|
|
James E. Hanley,
Ph.D.
email: jhanley {at} adrian {dot} edu
Current Position
- Department Chair, Adrian College.
- Assistant Professor of Political Science, Adrian College.
-
Fellow, Institute for Social Policy and Understanding.
Publications
-
Evolutionary Psychology and a More Satisfactory Model of Human Agency. With Jason Hartwig, Tomonori Morikawa, and John Orbell. In Cooperation: A Powerful Force in Human Relations. Edited by Brandon A. Sullivan, Mark Snyder, and John L. Sullivan. Malden MA: Blackwell Publishing. 2007.
- The Consequences of 9/11: Decline and Resurgence of International Students in the United States. With Jeffrey S. Schroeder. Muslim Public Affairs Journal. July, 2006.
-
Putting the Immigration Debate into Context. Institute for Social Policy and Understanding, Policy Brief #16. http://www.ispu.us/pages/policies/3070/articleDetailPB.html
- Institutional Failure in the Response to Hurricane Katrina. Muslim Public Affairs Journal. Jan. 2006. Republished by the Institute for Social Policy and Understanding.
- Review of Problems and Methods in the Study of Politics, Edited by Ian Shapiro, Rogers M. Smith, and Tarek Masoud. Cambridge, U.K.: Cambridge University Press, 2004. Perspectives on Politics, Dec. 2005.
-
Machiavellian Intelligence and the Evolutionary Origin of Cooperative
Dispositions
,
With John Orbell, Tomonori Morikawa, Jason Hartwig, and Nicholas Allen.
American Political Science Review. 98(1):1-33. February 2004.
-
Conflict, Interpersonal Assessment, and the Evolution of Cooperation:
Simulation Results,
with John Orbell and Tomonori Morikawa. In
Trust and Reciprocity: Interdisciplinary Lessons from Experimental Research
, edited by Elinor Ostrom and James Walker. Russell Sage: 2003.
-
The Cost of Mis-Information in Deadly Conflicts: Hawk-Dove Games and Suicidal
Terrorism,
with John Orbell and Tomonori Morikawa.
Politics and the Life Sciences
, March 2002.
-
Cognitive Requirements for Conflict of Interest Games: A Functional Analysis
for Evolutionary Design
,
with Tomonori Morikawa and John Orbell.
Politics and the Life Sciences
, March 2002.
|