Curriculum Vitae ANN HIRONAKA Department of Sociology University of California -- Irvine 3151 Social Sciences Plaza Irvine, CA 92697 hironaka@uci.edu POSITIONS 2007- present Associate Professor, Department of Sociology University of California Irvine 2006 2007 Associate Professor, Department of Sociology University of Minnesota 2000-2006 Assistant Professor, Department of Sociology University of Minnesota EDUCATION 1998 Ph.D. Sociology, Stanford University Boundaries of War: Historical Changes in Types of Warmaking, 1816-1980 (John Meyer, adviser; Lynn Eden, Nancy Tuma, committee) 1996 M.A. Sociology, Stanford University 1989 B.A. Psychology, Stanford University, with honors PUBLICATIONS Books 2005 Hironaka, Ann. Neverending Wars: The International Community, Weak States, and the Perpetuation of Civil War. Cambridge: Harvard University Press. Articles and Chapters Forthcoming Dahlin, Eric and Ann Hironaka. Citizenship Beyond Borders: A Cross- 1
National Study of Dual Citizenship. Sociological Inquiry. 2005 Schofer, Evan and Ann Hironaka. World Society and Environmental Protection Outcomes. Social Forces. 84(1):25-47. 2003 Hironaka, Ann. Science and the Environment. Pp. 484-515 in Science in the Modern World Polity. G. Drori, J. Meyer, F. Ramirez and E. Schofer. Stanford: Stanford University Press. 2002 Hironaka, Ann. The Globalization of Environmental Protection: The Case of Environmental Impact Assessment. International Journal of Comparative Sociology 43(1):65-78. 2002 Hironaka, Ann. Changing Meanings, Changing Institutions: An Institutional Analysis of Patent Legislation. Sociological Inquiry. 72(1):108-30. 2002 Hironaka, Ann and Evan Schofer. Decoupling in the Environmental Arena: the case of environmental impact assessments. Pp. 214-231 in Andrew J. Hoffman and Marc J. Ventresca (eds.) Organizations, Policy and The Natural Environment. Stanford: Stanford University Press. 2000 Frank, David John, Ann Hironaka and Evan Schofer. The Nation-State and the Natural Environment Over the Twentieth Century. American Sociological Review. 65:96-116. Reprinted in Michael R. Redclift (ed.) New Developments in Environmental Sociology. Northampton, MA: Edward Elgar. 2004, 2005. 2000 Frank, David John, Ann Hironaka and Evan Schofer. Environmentalism as a Global Institution: Reply to Buttel. American Sociological Review. 65:122-127. Reprinted in Michael R. Redclift (ed.) New Developments in Environmental Sociology. Northampton, MA: Edward Elgar. 2004, 2005. 1999 Frank, David John, Ann Hironaka, John W. Meyer, Evan Schofer, and Nancy Brandon Tuma. The Rationalization and Organization of Nature in World Culture. Pp. 81-99 in Constructing World Culture: International Nongovernmental Organizations Since 1875. Edited by John Boli and George M. Thomas. Stanford: Stanford University Press. 2
1997 Meyer, John W. David John Frank, Ann Hironaka, Evan Schofer, and Nancy Brandon Tuma. The Structuring of a World Environmental Regime, 1870-1990. International Organization. 51(4):623-51. Reprinted in Georg Kruecken (ed.) "Die Entstehung eines globalen Umweltschutzregimes von 1870 bis 1990." Pp. 235-275 in John W. Meyer: Weltkultur: Wie die westlichen Prinzipien die Welt durchdringen, translated by Barbard Kuchler. Frankdurt: Suhrkamp, 2005. WORK IN PROGRESS Book Project: Tokens of Power: The International Community and the Formation of State Interests How do states know what lies in their national interest? The concept of state interests plays a central role in theories of state behavior, but has received little theoretical attention. I develop a theoretical explanation of state interest formation in which changes in shared understandings among members of the international community particularly regarding prestige and status -- resulted in substantial changes in perceptions of national interests and in dramatic shifts in state behavior over time. To understand these influences of the international community on state interests, I plan to look at four historical cases of broad state interest formation: 1) the decline of wars of territorial expansion, 2) the development of European colonial empires in Africa, 3) European military preparations for World War I, and 4) the competition to acquire nuclear weapons in the late twentieth century. USIP Grant Project: The Long-Term Consequences of Civil War Interventions Interstate interventions in civil wars frequently achieve the short-term objectives of intervening Great Power states. In the longer run, however, intervention may create lasting domestic instability and antipathy towards the intervening state that undermines the long-term influence of the intervener. I propose to examine both the short-term and the longer-term outcomes of all Great Power interventions in civil wars since 1945 in terms of whether the target state has a government favorable to the intervening state and whether civil war has recurred in one, five, and twenty years following the intervention. PRESENTATIONS 2006 Hironaka, Ann. The Formation of Military Strategy. Presented to the Department of Sociology, University of California Irvine. December 2006. 3
2006 Polanska, Katarzyna and Ann Hironaka. The Effects of a Minority Rights Regime in Europe on Mobilization around Ethnicity: The case of the Roma. Presented at the American Sociological Association meetings, Montreal, Quebec. August. 2005 Hironaka, Ann. The Formation of State Interests. Presented at the Columbia University International Politics Seminar. Columbia University. 2004 Hironaka, Ann. Neverending Wars. Hironaka, Ann. Presented at the Henry M. Jackson School of International Studies. University of Washington. 2004 Hironaka, Ann. How Do States Know What They Want? The International Community and the Social Construction of State Interests. Presented at the Department of Sociology, University of Arizona. 2004 Hironaka, Ann. How Do States Know What They Want? The International Community and the Social Construction of State Interests. Presented at the Center for International Security and Cooperation, Stanford University. 2002 Hironaka, Ann. The Endurance of Civil Wars, 1945-1990. Presentation at the Social Science History Association meetings, St. Louis, MO: October. 2002 Hironaka, Ann. Latin American Indigenous Peoples and the Global Indigenous Rights Movement. Presented at the American Sociological Association meetings, Chicago, IL: August. 2002 Hassner, Ron and Ann Hironaka. Can Time Cure All Wounds: findings from intractable territorial disputes. Presented at the International Studies Association meetings, New Orleans, LA: March. 2001 Hironaka, Ann. Effects of International Linkage on Democratization. Presented at the American Sociological Association meetings, Los Angeles, CA: August. 2001 Schofer, Evan and Ann Hironaka. International Environmental Organizations and National Environmental Protection, 1980-1995. Presented at the American Sociological Association meetings, Los Angeles, CA: August. 1999 Frank, David John, Ann Hironaka, and Evan Schofer. The Nation-State and the Natural Environment. Presented at the American Sociological Association meetings, Chicago, IL: August. 4
1998 Hironaka, Ann. The Institutionalization and Organization of a Global Environmental Solution: the case of environmental impact assessment legislation. Presented at the American Sociological Association meetings, San Francisco, CA: August. 1997 Hironaka, Ann. The Decline of the Colonial Empire and the Rise of the Nation-State. Presented at the American Sociological Association meetings, Toronto, Canada: August. 1994 Schofer, Evan and Ann Hironaka. The Globalization of Invention: the international diffusion of the patent system. Presented at the American Sociological Association meetings, Los Angeles, CA: August. 1993 Hironaka, Ann. Sociologies of War: Realist and Institutionalist Arguments on the Rise of the Military-Industrial Complex. Presented at the Social Science History Association meetings, Baltimore, MD: November. HONORS AND AWARDS 2007 University of Minnesota Sabbatical Supplement. The Consequences of Interstate Interventions. 2006 United States Institute of Peace. Long Term Outcomes in Civil War Interventions. ($39,660) 2006 University of Minnesota. Residential Fellow at the University of Minnesota Institute for Advanced Study. 2005 University of Minnesota Graduate Research Partnership Program, with Katarzyna Polanska. European Integration and the Development of a Minority Rights Regime in Europe. 2004 University of Minnesota Graduate Research Partnership Program, with Eric Dahlin. Historical Changes in the Conception of Citizenship. 2004 University of Minnesota. Single Semester Leave. The Historical Construction and Reconstruction of State Interests. 2003 Center for International Security and Cooperation, Stanford University. Visiting Scholar. 5
2003 University of Minnesota. Department of Sociology. Faculty Mentoring Award. 2003 University of Minnesota Faculty Summer Research Fellowship. The International Community and the Perpetuation of Civil War. 2003 University of Minnesota. Department of Sociology/CLA Underrepresented Graduate Student Faculty Research Partnership Award. With Tiffany Davis. Racial Identities of Black Middle Class Americans. 2003 University of Minnesota Undergraduate Research Partnership Program, with Kyle Jones. Residential Choices of African-Americans in the Twin Cities. 2002 University of Minnesota Graduate Research Partnership Program, with Joyce Bell. Political Opportunities and the Relationship between Moderate and Radical Protest Politics. 2001-03 National Academy of Education/Spencer Postdoctoral Fellow The Effects of Higher Education on Transitions to Political Democracy 2001 Life Course Center Research Grant The Effects of Tertiary Education on Democratic Development 1995 MacArthur Consortium Pre-Doctoral Fellow, Center for International Security and Cooperation, Stanford University COURSES TAUGHT Introduction to Sociology, University of Minnesota Sociology of Ethnic and Racial Conflict, University of Minnesota Sociological Perspectives on Race, Class and Gender, University of Minnesota 27209412Sociological Methods: Computer Assisted Data Analysis, Stanford University Sociology of the Environment in Developing Countries, Stanford University Sociology of Gender, Northwestern University Major Project Seminar, University of Minnesota Graduate Seminar: Democracy and Development, University of Minnesota Graduate Seminar: Power of the State, University of Minnesota GRADUATE ADVISOR/COMMITTEE MEMBER 6
Maureen Clark Tim Clark Ph.D. 2006, Sociology -- Tiffany Davis Joseph Esser Ph.D. candidate, Anthropology Aysegul Kozak Wesley Longhofer Katarzyna Polanska Mayumi Uno Shawn Wick PROFESSIONAL ACTIVITIES Editorial Board Member: Reviewer: Sociological Inquiry American Journal of Sociology Comparative Political Studies Current Sociology Journal of World Systems International Studies Quarterly Policy Studies Journal Sociological Inquiry National Science Foundation Memberships: American Sociological Association; American Political Science Association; International Studies Association REFERENCES John W. Meyer Daniel Chirot Lynn Eden Department of Sociology, Stanford (650) 723-1868 Email: meyer@stanford.edu Henry M. Jackson School of International Studies University of Washington (206) 685-2412 Email: chirot@u.washington.edu Center for International Security and Cooperation, Stanford (650) 723-5369 Email: lynneden@stanford.edu 7