University of Maine

CLAS Honors Preceptor in Political Science, Political Science

University of Maine, Honors College

Ph.D. Political Science, University of Connecticut

Thesis Title: Citizenship Unhinged--Exploring the Potential of Agonistic Citizenship

Michael E. Morrell
Richard P. Hiskes
Charles R. Venator Santiago
Jeremy Pressman
Shareen Hertel

About

Robert W. Glover is the CLAS-Honors Preceptor of Political Science, a joint appointment in the Honors College and the Department of Political Science at the University of Maine. His research focuses generally on democratic theory, political engagement, and the politics of immigration.

His recent published research includes “Games without Frontiers?: Democratic Engagement, Agonistic Pluralism, and the Question of Exclusion” (in Philosophy and Social Criticism), “Ditching the Script: Moving Beyond Automatic Thinking in Introductory Political Science Courses” (in The Journal of Political Science Education), “Radically Rethinking Citizenship: Disaggregation, Agonistic Pluralism, and the Politics of Immigration in the United States” (in Political Studies).

He has also published in PS: Political Science & Politics, Honors in Practice, Geopolitics, History & International Relations, Diaspora: A Journal of Transnational Studies, EIDOS: Revista de Humanidades y Ciencias Sociales, and The Blackwell Encyclopedia of Political Thought.

Professor Glover is currently co-editing a book (with Daniel Tagliarina) on teaching and learning in political science, entitled Teaching Politics Beyond the Book: Film, Texts, and New Media in the Classroom (forthcoming from Continuum Press). He contributes a chapter to the volume, entitled, “Critical Pedagogy in Hard Times: Utopian Socialist Thought as a Means for Rethinking Capitalism within the Classroom.” In addition, he is in the process of finishing a book manuscript examining the contemporary politics of immigration in the United States entitled Citizenship Unhinged: Exploring the Potential of Agonistic Citizenship..

Prior to coming to the University of Maine, Professor Glover was a Visiting Assistant Professor in the interdisciplinary Justice Studies program at James Madison University. He is the winner of the 2009 Northeastern Political Science Association/McWilliams Prize for Best Political Theory Paper. In addition, his dissertation was nominated for the American Political Science Association Leo Strauss Award, awarded annually for the best dissertation in political theory.

Contact Information

Address:

Dept. of Political Science
University of Maine
5754 North Stevens Hall
Orono, ME 04469-5754

 
Political Studies
Politics
Contemporary Political Theory

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