New York at Albany, the University of the District of Columbia, the University of Maryland University College (UMUC), the Catholic University of America, the George Washington University, and elsewhere. He has published several books, including a course manual for the course Business and Professional Ethics for UMUC. At GWU he has taught the course, Ethics for Business and the Professions (Phil 135) since the spring of 2005. From 1990 until its close in 2004, he was an editor in the Currents in Modern Thought section of the monthly magazine The World & I, and he has published more than 130 articles, essays, and reviews in numerous publications, both print and electronic. He has traveled widely and participated in conferences and events in every continent of the world except Australia and Antarctica. He also has done extensive work in photography and film.

Mark C. Edberg: Adjunct Professor of International Affairs

Scott Edwards

Scott Edwards: Professorial Lecturer
Scott Edwards is Director of International Advocacy for Africa and Director of the Science for Human Rights program at Amnesty International, USA. He completed his doctoral work in International Relations from the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, and researches issues related to complex humanitarian crises. Current professional activity focuses on the development of early warning models of human rights crises, as well as the practical use of geospatial technologies for human rights compliance monitoring and research. Publications include a book manuscript, "The Chaos of Forced Displacement," which advances a computational model of forced migration for use in operational planning.

David Ettinger: Professorial Lecturer
A former career foreign service officer, David Ettinger is the International Affairs and Political Science librarian at the Gelman Library, George Washington University. He received his doctorate in political science from Columbia University. A graduate of the Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs at Princeton University, he holds Master's Degrees in International Law and Diplomacy from the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy, and Library Science from the school of Communication, Information and Library Studies at Rutgers University.
Email: dettingr@gwu.edu.


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