Judith Kelley

Dean of the Sanford School of Public Policy at Sanford School of Public Policy

Schools

  • Sanford School of Public Policy

Links

Biography

Sanford School of Public Policy

Judith Kelley became the Dean of the Sanford School of Public Policy in July 2018.
 
Kelley, an expert on international relations, researches how international actors can promote democratic and human rights reforms. Kelley is also a senior fellow with the Kenan Institute for Ethics and an elected member of the board of the journal International Organization. 

Kelley''s work focuses on how states, international organizations, and NGOs can promote domestic political reforms in problem states, and how international norms, laws and other governance tools influence state behavior. Substantively, her work addresses human rights and democracy, international election observation, and human trafficking. Past work has focused on the International Criminal Court, the European Union, and other international organizations. Details on her election monitoring project are on the web at Project on International Election Monitoring. 

Her newest work focuses on the global fight against human trafficking. She is leading a major research project to study the effectiveness of the diplomacy of the United States on human trafficking. She is the PI on a grant from the National Science Foundation for this project. Her work has been published by Princeton University Press, Cambridge University Press, and in journals such as American Political Science Review, American Journal of Political Science, International Organization, International Studies Quarterly, and the Journal of Common Market Studies.

Her book, Monitoring Democracy: When International Election Observation Works and Why It Often Fails (Princeton 2012) was "One of Choice''s Outstanding Academic Titles for 2013" and also received the Chadwick F. Alger Prize, which is awarded by the International Studies Association to recognize the "best book published in the previous calendar year on the subject of international organization and multilateralism." Her newest book, Scorecard Diplomacy: Grading States to Influence their Reputation and Behavior (Cambridge University Press, 2017), is on human trafficking and the rising phenomenon of global ratings and rankings. More about the book can be found at www.scorecarddiplomacy.org.

In 2012, Kelley was inducted into the Bass Society of Fellows at Duke, which recognizes faculty for excellence in both teaching and scholarship. Kelley has also been awarded the Sanford School’s Susan E. Tifft Undergraduate Teaching and Mentoring Award, and she was the 2016 inaugural recipient of the Brownell-Whetten Award for Diversity and Inclusion. The Smith Richardson Foundation has supported her as a Policy and Strategy Fellow. In 2009-2010 she was a visiting fellow at the University of Aarhus, Denmark. She also was elected Chair of the Editorial Board of International Organization.

Areas of Expertise

  • Emerging democracies
  • International Relations
  • Election Monitoring
  • Ethnic Conflict
  • European Union
  • Foreign Policy--United States
  • Global Governance
  • Globalization
  • International Organizations
  • Non-state actors
  • United Nations

Education

Ph.D., Harvard University (2001)

M.P.P., Harvard University (1997)

B.A., Stanford University (1995)

Videos

Read about executive education

Other experts

Reuben Ng

A Fulbright Scholar, Dr. Reuben Ng trained as a behavioural scientist at NUS, Oxford and Yale. He spent 16 years in government, consulting, and research. In government, he was in the Prime Minister’s Office driving evidence-based policymaking through data analytics and Singapore's Smart Nation st...

Gwen Yu

Gwen Yu is the Arthur Andersen Associate Professor at the Ross School of Business, University of Michigan. Prior to joining Ross, she was an Associate Professor at Harvard Business School in the Accounting and Management unit. Her research focuses on how accounting information affects various re...

Looking for an expert?

Contact us and we'll find the best option for you.

Something went wrong. We're trying to fix this error.