John R. Karaagac
Education
Ph.D., International Relations, Johns Hopkins University, with Distinction1997
M.A., International Relations, Cambridge University, 1987
B.A., History, University of California-Berkeley, 1986
Professional Experience
- Lecturer, School of Public and Environmental Affairs, Indiana University, 2012 to present
- Professorial Lecturer, Nitze School of Advanced International Studies, Johns Hopkins University, 2004 to present
- Visiting Assistant Professor, School of Public and Environmental Affairs, Indiana University, 2009-2011
- Adjunct Instructor, School of Public and Environmental Affairs, Indiana University, 2003-2005 and 2007-2009
- Visiting Assistant Professor, University of Richmond, 2005-2007
Awards, Honors & Certifications
SPEA Teaching Award, Undergraduate Instruction, 2012
Professional Interests
International Relations and International Policy; American Public Administration, Foreign Policy, Politics and the Political Process, the Presidency; International Political Economy; Political Theory and Public Policy
Selected Publications
Full Vita
Books
- With Randall Baker, Why America Isn’t Europe (Paradigma, 2010)
- The Bush Paradox: A Study in Contemporary Politics (Fenestra, 2004)
- The Fate of the Father: The Bush Policy Paradox (Fenestra, 2004)
- Between Promise and Policy: Ronald Reagan and Conservative Reformism (Lexington, 2000)
- John McCain: An Essay in Military and Political History (Lexington, 2000)
Articles
- “Wilson in Warsaw” in American Dream, Halina Parafinowicz ed., (Bialystok, Poland: Trans Humana, 2011)
(Essays in honor of the late Prof. Michalek. Sponsored by the Polish-American Fulbright Committee and the History Institute of Warsaw University.)
- “Republican Foreign Policy Tendencies in the Truman Years: Ideas, Traditions and Commentary,” in Dzieje Najnaowsze: Polska Akademia Nauk Institut Historii (2007: 4)