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Cecelia M. Lynch

Associate Professor, Political Science
School of Social Sciences

Director, Center for Global Peace and Conflict Studies

M.A., M.Phil., Ph.D.(1993), Columbia University, Political Science


A.B., Drake University, Phi Beta Kappa, International Relations and French


Certificat, Institut d'Etudes Politiques, Paris

Phone: (949) 824-2745
Fax: (949) 824-8762
Email: clynch@uci.edu

University of California
3151 Social Science Plaza
University of California, Irvine
Irvine, CA 92697

picture of Cecelia M. Lynch

Research
Interests
International Relations (theory, organization, law), Religion and Ethics, Social Movements and Civil Society Actors (on peace, security, globalization, humanitarianism, and religion)
   
Academic
Distinctions
Book Awards:
Winner of 1999 Furniss Award for best first book on International Security from Mershon Center for International Security; co-winner of 1998-99 Myrna Bernath award from the Society for Historians of American Foreign Relations, both for "Beyond Appeasement: Interpreting Interwar Peace Movements in World Politics," Cornell UP, 1999.

Recent Research Awards:
Andrew W. Mellon "New Directions" Post-doctoral Fellowship, 2006-2008, for research on "Islamic and Interfaith Religious Ethics in World Crises"
American Association of University Women (AAUW) Post-doctoral Fellowship, 2004-2005, for book on Christian religious ethics and world politics
Mellon Fellowship at the Huntington Library, 2004-5, for research on religious ethics and violence during the Mission period
Social Science Research Council-MacArthur Foundation Postdoctoral Fellowship on International Research, 1999
SSRC-MacArthur Foundation Postdoctoral Fellowship on Peace and Security in a Changing World, 1996-1998

Mentoring Awards:
Society for Women in International Political Economy Mentoring Award for 2003
Women's Caucus of the American Political Science Association Mentoring Award, 2003

Professor Lynch is also a member of the Working Group on Religion, Secularism, and International Affairs of the Social Science Research Council (www.programs.ssrc.org/religion/wg/)
   
Research
Abstract
Cecelia Lynch works on religion and ethics in international affairs, social movements and civil society organizations, and qualitative/interpretive methods in social science research. Her first book, "Beyond Appeasement," took issue with traditional interpretations of realism and idealism by examining interwar peace movements in Britain and the U.S., and looking at their role in providing the normative underpinnings for the continuation of global international organization from the League of Nations to the UN. Her co-edited book with Michael Loriaux takes a critical perspective on the foundations of international law, asking what kind of moral order does international law represent, and what are the goods entailed in this order. Her newest book, co-authored with Audie Klotz, is the first methods book on the constructivist approach in international relations. She is currently completing a book on tensions in Christian ethics over the use of violence in the twentieth-century, and is researching another on interfaith (including Islamic) humanitarianism, for which she is traveling to West and East Africa and the Middle East. Her articles address subjects ranging from social movements and civil society actors on issues of peace and globalization, contemporary religious humanitarian movements, the relationship between contemporary theological constructs and international relations, substantive issues in qualitative and interpretive research methods, and the use of E.H. Carr and Immanuel Kant in international relations theory.
   
Publications Strategies for Research in Constructivist International Relations, with Audie Klotz. M.E. Sharpe, 2007
   
  (co-ed. with Michael Loriaux) Law and Moral Action in World Politics. Minneapolis, MN: University of Minnesota Press, 2000.
   
  Beyond Appeasement: Interpreting Interwar Peace Movements in World Politics. Ithaca and London: Cornell University Press, 1999. Winner, Edgar J. Furniss Prize, Mershon Center on International Security; Co-winner, Myrna Bernath Prize, SHAFR
   
  "Translating Terminologies," with Audie Klotz. International Studies Review, 8:2, (June 2006).
   
  "Critical Interpretation and Interwar Peace Movements: Challenging Dominant Narratives," in Dvora Yanow and Peregrine Schwartz-Shea, eds., Interpretation and Method, M.E. Sharpe, 2006.
   
  Public Spheres Transnationalized: Comparisons Within and Between Muslim Majority Societies," in Armando Salvatore and Mark LeVine, eds., Religion, Social Practice, and Contested Hegemonies: Reconstructing the Public Sphere in Muslim Majority Societies, Palgrave-MacMillan, 2005.
   
  "The 'R' Word, Narrative, and Perestroika: A Critique of Language and Method," in Kristin Renwick Monroe, ed. Perestroika! The Raucous Rebellion in Political Science. Yale UP, 2005.
   
  "Dogma, Praxis, and Religious Perspectives on Multiculturalism," Millenium, Journal of International Studies, 4 (2000).
   
  "Acting on Belief: Christian Perspectives on Suffering and Violence," Ethics & International Affairs, 14 (2000).
   
  "The Promise and Problems of Internationalism," Global Governance, 5 (1999).
   
  "Le constructivisme dans la theorie des relations internationales," with Audie Klotz, Critique Internationale, Journal of the Institut d'Etudes Politiques, Paris, 2 (1999).
   
  "Social Movements and the Problem of 'Globalization'," Alternatives, (1998).
   
  "E.H. Carr, International Relations Theory, and the Societal Origins of International Legal Norms," Millenium, Journal of International Studies, 3 (1994).
   
  "Kant, the Republican Peace, and Moral Guidance in International Law," Ethics & International Affairs, 8 (1994).
   
Grants American Association of University Women (AAUW) American Post-Doctoral Fellowship, 2004-2005 Huntington Library Mellon Fellowship, 2004-2005
   
Andrew W. Mellon, "New Directions" Fellowship, for project on "Islamic and Interfaith Religious Ethics in World Crises (one of 10 awarded nation-wide in the social sciences and humanities), 2006-2008
   
Professional
Society
International Studies Association, American Political Science Association, Society for Historians of American Foreign Relations, Academic Council on the UN System
   
Research Center Center for Global Peace and Conflict Studies
   
Link to this profile http://www.faculty.uci.edu/profile.cfm?faculty_id=4537
   
Last updated 07/25/2007