Academic Positions:
2017-2018 Fulbright Schuman Scholar, Gothenburg, Sweden & Duisburg, Germany
2016 – Present Associate Professor, School of Public & International Affairs, NC State University
2010 – 2016 Assistant Professor, School of Public & International Affairs, NC State University
2009 – 2010 Teaching Assistant Professor, School of Public & International Affairs, NC State University
2008 – 2009 Visiting Lecturer, Political Science, NC State University
2004 & 2005 Lecturer, Spring Semester Program in Segovia, Spain, Kentucky Institute for International Studies
Research Affiliations and Positions:
2017-2018 Visiting Researcher, Gothenburg University
2013-Present Co-Director, SPIA/KIETS Energy & Security Initiative
Summer 2011 Visiting Researcher, Hessische Stiftung Friedens- und Konfliktforschung, Frankfurt, Germany
Summer 2009 Affiliate, Department of International Studies, Instituto Tecnológico Autónomo de México, Mexico City, Mexico
Education:
2009 Ph.D., Political Science, University of Wisconsin-Madison
2004 M.A., Political Science, University of Wisconsin-Madison
2001 Non-degree program in German and European Politics, Philips-Universität Marburg, Germany
2000 B.A., magna cum laude, Political Science, Murray State University
Areas of Interest:
Global Governance, Crisis capitalism, Politics of Europe and the European Union, Illicit Political Economy, Ideas and persuasion in political economy
Edited Volumes:
Edited Special Issues:
Mark T. Nance (ed). 2018. “Defining and Fighting Illicit Finance: The Financial Action Task Force and the Anti-Money Laundering Regime.” Crime, Law, and Social Change 69(2).
Mark T. Nance and William A. Boettcher III (eds). 2017. “Conflict or Cooperation? The Politics of Global Energy and Security.” Energy Research and Social Science 24: 1-106.
Refereed Journal Articles:
Nance, Mark T. and Jack Daly 2018. “The Nordic Model and Structural Change: Lessons from the collapse of Saab Automobile AB.” Intereconomics: Review of European Economic Policy 53(4): 190-196.
Nance, Mark T. 2018. “The Regime that FATF Built: An introduction to the Financial Action Task Force.” Crime, Law, and Social Change 69(2): 109-129.
Nance, Mark T. 2018. “Re-thinking FATF: An experimentalist interpretation of the Financial Action Task Force.” Crime, Law, and Social Change 69(2): 131-152.
Nance, Mark T. and William A. Boettcher III. 2017. “Introduction: Conflict and Cooperation at the Energy-Security Nexus.” Energy Research and Social Science 24: 1-5.
Early, Bryan C., Mark T. Nance, and M. Patrick Cottrell. 2017. ““Global Governance at the Energy-Security Nexus: Lessons from UNSCR 1540.” Energy Research and Social Science 24: 94-101.
Nance, Mark T., Gabriele Suder, and Abigail Hall. 2016. “Negotiating the Transatlantic Relationship: An international, interdisciplinary simulation of a real-world negotiation.” PS: Political Science & Politics: 49(2): 333-338.
Nance, Mark T. and M. Patrick Cottrell. 2014. “A turn toward experimentalism? Re-thinking security and governance in the 21st century.” Review of International Studies 40(2): 277-301.
Struett, Michael J., Mark T. Nance, and Dianne Armstrong. 2013. “Navigating Complexity? Pitfalls for Cooperation in the Maritime Piracy Regime Complex.” Global Governance 19(1): 93-104.
Nance, Mark T. and Anja P. Jakobi. 2012. “Laundering Pirates? The potential role of anti-money laundering in countering maritime piracy.” Journal of International Criminal Justice 10: 857-880.
Trubek, Louise, Mark Nance, and Tamara Hervey. 2009. “The Construction of Healthier Europe: Lessons and Questions for EU Governance from the Fight Against Cancer.” Wisconsin International Law Journal 26(3): 804-843.
Book Chapters:
Nance, Mark T. 2015. “Naming and Shaming in Financial Regulation: Explaining Variation in the Financial Action Task Force on Money Laundering” in Friman, H. Richard (ed.), The Politics of Leverage in International Relations: Name, Shame and Sanction. New York: Palgrave Macmillan. Pp. 123-142.
Suder, Gabriele, Mark T. Nance, and Abigail Hall. 2014. “Improving IB Learning through Interdisciplinary Simulations: Lessons from a Mock-up of EU-US Trade Negotiations” in Taras, Vasyl and Maria Alejandra Gonzalez-Perez (eds), Experiential Learning in International Business. New York: Palgrave-Macmillan. Pp. 665-678.
Struett, Michael J. and Mark T. Nance (equal authorship). 2012. “Constructing Pirates, Piracy, and Governance: An Introduction” in Struett, Carlson, and Nance (eds.) Maritime Piracy and the Construction of Global Governance. New York: Routledge. Pp. 1-19.
Nance, Mark T. and Michael J. Struett (equal authorship). 2012. “Conflicting Constructions: Maritime Piracy and Cooperation under Regime Complexes” in Struett, Carlson, and Nance (eds.) Maritime Piracy and the Construction of Global Governance. New York: Routledge. Pp. 125-148.
Trubek, David M., Patrick Cottrell, and Mark Nance. 2006. “‘Soft Law,’ ‘Hard Law,’ and European Integration: Toward a Theory of Hybridity” in Scott, Joanne and Gráinne de Búrca (eds.), New Governance and Constitutionalism in Europe and the US. Oxford: Hart Publishing Ltd. Pp. 65-94.
Also published as: Trubek, David M., Patrick Cottrell, and Mark Nance. 2005. “‘Soft Law,’ ‘Hard Law,’ and European Integration: Toward a Theory of Hybridity.” Jean Monnet Working Paper 02/05. Jean Monnet Center for International and Regional Economic Law & Justice, New York University School of Law.
Works in Progress:
Crisis Capitalism: Bailing out the automobile industry in Sweden, Germany, and the US.
Other Publications:
Cobb, Michael D. and Mark T. Nance. 2011. “The Consequences of Measuring Non-Attitudes about Foreign Trade Preferences.” Survey Practice, December: http://www.surveypractice.org.
“The problem of tying education to jobs.” Op-ed in The Raleigh News & Observer. Sunday, October 13th, 2012.
King, Larry D. and Mark T. Nance. 2013. “Gerrymandering in North Carolina 1992-2012.” White Paper for Common Cause of North Carolina.
Selected Presentations:
“Re-thinking Compliance in a Complex Policy Environment” (with Bryan Early and M. Patrick Cottrell). International Studies Association Annual Meeting, Toronto, IL. March 25th, 2014.
“Capacity Building as Norm Diffusion and Elaboration: The lessons of UNSCR 1540” (with Bryan Early and M. Patrick Cottrell). International Studies Association Annual Meeting, Toronto IL. March 26th, 2014.
“Muddling Through: Transnational Experimentalism and the Financial Action Task Force.” Workshop on Transnational Experimentalism. University of Amsterdam. November 2nd, 2013.
“Re-Interpreting the Anti-Money Laundering Regime: Naming, Shaming, and Experimentalism in the Financial Action Task Force.” American Political Science Annual Meeting, Chicago, IL. September 1st, 2013.
“Trade with whom? The Impact of Non-Economic Factors on Preferences for Trade” (with Michael Cobb, Amancio Oliveira, and Janina Onuki). American Political Science Annual Meeting, Chicago, IL. August 29th, 2013.
“David beats Goliath Again? How ex-fishermen in dinghies beat the world’s most powerful navies and what it teaches us about international politics.” Invited presentation at Linfield College, McMinnville, OR. September 24th, 2012.
“Name, Shame, and FATF Efforts against Money Laundering.” Joint British International Studies Association-International Studies Association Meeting, Edinburgh, Scotland. June 22, 2012.
“The Gender Gap in Americans’ Foreign Trade Preferences: Different Values or Differential Rates of Non-Attitudes?” (with Michael D. Cobb). International Studies Association Annual Meeting, San Diego, CA. April 2, 2012.
“Regime Complex Integration” (with Michael J. Struett). International Studies Association Annual Meeting, San Diego, CA. April 1, 2012.
“Public Opinion and Trade” (with Michael D. Cobb). Center for the Study of International Business. University of Sao Paulo, Sau Paulo, Brazil. March 13th, 2012.
“Back to the Basics: How Measuring Non-Opinions Affects the Validity of Sociotropic Explanations of Foreign Trade Preferences.” American Political Science Association’s Annual Meeting, Seattle, WA. August 3, 2011.
“Putting off Pirates: Explaining Low Levels of Coordination against Maritime Piracy” (with Michael J. Struett). University of Bamberg’s Seminar on Institutional Interaction, Bamberg, Germany, July 12, 2011.
“Naming and Shaming in the Financial Action Task Force on Money Laundering.” Marquette University’s Center for Transnational Justice’s Conference, “Naming, Shaming, and Compliance,” Milwaukee, WI, May 13-14, 2011.
“Constructing Enforcement: The International Anti-Money Laundering Regime and the Interaction of Constructivist and Rationalist Dynamics.” American Political Science Association’s Annual Meeting, Toronto, Canada. September 3-6, 2009.
“A Stimulating Debate: Explaining Differences in US and European Responses to the Financial Crisis.” Eurasia in a Shifting in a Shifting Global Context: Building Interdisciplinary Bridges. Hosted by ACC-IAC and Koç University, Istanbul, Turkey. June 17-21, 2009.
“The Strange Case of the Posted Workers Directive: EU Law as Reflexive Coordination?” (with David Trubek). The European Court of Justice’s decisions in Laval and Viking, Cambridge University, Cambridge, England. September 19, 2008.
Research Experience:
Public Opinion – With Michael D. Cobb, developed and administered state-wide survey to gauge public opinion on free trade. Expanding to comparative project with University of Sao Paulo, Brazil.
Elite Interviews – Conducted with governmental and non-governmental actors in 7 countries.
Participant Observation – Participated in formal and informal meetings of transnational policy networks in 3 countries.
Text Analysis – Analyzed public and confidential documents using Atlas.ti.
Grant Support:
2014 Junior Faculty Development Award
2014 PI, International Studies Association Catalytic Workshop Grant For workshop on “Politics and Policy at the Energy-Security Nexus”
2013-2014 Co-PI, Energy & Security Initiative at NC State$20,000 from Kenan Institute for Engineering, Technology, & Science
2012-2013 PI, Comparative Public Opinion in the US and Brazil$5,000 from University Global Partnership Network
2004-2005 Fulbright-IIE Grant to the European Union
Courses Taught:
Graduate – International Political Economy; European Politics; Doing Business in Mexico (Monterrey, Mexico); Doing Business in Brazil (Sao Paulo, Brazil)
Undergraduate – Global Issues; International Political Economy; European Politics; History of European Politics; Spanish Culture and History
Honors & Awards:
2012-2013 Political Science Nominee for College of Humanities and Social Sciences Outstanding Junior Faculty Member Award
Professional Memberships:
American Political Science Association, International Studies Association, International Studies Association-South, International Political Economy Society
Languages:
German: fluent in speaking, reading, and writing
Spanish: proficient in speaking, reading, and writing
Public Service & Activities:
2012 – Present Board Member, Common Cause of North Carolina
References available upon request.