Bio

 

Chip GagnonI’m a Professor of Politics at Ithaca College, Chair of the Department of Politics, and a Regional Affiliate Scholar at the Judith Reppy Institute for Peace and Conflict Studies at Cornell University.

I grew up outside of Syracuse, NY, and earned my undergraduate degree at Georgetown University in Washington, DC, majoring in European Studies.  After working in France, Germany, and Washington DC for several years, I enrolled in Columbia University’s School of International and Public Affairs, where I earned my Masters in International Affairs.  I then entered the PhD program in Political Science at Columbia, writing my dissertation on “Ideology and Soviet-Yugoslav Relations 1962-1969.”  I also earned certificates in East European and Russian/Soviet Studies at Columbia.
Chip Zagreb 2006In front of Croatia’s Parliament Building 2006

After receiving my PhD, I was awarded a one year postdoctoral fellowship at Stanford University, and then a three-year SSRC-MacArthur postdoctoral fellowship during which I was in residence at the Peace Studies Program (now the Reppy Institute for Peace and Conflict Studies) at Cornell University.  During that three year period I  spent an academic year at the Department of Sociology of the University of Zagreb (Croatia) and at the Institute for Philosophy and Social Theory of the University of Belgrade (Serbia), conducting research for my book The Myth of Ethnic War: Serbia and Croatia in the 1990s.

I came to Ithaca College in the the fall of 1996.  I am currently serving as Chair of the Politics Department, a role I also served in from 2009 to 2013.

My research interests include ethnic and nationalist conflict, the phenomenon of political demobilization, democracy promotion, and post-conflict societies.  I have also worked with anthropologist Stefan Senders on a multi-year project, “Interdisciplinary Perspectives on Post-Conflict Studies,” based at the Reppy Institute. My current research projects include the question of how images of a dangerous outside world are used as a domestic political resource.

As mentioned above, I’m the author of the book The Myth of Ethnic War: Serbia and Croatia in the 1990s, which won the American Political Science Association’s Prize for the Best Book on European Politics and Society as well as the Best First Book Award of the Council for European Studies.  I also co-edited the book Post-Conflict Studies: An interdisciplinary approach with anthropologist Keith Brown (Routledge, 2014).  I’ve published numerous scholarly articles on topics related to the Yugoslav wars, nationalism, ethnic conflict, and multiculturalism in the Balkans in journals such as International SecurityForeign AffairsNationalities Papers and Journal of Democracy.

Montenegro 2010

Montenegro 2010

I teach Introduction to International Relations, as well as upper level courses on nationalism, populism, and ethnic conflict, terrorism, global migration, whiteness and multiculturalism, democracy assistance, US foreign policy, and “Pirates, Mercenaries and Missionaries: Sovereignty in the International System.”  I designed and obtained college approval for a Concentration in International Studies for Politics Majors, and for a Minor in International Politics for nonmajors.

I have participated as organizer or presenter in summer schools in Niš (Serbia) and Ohrid (Macedonia), and was part of the research team for the Muabet project of Brown University’s Watson Institute for International Studies. I have traveled to Russia and to the former Yugoslavia numerous times.

Chip with bikeI’m an avid cyclist; I bike-commute year-round up South Hill from downtown (with studded snow tires in the winter).  I also enjoy riding my road bike and my recumbent bike in the beautiful Finger Lakes region. I’ve biked from Ithaca to the Tidewater region of Virginia four times, down the California coast from San Francisco to San Diego, as well as a number of other bike tours, both on my upright bike as well as on my recumbent.  I also enjoy hiking, canoeing and camping.

I currently live in downtown Ithaca with my husband and our cat. I have a daughter who lives in Brooklyn and a son in Toronto.