Faculty / Staff | ÁùºÏ±¦µä

ÁùºÏ±¦µä

Faculty / Staff

Staff

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Barbara A. Jeffrey

Departmental Secretary II
ÁùºÏ±¦µä
331 McCall Hall (MSCX)

bjeffrey@troy.edu
polsci@troy.edu

Telephone: (334) 670-5926

Chair and Directors

everhardt

Sharon Lindhorst Everhardt, Ph.D.

Interim Chair 

Associate Dean of Administration, College of Arts and Sciences

Associate Professor of Sociology

115 McCall Hall (MSCX)
ÁùºÏ±¦µä, AL 36082
severhardt@troy.edu
Telephone: 1-334-670-5926

Research 

Areas of Interest: Race, Class, Gender, and Clinical/Applied Sociology

Biography

Ph.D., Sociology, Wayne State University

Dr. Everhardt joined the ÁùºÏ±¦µä faculty in 2014. She teaches at both the undergraduate and graduate level. Her main research interests include the study of race, class, and gender, especially disenfranchised populations of women. In 2020, Dr. Everhardt earned certification as an AACS Clinical Sociologist who helps organizations and institutions resolve social issues related to the human condition.  She is currently researching the impact of horticultural programs on nutritional knowledge and food insecurity among female inmates in women’s correctional facilities. She has secured over $75,000 in USDA funding to support her gardens projects.  In 2020, she spearheaded the pursuit of a 1.9 mil Department of Education’s Strengthening Institutions Title III grant to improve student achievement and retention at ÁùºÏ±¦µä.  In December 2020, Dr. Hawkins awarded her with the Chancellor’s Excellence Award for her grant work.  

Further areas of interest include food, capital, self-sufficiency programs for low-income populations, and volunteerism. She enjoys incorporating service learning into her classes to allow students to gain real world understanding of the topics they are studying. Dr. Everhardt has been the recipient of numerous awards including the 2017 Teacher of the Year for ÁùºÏ±¦µä-Montgomery and the 2015 and the 2018 ÁùºÏ±¦µä-Montgomery Faculty Excellence Award. 

Ledet

Richard Ledet, Ph. D.

Associate Chair/ Associate Professor of Political Science
331C McCall Hall (MSCX)
ÁùºÏ±¦µä, AL 36082
rledet@troy.edu
Telephone: 1-334-670-5926

Research

Areas of Interest: Religion and politics, Research Methods and Applications, Political Culture and Civil Society, US Politics, Political and Democratic Development

Biography

Ph.D., Political Science, University of Notre Dame

Rich Ledet is currently an Associate Professor of Political Science at ÁùºÏ±¦µä, in ÁùºÏ±¦µä, Alabama. A former US Army Infantryman (1995-1997), and Infantry Squad Leader in the Louisiana National Guard (1997-2000), Ledet earned a Ph.D. in Political Science from the University of Notre Dame in 2011, and served as an Army Civilian field researcher in Afghanistan in 2012. He teaches American and Comparative politics courses, and conducts research into the political consequences of identity, culture, and religion, with an emphasis on state-building and democracy.

davis

G. Douglas Davis, Ph. D.

Director of MSIR Program / Professor
331A McCall Hall (MSCX)
ÁùºÏ±¦µä, AL 36082
gddavis@troy.edu
Telephone: 1-334-808-6280

Research

Areas of Interest: European Security, European IPE, Middle East Security, Research Methods

Biography

G. Doug Davis, PhD is the director of the Master's of Science in International Relations program at ÁùºÏ±¦µä where he is a European Security and Middle East regional expert. In addition to a masters and doctorate in political science from the University of Arizona, he has a European graduate degree from the Pontificia Università Lateranense. He has published academic papers and is the author, with Dr Michael Slobodchikoff, of a book that was recently published titled Cultural Imperialism and the Decline of the Liberal Order: Russian and Western Soft Power in Eastern Europe. His academic work has been translated and published in nine languages. He has international development experience in the Middle East where he has worked on projects funded by the European Union, Italian government, and the World Bank. He has international banking experience and has worked to open financial institutions internationally.  He has done work at multiple Polish universities and in 2020 was a visiting scholar at the University of Zagreb.  In 2019, he and colleagues were awarded a NATO public diplomacy grant to host the NATO at Seventy: A Strategic Examination of the Past, Present, and Future of the Atlantic Alliance Conference at ÁùºÏ±¦µä.  He is contributor and co-editor of a book that will come out in the fall of 2021 titled The Challenge to NATO: Global Security and the Atlantic Alliance.

Dr. Guo-Brennan

Michael Guo-Brennan, Ph. D.

Director of the MPA Program / Associate Professor
331B McCall Hall (MSCX)
ÁùºÏ±¦µä, AL 36082
mbrennan@troy.edu 
Telephone: 1-334-808-6387

Research
Areas of Interest: Civic Capacity and Community Engagement, Global Competency in Public Administration, Education Policy, Immigration Policy, Comparative Policy and Politics, and Emergency Management

Biography
Ph.D. Urban and Public Affairs, University of Louisville

Dr. Michael Guo-Brennan is an Associate Professor in the Department of Political Science at ÁùºÏ±¦µä. His teaching is focused on global competency in public administration, public/non-profit policy and administration, organizational leadership, ethics in public administration, educational policy, migration, emergency management, and diversity issues in public administration and urban education. His research addresses critical issues in public policy and administration from a global perspective, urban education reform, immigration policy and crisis management.

Department Faculty

Bailey

Melissa Bailey, Ph. D.

Assistant Professor of Public Administration
ÁùºÏ±¦µä Online
327B McCall Hall (MSCX)
ÁùºÏ±¦µä, AL 36082
 mbailey97613@troy.edu
Telephone: 334-808-6710

Research

Areas of Interest: nonprofit management and leadership, grant writing and management, public value, cross-sector collaborations, education policy

Biography

BS, University of West Alabama

MPA, Auburn University Montgomery

Ph.D. Public Administration and Public Policy, Auburn University

Dr. Melissa Bailey is a native of Berry, AL. She joined the faculty at ÁùºÏ±¦µä in 2018. Dr. Bailey has over 13 years of nonprofit and government experience. With broad experience in nonprofit administration, she has managed fundraising campaigns and events that engaged board members, mobilized volunteers, and dramatically increased giving. She is also an expert grant writer and manager. She was recognized for her outstanding contributions to the Alabama Department of Homeland Security by Governor Bob Riley. She was awarded a Black Excellence Award in the area of nonprofit leadership for exemplifying excellence in the Shoals community. And she recently received the distinction of being the University of West Alabama’s Most Distinguished Alumni in the College of Liberal Arts.

Campbell

Joel Campbell, Ph. D.

Associate Professor of International Relations
18 FSS/FSDE
APO, AP 96368-5134
 jrcampbell@troy.edu
Telephone: DSN 634-5365 +81-611-734-5365

Research

Areas of Interest: Politics and Political Economy of Northeast and Southeast Asia, Science and Technology Policy, International Security, International Political History, and Film and Politics 

Biography

Ph.D., Political Science, Miami University (Ohio)

Joel R. Campbell is an Associate Professor of Political Science in the Pacific Region (Japan and Korea) of the Global Campus program of ÁùºÏ±¦µä. He teaches in the Masters of Science in International Relations (MSIR) program. He has served as faculty chair for the ÁùºÏ±¦µä Pacific Region, has been a member of the Institutional Review Board and the Faculty Senate. He is now on the Undergraduate Academic Council. He has taught at global political economy at Tohoku University, politics and economics at Miyazaki International College and political economy and business at Kansai Gaidai University in Japan, as well as international relations at Chung Ang University, political economy and public policy at Kyung Hee University and East Asian political history at Yonsei University in Korea. He has published extensively on his principal research interests, the politics and political economy of Northeast Asia, along with technology policy and international security

Craig

Kern W. Craig, Ph. D.

Associate Professor
ÁùºÏ±¦µä Online
kcraig38002@troy.edu
Telephone: 1-850-301-2125

Research

Research interests: political economy

Biography

Ph. D., University of Mississippi

Professor Craig began teaching for ÁùºÏ±¦µä in 2004. He previously taught for a number of other colleges and universities since his wife’s career as an Air Force officer required many moves.

His academic qualifications include a B.Sc. in Business Administration from California State University, an M.B.A. in Management from Fairleigh Dickinson University, and a Ph.D. in Political Science from the University of Mississippi.

Professor Craig's doctoral dissertation was entitled "Empirical Tests of Dependency Theory in the Contemporary Commonwealth Caribbean."

Dr. Tammy Esteves

Tammy Esteves, Ph. D.

Assistant Professor of Public Administration
MPA Internship Coordinator
ÁùºÏ±¦µä Online
tlesteves@troy.edu
Telephone: 321-209-2990

Research

Areas of Interest: Social Media use for civic engagement, and emergency preparedness and response, Sustainability, eLearning, and the Role of Technology in Building Community

Biography

BA, American Government, University of Virginia
MPA, James Madison University
Ph.D, Public Administration and Public Affairs, Virginia Tech

Tammy Barnett Esteves, Ph.D., is a native Virginian, now living in Orlando. Dr. Esteves ("Dr. E" to her students) brings both practical and academic experience to the field of public administration. She has been a full-time faculty member with ÁùºÏ±¦µä's MPA program since 2002. Prior to TROY, she taught for Christopher Newport University, the University of Richmond, and Indiana State University. She has also taught individual courses for NC State, Virginia Commonwealth University, James Madison University and The Presidio Graduate School. Prior to entering the world of academia, her practical experiences included work as training coordinator for Virginia Blood Services; human resources director for International AutoSport; community services coordinator for the Jefferson Area Board for Aging; development coordinator for the Virginia Discovery Museum; and Interim Executive Director for Avalon, a women's shelter in Williamsburg, Virginia. 

Dr. Esteves is very active in the American Society for Public Administration and the International Leadership Association. She primarily teaches Research Methods, Leadership in Public Administration, eGovernance, Public Health Preparedness and Emergency Response, and in 21-22 will offer a new course, Social Marketing. Her main research interest is the role of technology for building community, particularly in the areas of social media, smart cities, and civictech. She brings these interests into the classroom with creative assignments to get students to think outside the box and make connections to the world around them, encouraging whole person education and lifelong learning.

Gibson

Pamela A. Gibson, Ph. D.

Associate Professor of Public Administration
ÁùºÏ±¦µä Online
pagibson@troy.edu 

Research

Areas of Interest: Ethics and Moral Development, Citizen Participation in Policy Formation, Research-Practice Gap, and Cyberbullying

Biography

Ph.D., Public Policy and Administration, Virginia Commonwealth University

Dr. Pamela A. Gibson is an Associate Professor at ÁùºÏ±¦µä.  Prior to joining ÁùºÏ±¦µä, she taught for Old Dominion University and individual courses for the University of Virginia, University of Richmond, Virginia Commonwealth University and Christopher Newport University. She earned her PhD in Public Policy and Administration from Virginia Commonwealth University, a Master of Public Administration degree from VCU and a Bachelor of Arts in Psychology from the University of Virginia. 

Prior to entering academia, she served the public in professional positions in the mental health field as Services Coordinator for Cobb and Douglas County Board of Health; consultant for the Kennedy Institute in Washington and Center for Community Development in Maryland; and Director of Residential Services for Rock Creek Foundation of Maryland and Butler County Pennsylvania. 

Her research interests include administrative ethics and immigration policy, cyber-service in the public sphere, and empirical assessment of moral reasoning. Her research has been published in Human Resource Management Review, Public Administration Quarterly, Journal of Public Affairs Education, Ethics & Behavior and Public Integrity.

Hayes

David R. Hayes, Ph. D.

Assistant Professor of International Relations
ÁùºÏ±¦µä Online
dhayes@troy.edu 
Telephone: 1-910-286-1871

Research

Areas of Interest: International Political Economy, International Relations Theory, International Power, and Terrorism

Biography

Dr Hayes grew up in NJ and attended Drew University as an undergrad. While in college, he  also joined the Army National Guard and then participated in Army ROTC at Seton Hall University. He was branched in to the Field Artillery and  assigned to the Field Artillery Training Center at Fort Sill, OK from 1986-1989. He left active duty to pursue a PhD. at the University of Rochester (1989-1993) and continued to serve in the Army National Guard with the 209th FA Brigade  until 1993. He studied at the Hoover Institution at Stanford before being hired  by, then, ÁùºÏ±¦µä State University in 1995 to teach under contract at the John F Kennedy Special Warfare Center and School. When that contract was terminated in 2001, he continued to teach online and at the Fayetteville, NC site.

henshaw

Alexis Henshaw, Ph. D.

Associate Professor of Political Science
321A McCall Hall (MSCX) 
ÁùºÏ±¦µä, AL 36082
ahenshaw@troy.edu

Research

Research Interests: civil wars, gender issues in international politics, and post-conflict transitions in Latin America

Biography

ALEXIS HENSHAW is an Assistant Professor at ÁùºÏ±¦µä. Her research
interests include civil wars, gender issues in international politics, and post-conflict transitions in Latin America. She is the author of Why
Women Rebel: Understanding Women’s Participation in Armed Rebel Groups (Routledge, 2017) and co-author of Insurgent Women: Female Combatants in Civil Wars (Georgetown University Press, 2019). Her
research has appeared in Journal of Global
Security Studies, International Feminist Journal of Politics
and a variety of other peer-reviewed outlets. Dr. Henshaw has also written for The Conversation and The Monkey Cage, the political blog of The Washington
Post. She received her Ph.D. in Political Science from the
University of Arizona.

Kolasa

Thomas Kolasa, Ph. D.

Assistant Professor of Political Science
312G McCall Hall (MSCX)
ÁùºÏ±¦µä, AL 36082
tskolasa@troy.edu 
Telephone: 1-334-808-6507

Research

Areas of Interest: Comparative Politics, American Politics, Political Theory

Biography

Originally from a suburb of Detroit, MI, received a dual BA in Political Science & History at the University of Michigan in 1990.  Dr. Kolasa went on to receive his Ph.D. in Political Science (Comparative, American, Theory) at Washington University in St. Louis MO in 1999.  After graduating, he did research and taught for many years in the St. Louis area before moving to Montgomery, AL.  Dr. Kolasa joined ÁùºÏ±¦µä in 2007, and has since obtained tenure and teach at the ÁùºÏ±¦µä and Online campuses.

McDaniel

Dayna McDaniel, Ph. D.

Senior Lecturer of Public Administration
ÁùºÏ±¦µä Online
dmcdaniel@troy.edu

Research

Areas of interest: Public Health and Personnel Management

Biography

Ph.D., Public Administration, University of Alabama

Dr. Dayna McDaniel holds a Doctorate in Public Administration from the University of Alabama, an M.S. in Management, and a B.S. in Political Science.  

Academic Experience: College instructor since 1990, Full-time instructor for ÁùºÏ±¦µä University teaching research methods, public personnel, and public health courses. Dr. McDaniel has taught as adjunct Professor for UWF, Embry Riddle, Barry University, OWCC, St Leo, and other colleges in Management Graduate and Undergraduate, Health Service Administration, and Public Administration. Her academic research has been in the areas of instructor online training and better communication with online students and advising online.  She also has developed several internal organizations for the faculty and students use in which led to published articles as well as consulting with other departments and other educational institutions on the models.   

Public Administration Experience; Dr. Dr. McDaniel began her political science career as an White House intern for the White House News Summary Office at White House Washington DC under the Reagan Administration and later became a  Legislative Aid for Florida State House of Representatives in the Panhandle. Dr. McDaniel also had local county employment experience with her teaching career that began as an elementary (1-2nd Grade) and high school (algebra) teacher at Riverside, CA.  

Military Career Experience:  In Dr. McDaniel's military career, she is a retired Lt. Colonel in the Air Force Reserve Hospital Administrator (last assigned to HQ Air Force Special Operations Surgeon's office, Hurlburt Field) as the augmenter for the Command's Health Service Administrator. Lt. Col. McDaniel's past assignments are as follows: Mission Coordinator for Humanitarian Civic Action Missions in South America for the 919 Medical Squadron and Medical Readiness Officer, interim Squadron Hospital Administrator for the 919 Medical Squadron, Air Evacuation Operations officer for "live" patient missions on flying status for 68 Air Evacuation Squadron Norton AFB, CA (several patient evacuation missions accomplished throughout the European and Pacific theater); Director of Personnel for the 414 Medical Squadron, March AFB, CA.

Pinkston

Daniel A. Pinkston, Ph. D.

Lecturer of International Relations
51 FSS/FSDE
APO AP 96278-2065
dapinkston@troy.edu
Telephone: 011-82-2-7913-7508

Research

Areas of Interest: Politics, security, and political economy of Northeast Asia; authoritarian politics; North Korea, WMD proliferation.

Biography

Ph.D. International Affairs, University of California, San Diego

rutkowski

Adam G. Rutkowski, Ph.D.

Assistant Professor of Political Science
329 McCall Hall (MSCX)
ÁùºÏ±¦µä, AL 36082
arutkowski@troy.edu
Telephone: 1-334-670-3754

Research 

Areas of interest: American politics, judicial politics, federal judicial selection and behavior, separation of powers.

Biography

B.A., Political Science, Augusta University 
Ph.D., Political Science & International Affairs, The University of Georgia

Dr. Adam G. Rutkowski is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Political Science at ÁùºÏ±¦µä. He teaches courses on American government, judicial process, and constitutional law. Originally from Thomson, GA, Dr. Rutkowski earned a BA in Political Science from Augusta University in Augusta, GA, and a PhD in Political Science & International Affairs from the The University of Georgia (American Politics, Political Methodology). 

At ÁùºÏ±¦µä, Dr. Rutkowski serves as the Pre-Law Advisor for Political Science majors and as an advisor for ÁùºÏ±¦µä's Accelerated Law program. He is also the faculty advisor for the Pre-Law Society. 

Dr. Rutkowski's research encompasses American politics, with a special focus on the judicial branch. He is particularly interested in federal judicial selection and behavior. His research has appeared in Open Judicial Politics, Politics, Groups, & Identities, and Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Politics

Sherrill

Clifton Sherrill, Ph. D.

Professor of International Relations

18 FSS/FSDE
APO, AP 96368-5134

csherrill@troy.edu

Research
Areas of Interest:  Strategic studies; National security; Nuclear strategy; Iranian politics; Japanese defense policy

Biography
Ph.D., International Relations, Florida State University
M.S., Defense & Strategic Studies, Missouri State University
J.D., University of Arkansas at Little Rock School of Law

Dr. Sherrill is a Marine Corps veteran, a member of the Florida Bar, and a former counterterrorism analyst with the FBI.  He is the author of Losing Legitimacy: The End of Khomeini's Charismatic Shadow and Regional Security and has published in numerous academic journals including Comparative Strategy, Orbis, Nonproliferation Review, Asian International Studies Review, Journal of Asian Security and International Affairs, Middle East Policy, Strategic Insights, and Asian Affairs: An American Review.  Dr. Sherrill teaches a variety of national security courses in ÁùºÏ±¦µä's graduate International Relations program.

slobodchikoff

Michael O. Slobodchikoff, Ph.D. 

Professor of Political Science
334 McCall Hall (MSCX)
ÁùºÏ±¦µä, AL 36082
mslobodchikoff@troy.edu
Telephone: (334) 670-5926 
spectrum.troy.edu/mslobodchikoff

Research

Areas of Interest: Russia, Former Soviet Union, International Cooperation, Networks, International Law, Security, International Conflict

Biography

Ph.D., Political Science, University of Arizona

Michael O. Slobodchikoff, PhD, Professor of Political Science, is founding director of the Center for Eastern and Central European, Russian, and Eurasian Studies at ÁùºÏ±¦µä University. Among his many books are: India as Kingmaker:  Status Quo or Revisionist Power;  Building Hegemonic Order Russia's Way; Cultural Imperialism and the Decline of the Liberal Order:  Russian and Western Soft Power in Eastern Europe (with G. Doug Davis); and the co-edited volume, The Challenge to NATO:  Global Security and the Atlantic Alliance. Dr. Slobodchikoff is a leading expert on treaty networks and the creation of global and regional order.  He specializes in Russian security, international conflict, and peace. He is a regular contributor to BBC World News and Asharq Al-Awsat News. 

stewart

Brandon Stewart, Ph. D.

Assistant Professor of Political Science
132E McCall Hall (MSCX)
ÁùºÏ±¦µä, AL 36082
bstewart169746@troy.edu
Telephone: 1-334-808-6798

Research

Research Interests: Ethnic Politics, Political Violence, East European Politics, and African Politics

Biography

Brandon Stewart is an Assistant Professor of Political Science at ÁùºÏ±¦µä.  Dr. Stewart received his PhD in Political Science from the University of North Texas. His primary research interests include Ethnic Politics, Political Violence, East European Politics, and African politics. You can find his research published in journals such as Nationalism and Ethnic Politics and Social Science Quarterly.

Sun

Feng Sun, Ph. D.

Associate Professor of International Relations
312D McCall Hall (MSCX)
ÁùºÏ±¦µä, AL 36082
fsun57924@troy.edu
Telephone: 1-334-808-6288

Biography

Dr. Sun is an associate professor of Political Science at ÁùºÏ±¦µä. She received her MS in Statistics, MA and Ph.D. in political science from the University of Alabama. Her research interests include contemporary Chinese politics, foreign direct investment, and development in developing countries. 

Taylor

Steven L. Taylor, Ph.D.

Dean, College of Arts & Sciences-ÁùºÏ±¦µä Campus Professor of International Relations
115 MSCX
ÁùºÏ±¦µä Campus

Research

Research Interests: democratic institutions, parties, and elections in a comparative context with a geographical focus on Latin America

Biography

Ph.D., Government, University of Texas at Austin

Steven L. Taylor earned his BA in Political Science from the University of California, Irvine in 1990 and his Ph.D. in Government from the University of Texas at Austin in 1996. He joined the faculty of then ÁùºÏ±¦µä State University in 1998, serving in a faculty role and eventually as Chair of the Political Science Department until his appointment as Dean of Arts and Sciences in March of 2016. His main areas of academic expertise are those of democratic institutions, parties, and elections in a comparative context with a geographical focus on Latin America. He is the author of Voting amid Violence: Electoral Democracy in Colombia (Northeastern University Press, 2009) as well as articles, book chapters, and reference entries on Colombian politics. His most recent book is A Different Democracy: American Government in a Thirty-One Country Perspective (Yale, 2014) which he co-authored with Matthew S. Shugart, Arend Lijphart and Bernard Grofman.

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