Virginia Tilley
Virginia Tilley (born 1953) is an American political scientist specialising in the comparative study of ethnic and racial conflict. She is Chair and Professor of Political Science at Southern Illinois University-Carbondale in the USA.
Background
Tilley holds a BA in Political Science from Antioch College (1985) and an MA from the Centre for Contemporary Arab Studies at Georgetown (1988). She completed an MA and PhD in Political Science at the University of Wisconsin-Madison (1997),[1] where she studied comparative politics and theories of ethnic, racial and national identities under Professor M. Crawford Young and international relations theory under Professors Michael Barnett and Emanuel Adler.
After finishing her MA in Arab Studies at Georgetown, she had served as Assistant Director of the International Organisation for the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination (EAFORD) in Washington DC, where she developed a second field in the politics of indigenous peoples.[2] This interest led her to focus her doctoral dissertation on the politics of 'being Indian' or indigeneity in Latin America, published in 2005 as Seeing Indians: A Study of Race, Nation and Power in El Salvador (University of New Mexico Press).[3]
In 1997, Tilley joined the Department of Political Science at Hobart and William Smith Colleges where she taught courses on Latin American politics, the politics of development, and Middle East politics, as well as introductory courses on international relations and comparative politics and senior seminars on comparative racial and ethnic conflict.[4] With Professor Kevin Dunne, she developed the International Relations Major and served as Co-coordinator, and for several years led the Development Studies minor. She was appointed as Associate Professor in 2003[5] but in 2005 took leave to conduct research in South Africa, initially at the Centre for Policy Studies in Johannesburg.[6] She resigned from HWS in 2006 to assume a senior post at the Human Sciences Research Council (South Africa) (HSRC).
In South Africa, she conducted studies of South Africa's transition from apartheid to democracy, with special projects on poverty alleviation and rural development.[7] In 2011, she left South Africa to serve as Director of Governance Studies at the University of the South Pacific in Fiji. In 2014, she moved to Southern Illinois University at Carbondale in Illinois, USA to serve as Chair of Political Science.
Research
Tilley has adopted a critical position regarding the Middle East peace process and has authored several articles and opinion pieces criticizing Israel's occupation policies. In her first book on the topic, The One-State Solution (2005, University of Michigan Press), she argued that Israel's settlements in the West Bank have made a two-state solution obsolete.[8] A team research project in international law that she led at the HSRC, which found that Israeli policies in the West Bank and Gaza Strip are consistent with colonialism and apartheid as these regimes are codified in international law, was published in 2012 by Pluto Press as Beyond Occupation: Apartheid, Colonialism and International Law in the Occupied Palestinian Territories.[9]
Awards
- Seeing Indians chosen as book of the year by the 2006 Congress of Central American Anthropologists
- 1999 Prize from the Congress on Latin American History, with Prof. Erik Ching.[10]
Selected articles
- — (Spring 2010). "A Palestinian Declaration of Independence: Implications for Peace". Middle East Policy 17 (1): 52–67. doi:10.1111/j.1475-4967.2010.00425.x.
- — (March–April 2006). "The Secular Solution: Debating Israel-Palestine". New Left Review 38.
- — (2005). "Mestizaje and the "Ethinicization" of Race in Latin America". In Spickard, Paul R. Race And Nation: Ethnic Systems In The Modern World. Routledge. pp. 53–68. ISBN 978-0-415-95003-9.
- — (August 2002). "New Help or New Hegemony? The Transnational Indigenous Peoples' Movement and 'Being Indian' in El Salvador". Journal of Latin American Studies 34 (3): 525–554. doi:10.1017/S0022216X0200651X. JSTOR 3875460.
- “The Generation of Ethnic Conflict by the International System.” In Cris Toffolo, ed., Emancipating Cultural Pluralism, SUNY Press, 2002.
— (2002). "The Role of the State in Ethnic Conflict: A Constructivist Reassessment". In Green, Daniel M. Constructivism Comp Politics. M.E. Sharpe. pp. 151–174. ISBN 978-0-7656-0861-1.
- Ching, Erik; Tilley, Virginia Q. (February 1998). "Indians, the Military and the Rebellion of 1932 in El Salvador". Journal of Latin American Studies 30 (1): 121–156. doi:10.1017/s0022216x97004926. JSTOR 158450.
- — (July 1997). "The terms of the debate: Untangling language about ethnicity and ethnic movements". Ethnic and Racial Studies 20 (3): 497–522. doi:10.1080/01419870.1997.9993972.
- — (1996). "Post-Confucianism: The Culturalist Approach to Understanding the East Asian NICs". Asian Thought and Society: An International Review 21 (61): 67–80.
References
- ↑ http://www.hws.edu/academics/pdf/catalog_directories-end0406.pdf
- ↑ See under Publications, Without Prejudice Vol. 2, No. 2, at: .
- ↑ Tilley, Virginia (2005). Seeing Indians: A Study of Race, Nation, And Power in El Salvador. UNM Press. ISBN 978-0-8263-3925-6.
- ↑ http://www.hws.edu/academics/pdf/catalog_eng-math0406.pdf
- ↑ http://web.hws.edu/news/update/printrelease.asp?id=3769
- ↑ http://festival.channel4.co.za/?page_id=40
- ↑ For example, .
- ↑ Virginia Tilley (24 May 2005). The One-State Solution: A Breakthrough for Peace in the Israeli-Palestinian Deadlock. University of Michigan Press. ISBN 978-0-472-11513-6. Retrieved 1 December 2012.
- ↑ Tilley, Virginia Q. (2012). Beyond Occupation: Apartheid, Colonialism and International Law in the Occupied Palestinian Territories. Pluto Press. ISBN 0-7453-3236-6. OCLC 795849477.
- ↑ http://clah.h-net.org/?page_id=181
External links
- Unpetrified Opinion, Virginia Tilley's blog
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