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Norman D. Palmer Prize Winners

Norman D. Palmer Award

The Palmer Award is bestowed annually on the student submitting the best undergraduate thesis in International Relations. The award was established jointly by the IR Program and the Anspach Institute for Diplomacy and Foreign Affairs in honor of Dr. Norman D. Palmer, Professor Emeritus, and a pioneer in the field of International Relations. For past prize winning theses, see the list below.

 

2016

R. Bailey Scott, "A Tale of Two Russias: Foreign Direct Investment and Inequality in Post-Soviet Russia" 

2015

Erica Ma, "A State Divided: The Decisive Impact of Third-Party Interventions on Secession Conflicts (1945-2011)"

2014

Justin F. Pergolini, "'All for One' Leads to Growth for Non: How income equality helps you break the middle-income trap (but redistribution doesn't)"

2013

David Beizer, "International Compliance Theory and the Implementation of the Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act"

2012

Jacob Werlin, "The Long Peace: A Normative Look into South American Interstate Security"

2011

Janis Kreilis, "Another Case of Tigeritis? Capital Market Liberalization and the 2008 Financial Crisis of Latvia"

2010

Boyan P. Gerasimov, "Conditionality and Legitimacy: How Did the European Commision Manage to Reassert its Influence over Bulgaria After the 2007 Accession?"

2009

Elizabeth Song, "Francois Mitterand and Francafrique: Masquerades of power in sub-Saharan Africa during the post-Cold War era"

2008

Maxwell Kosman, "Deceptively Different? Explaining the Gap in Affective Support Between the Czech Republic and Slovakia"

2007

Megan Kristine Peppel, "The Argentine Socioeconomic and Political Crisis of 2001: An Opportunity for Think-Tank Growth"

2006 

Neil F. Rudisill, "Absorbing Muslim Minorities in Britain and France: A Comparative Study of Integrationist and Assimilation"

2005

Maksim A. Piskunov, "Commanding Growth or Your Friendly Developmental Dictatorship: Relating Political Structures, Institutions and Economic Development"

2004 

Rachael A. Martin, "Coyotes, Pateros, Polleros, Oh My! Migrant Smuggling at the U.S. Mexico Border"

2003

Daniel Erlich Schmerin, "The Poor Man's Strategic Weapon: The Rise of Palestinian Suicide Bombings"

2002

Stefanie A. Magner, "Actor Preferences, Domestic Politics and Cohabitation: The French Decision to Resume Nuclear Testing in 1995

2001

Isabel E. Rioja-Scott, "International Organizations and Democraticization: NATO's Role in the Spanish Transition to Democracy"

2000

Kristopher A. De Leon, "Electronic Commerce: The Evolution in US-Japan Relations"

1999

Martin Hrivnak, "The Rich Man's Atom Bomb?: Nuclear States and Biological Warfare"

1998

Aaron Kotok

1997

Job Campbell, "Interdependence and Decentralization: Dynamics of Center-Local Relations in the People's Republic of China"

1996

Jessica L. Hun, "Neo-Authoritarianism & Political Legitimacy: China's Struggle with Economic Reforms"

1995

David Craig Brown, "Revolt Against Revolution: A Study on Rebellion Dynamics"

1994

Benjamin M. Cukier, "Political Origins of Itnernational Bank Regulation"

1993

Joanna Dziubak, "The Role of Law in European Integration: Bridging the Gap Between International Relations and Legal Theory"

1992

Gayle D. Meyers, "Modeling Peace Conferences: An Application of Game Theory to the Search for Peace in the Middle East"

1991

Randy Karl Rethemeyer, "Institutional Bargaining and the Formation of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation Council

1990

Suzanne Maloney, "The Linchpin Strategy: How the Soviets Targeted Women as a Revolutionary Class in Afghanistan