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Elizabeth Prodromou: Biographical Note
ELIZABETH PRODROMOU is an Assistant Professor in the Woodrow
Wilson School of Public and International Affairs at Princeton University,
where she teaches courses in comparative politics and international
relations. Prodromou is an area specialist dealing with Southeastern
Europe and the Eastern Mediterranean, and has published widely on issues of
democratization and religious change and, more recently, on issues of
culture and security. Her publications include "Democratization and
Religious Transformation'' in Europe's Southern Tier: Spain, Italy,
Portugal, and Greece (Diamandouros, Gunther, and Puhle, Johns Hopkins
University Press, forhcoming), "The Perception Paradox for Greece's
Post-Cold War Security," (Allison and Nicolaides, MIT Press, 1997) and
"Paradigms, Power and Identity: Rediscovering Religion and Regionalizing
Europe" (European Journal of Political Research, 1996). She is an active
member of several policy research groups, and currently is working on the
National Endowment for Democracy's Center for Democracy and Reconciliation
in Southeastern Europe, the Georgetown University Project on
Muslim-Orthodox Dialogue in America, and a Woodrow Wilson School Project on
Developing Markets and Democracy in Central Asia.
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